HOP Munitions, a pioneering ammunition company known for its commitment to innovation and excellence, is proud to announce the release of its state-of-the-art poly ammo. Building on a legacy of providing quality ammunition products, this latest offering promises superior performance for both professional and recreational shooters.
HOP Munitions’ mission is to elevate the shooting experience through relentless innovation. We believe that every shooter deserves ammunition that is not just reliable, but also advanced in terms of technology and design.
HOP Munitions Poly Ammo
Our new poly ammo is the embodiment of that belief, offering a blend of performance, durability, and value. These more economical rounds have become quite popular among competition shooters and firearms trainers.
The Polymer Bullets contain a lead core coated in a high-temperature polymer. These poly-coated bullets offer several benefits, such as reducing barrel wear, preventing barrel fouling, improving accuracy, and most importantly, being more affordable.
Optimized for competition shooting and training, this is an incredibly affordable training and practice round!
Advantages of Using Polymer Bullets
Shooting our Poly Bullets comes with several advantages over other types of ammunition.
Unlike lead rounds, they do not release toxic gases into the air, making them a safer choice, particularly for indoor shooters.
Polymer-coated rounds ensure smooth feeding from the magazine to the chamber, reducing the likelihood of a failure to feed. They tend to cycle more consistently into the chamber when compared to standard FMJ or even jacketed hollow points.
Another advantage is that they produce less fouling in the barrel compared to lead round-nose bullets. The soft lead can leave residue in the barrel, affecting accuracy and performance. Polymer-coated rounds, however, leave less or no residue, contributing to improved barrel longevity.
The overall purpose of using a polymer coating on bullets is to enhance performance by reducing friction, resulting in smoother and safer shooting experiences. HOP Munitions remains committed to pushing the boundaries in ammunition technology and serving our customers with unmatched quality and service.
With our new poly ammo, we are confident that shooters everywhere will experience a noticeable difference in their performance.
For more information on HOP Munitions and our groundbreaking poly ammo, please visit our website at hopmunitions.com.
About HOP Munitions
Our mission is to create the highest quality ammunition possible! Located in central Ohio, House of Payne munitions strives to create the highest quality ammunition possible, by our team of skilled veterans while while providing them purpose and stability in the workplace.
Very Innovative – only about a dozen other companies have been producing these for years. You state that the polymer coating prevents the bullets from releasing toxic gasses into the air like traditional uncoated lead bullets do. This is either a bald-faced lie, or your creative ad writer doesn’t have a clue. It is the primer that releases toxic gasses into the air, not the projectile. Unless you are using lead-free primers, your cartridges are no less toxic than a cartridge with a soft lead bullet.
Congratulations on being the LAST to the market with this technology.
I think you hit the nail on the head about their copy writer — note that they also claim their plastic coated bullets “tend to cycle more consistently into the chamber when compared to standard FMJ or even jacketed hollow points.” so apparently their copy writer thinks JHPs feed more reliably than FMJ.
They also say “this is an incredibly affordable training and practice round!” but their prices are about the same as major brands known for consistent quality ammunition.
I just came back from HOP website, and all I have to say is you enter the House of “Pain” on their ammo prices, including poly tipped. Cheaper cost my __s!
Nice researching. I didn’t bother, bc in my experience, corporations that advertise their products as being economical are generally the most expensive. So I avoid any that list how “economical” they are. I avoid that word like it’s toxic. Adspeak is deception, down at its core. The truly cheap products aren’t proud of being the cheapest, so their focus tends to be to try and convince customers that their products are just as good as the more expensive ones. These are the ones that I research, to see if that claim holds water. I find value in products that are… Read more »
“HOP Munitions’ mission is to elevate the shooting experience through relentless innovation.”
Your product certainly looks interesting an innovative.
But I’m still taking off points for the “corporate newspeak.”
I can’t speak for everyone. But I suspect part of Amazon’s success is rooted in growing fatigue with “the enhanced customer experience” among shoppers in general.
Not going too feed the grizzley bear plastic bullets hoping he shits me out a Tupperware gun . Sorry
Innovative? Maybe. A decade and more ago Cabelas sold Herter’s nylon jacketed, aluminum case handgun ammo. “More economical”? At 36 cents per round for 9mm, you be the judge. It could be their polymer is far superior to the Herter’s nylon. Their ammo might be the most accurate in the world. Perhaps copper jackets wear you barrels far more than you thought and replacements more expensive or impossible. I wish them well, but…
Now that edit is fixed, maybe Ammoland could get a change that allows uploading the more economically sized .jpg files. I took a picture of the Herter’s ammo but converting to .png is about 10 times as big – i.e. too large to upload.
Guess they never heard of Federal Syntech.
That too.
Or even S&W Nyclad from around 40 years ago. 😉
I still have a half a box of that left around somewhere. In .38 SPL.
I don’t know. I load my own bullets. I always build my round so that it gives the same amount or just a little more kick than a manufactured Hornady Self Defense Ammo that the police use so that way when I shoot manufactured bullets the feel is the same or less potent.
To me when it comes to pistols, self-defense comes first then comes fun.