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When shooters talk about ammo, everything boils down to two questions:
Does it run?
Does it shoot the way it should?
Everything else, branding, buzzwords, and even good intentions, comes second.
That’s exactly why independent testing matters. Not controlled lab claims. Not polished ad copy. Just ammo, a firearm, and a camera rolling.
Recently, Graham from GBguns put our EcoBullet 9mm 115gr TMJ through its paces. He bought it like any other shooter, took it to the range, and shared his honest impressions, no script, no sponsorship gloss, no softballs. Just a real range session.
We can explain what we designed this load to do. What really counts is what happens when someone else loads a mag and presses the trigger. Independent reviewers tend to zero in on the things that actually affect your range day:
Feeding and function across real, unmodified firearms
Consistency you can feel shot to shot
Practical accuracy at realistic distances
Recoil impulse and controllability
Clear statements about what the ammo is, and what it isn’t
If you’ve watched enough ammo reviews, you know good reviewers are picky. That’s a feature, not a flaw. Being held to the same standard as every other brand is the baseline, not a favor.
One thing that sets Graham apart on GBguns is how methodical he is. This wasn’t a quick mag dump and opinion. It was a data-driven range session focused on consistency, velocity, and real-world use. Before getting into numbers, Graham lays out why ammo like this exists in the first place.
EcoBullet’s 115gr 9mm TMJ is built around two practical concerns:
Reduced lead exposure
Lead-free primers combined with a total metal jacket significantly cut down airborne lead - especially relevant for indoor ranges or ported firearms - where gas and particulate blowback are a real issue.
Environmental considerations
Reused brass and a CO₂-offset model are part of the company’s approach, but the focus stays on function first, not messaging.
He also notes pricing sits slightly above average range ammo, but still below most fully lead-free alternatives. a middle ground between cost and health-conscious design.
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Rather than chasing groups or marketing claims, GBGuns focused on raw velocity data and consistency across different barrel lengths.
To keep comparisons fair, he used a familiar reference setup and then expanded outward:
4.25" barrel (Grand Power Q100) as the baseline “equalizer”
Additional testing with:
3" barrel (compact pistol)
4" barrel
5" barrel
11" barrel (PCC-style platform)
All shots were fired at 7 yards on a 1-inch target, keeping conditions consistent while observing how the load behaved as barrel length changed.
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The numbers showed a predictable, well-behaved load:
4.25" barrel: ~1087–1119 FPS
Consistent velocities despite mixed brass, which is exactly what you want to see in training ammo.
3" barrel: ~1040–1057 FPS
No surprises—reasonable drop with shorter barrels.
4" barrel: ~1080–1127 FPS
Tight spread and solid performance.
5" barrel: ~1126–1165 FPS
Velocity scales as expected with added length.
11" barrel: ~1275–1297 FPS
Clear indication of a full, complete powder burn with no erratic spikes.
The takeaway: no odd pressure behavior, no preference for a “magic” barrel length, just consistent scaling.
The practical takeaway
Graham’s conclusion wasn’t framed around novelty or eco branding. Instead, he focused on risk management.
For shooters who spend time at indoor ranges, shoot frequently, or have family and pets exposed to contaminated clothing or gear, reduced-lead ammunition isn’t a luxury, it’s a health decision.
He describes the modest price premium as “cheap insurance” against long-term lead exposure and encourages shooters to consider reduced-lead or lead-free options where practical.
Not hype. Not fear-mongering. Just a pragmatic recommendation based on data and experience.
We appreciate the time and attention GBGuns put into the test. We also read the comments, all of them. And that feedback matters.
Here’s what we’re doing as a result:
Clearer product specs and test context on our site
More straightforward, lot-based information where applicable
Continued encouragement for independent testers to evaluate our ammo exactly like any other brand
If you care about performance first, that’s the direction we’ll keep leaning.
“Eco” is part of who we are, but we’re realistic about how shooters buy ammo.
For most people, sustainability is not the first decision factor. Reliability is. Accuracy is. Shootability is.
Our stance is simple: If we can’t deliver reliable ammo, none of the rest matters.
So we focus on making ammo people actually want to shoot.
Then we work to reduce impact where it’s meaningful, measurable, and verifiable, without asking you to compromise function.
No trade-offs. No greenwashing.
If you want the unfiltered version, go watch GBGuns’ video and decide for yourself.