Ammo Hack

The hyperbole runs deeper than the national debt. Happy little dust bunnies are playing hop scotch on the shelves where 9 mm loads once resided, clouds part and angels sing when you find a box of .223 Rem. Rimfire vanished faster than Jimmy Hoffa and it’s not a pot of gold that annoying leprechaun is guarding at the end of a rainbow. It’s a conspiracy, a government plot designed to force people to dig up all the Survivor Ammo Cans they buried on moonless nights, when it was raining, muddy and uphill both ways to the cache.

I, for one, don’t want to start digging again. There could be an easier way, though. Walmart buys a lot of ammo, but it’s doled out sparingly to each store, the amount you’re allowed to purchase is often limited, and you have about the same chance of showing up at the right time as those marshmallow-cereal-addicted kids have of catching that happy-for-no-reason comic Irishman with height issues.

There’s not much we can do about it, but I ran across something interesting on Youtube. If you visit Walmart.com and look for ammo at your nearest store, more than likely the response will be “Store Information Not Available.” But it is, according to coder Rich Bianco. On this video he explains how to turn on a feature that tells you whether your local store has inventory. There are problems, including the fact that inventory is updated at midnight, so if you locate your pet load at 5 in the afternoon, you might as well visit the cereal aisle.

I don’t know anything about code, but on Internet Explorer I searched the Walmart website for Federal .45 ACP 230-grain ACP 100 packs. The search gave me the “Store Information Not Available” signal, so I moved my mouse to the upper right side of the screen on top of “tools” (it’s looks like a little machinery cog just under the close-window button).

Click on it and select “F12 developer tools.” A smaller, horizontal box will pop up on the bottom of your screen. To the right side you’ll see a box with a magnifying glass icon that lets you search. In the box type “STORE_MSG” and hit enter.

It will locate the words in the code and in the box to the right you’ll see a bunch of script with options that can be turned on or off. Scroll down until you find the boxes on the right side that read “Inline style, and display none” (they were the last ones on my browser). Uncheck those boxes, hit enter and wait for your store info to appear.

Wow, those 100-round boxes are available at my closest store—or at least they were last night at midnight. If I get lucky I might even visit the cereal aisle to pick up some extra targets. I won’t be taking my name off the waiting list at my sporting goods dealer anytime soon, though, since I carry Hornady’s 230-grain TAP load. In the meantime, at least I’ve discovered something mildly therapeutic while we wait for the ammo shortage to lose its momentum.

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3 Responses to Ammo Hack

Chuck wrote:
August 29, 2013

Would you think maybe. just maybe, Wally World clerks are reserving any ammo that comes in for 'special' customers or favorite uncles and such? I know I am paranoid, but the idea did flit across my evil little brain.

fountain wrote:
August 25, 2013

First let me say that I think the 'hack' is great. It could possibly save a lot of time making random stops at WalMarts on my way to/from work. However, let me give you my recent experience. I checked the inventory at my local store at about 5am on a Sunday morning. (What can I say, I had trouble sleeping) I was looking for some inexpensive .223. Low and behold, they had some Tula Ammo in stock. Well...the store opened at 6am (on Sunday). I got there at about 5 after...nothing on the shelf. Poking around the aisles I found a flat cart with about 3 dozen cases of Federal shot gun shells. They hadn't made to the shelves yet. I went back to the ammo case, wrote down the UPC number and went up to the service desk to ask if they could check the system to see what it said for stock. The lovely woman took my slip of paper with the number written on it and then asked what it was I was looking for. I explained that it was ammo and that I'd seen some on a cart in the aisle and thought that maybe what I was looking for didn't make it to the floor yet. She radioed another worker whose response was unintelligible. She tried the radio twice more with the same results and finally asked the other person to call her. When she got off the phone she simply said that they didn't get a truck last night so they don't have any ammo. 'Check back on Monday'....I didn't say anything more but as I left the store I saw a tractor-trailer parked in the lot. I'm pretty confident that it hadn't been parked for multiple days...and the cart of shotgun shells in the aisle kind of says to me that maybe they did get some ammo. Ahhh, WalMart! You can't expect much more....

Guy J. Sagi wrote:
August 21, 2013

I received one note indicating it didn't work. This method is for Internet Explorer (my version is 10.0). Obviously you have to 'favorite' a Walmart nearby to peek into its latest inventory.