I have not had good experience with Wolf rifle ammo.... I bought some 5.56 to use in my AR, and it was very inconsistent in charge round to round, and whatever the F&$$ they use for case lube gummed up the chamber of my AR but good. Whatever propellent they use is nasty as well (smells horrible and dirtys up EVERYTHING in the gun! I have owned this rifle since 1986, and it has NEVER jammed in any way shape or form with factory ammo, until I used Wolf. IMHO, Wolf is fine for the loose chambered guns like AK's, SKS' (or any of the other ComBloc weapons designed around this ammo), subguns, some pistols etc., but anything else, I won't use it.
Just my $.02+
I would also be leery about using any steel cased ammo in a gun with a fixed extractor (like a 1911), since it relies somewhat on the "give" in the brass rim for extractor tension. Years ago, I broke an extractor on my .45 using WWII vintage steel cased stuff that a friend gave me (it was also mildly corrosive, as I found out !

) . That free ammo cost me about $100 in '86, when I really couldn't afford it!
YMMV, but I'll pay the extra $1.00 or so a box.
Most military surplus ammo is good, depending on the caliber, age, condition and county of origin. I shoot nothing but milsurp in my FALS, and ARs and sometimes my FN Hi Power (I got some real nice South African surplus 9mm real cheap a few years back), and have never had any issues whatsoever. Load up, shoot and maybe clean afterwards. And it's not too much more expensive than the Wolf. I don't think I've even cleaned the HP since I've been using this stuff, and it's got about 1500 rds of this SA stuff through it.
The S&B as Swede suggests is GREAT ammo..... I use it in most all of my pistols, and is one of the few, current production cartridges that will function properly in my Title 2, M-2 Carbine. I suspect that SAAMI has lowered the allowable pressures on commercial .30 Carbine loads, due to the mean age of these guns. I was having fits trying to get more than 2-3 shots fired in FA (short cycling with a classic stovepipe) using the various generic brands (Win USA, UMC, Federal red box) when I found 500 rounds of '50's vintage LC surplus, that functioned FLAWLESSLY, with a noticeable difference in report and recoil. This is not unique to my Carbine either. I have video of 3 of us firing M-2s at the same time, me using my reloads, and the other guys using USA. I got through 2 30 round mags way before those guys got through 1. Both were stovepiping every 2-3 shots with Win. USA.
I've also had good results with MagTech for clean yet cheap blasiting ammo.
As far as the reloader for the FFDO training.... not necessary, or so I've been told.

They will probably let you use it, but, imho, it won't save any time, and (I've heard) that the H&K mags aren't too bad on the thumb, especially the well used range mags that I've heard they use for training. I imagine that they will practically load themselves, unlike some sub gun mags that take about 100 lbs of pressure to get the last few rounds in!
I've also heard that the FFDO training is actually kind of fun, so, enjoy it!
(Say hi to W.T. when you get there.....)
