I received the 62gr 5.56x45 ammo from Palmetto that I mentioned earlier.
This stuff: https://bit.ly/3sAI0Qe
I'll go see how it shoots next week. After examining the boxes a bit, one thing I find interesting is that it does not say where it is made. It essentially only mentions RUAG in Switzerland, which is Norma's parent company.
The headstamp mentions "Norma 21 5.56x45 T"
That is really what made me wonder. I have 7.62x39 Norma ammo in the same packaging that is very clearly marked "Made in Hungary". RUAG controls a variety of plants all over Europe and sells ammo under several brands: Norma, GECO, RWS and Rotweil, I think. Depending on what exactly it is, it can be made in Sweden, Germany, Hungary or probably a couple of other places.
When I was purchasing it this SS109, I sorta assumed that I was just getting Hungarian ammo that, historically, has been reliable, but not made for accuracy. In other words, I assumed this would be just simple plinking ammo.
However, that "T" on the cartridge head usually means Thun, Switzerland, where RUAG has a plant. They make a ton of NATO ammo there is really pretty good stuff. Once in a while, they sell some stuff on the commercial market that does not meet the accuracy specs of their military customers, but then the cartridge would be stamped with RUAG head stamp, not Norma. This ammo was clearly intended for the commercial market form the get go. It is still possible that the projectiles did not pass QC for their military use, which would show up in accuracy testing.
I doubt I can run through the all the accuracy tests until this Palmetto deal expires, but I am sure other places have matched Palmetto's prices by now.
Either way, it looks like this is indeed Swiss-made ammo, so it is likely to be consistent, reliable and clean. Accuracy is the one thing I need to confirm.