northdude wrote:Better be carefull carrying ammo in my pocket then. Anyone ever had one go off in their pocket


northdude wrote:Better be carefull carrying ammo in my pocket then. Anyone ever had one go off in their pocket
northdude wrote:Better be carefull carrying ammo in my pocket then. Anyone ever had one go off in their pocket
northdude wrote:Better be careful carrying ammo in my pocket then. Anyone ever had one go off in their pocket
JohnV wrote:northdude wrote:Better be carefull carrying ammo in my pocket then. Anyone ever had one go off in their pocket
I has happened to two people in the UK and 1 in the USA that I have read about not seen it personally but then I never carry ammo in my pocket because static discharge from clothing can happen especially when being very active .
Also there has been instances of primers going off in auto reloading presses priming tube .
JohnV wrote:If it's nonsense then how come static can ignite a primer only takes 190 C degrees to ignite a primer and static sparks can be over 1000 degrees C . It is not a Faraday cage as far as the primer is concerned . It's not within the cage it's on the external surface where the charge can build up .
straightshooter wrote:Yet more nonsense!
A Faraday Cage is but one implementation of a Faraday Shield. For this exercise earthing is irrelevant.
The static hits the primer irrespective of the cylindrical shape of the case .
How does the static only "hit the primer" and where does it go from there? How many joules of energy are in the static?
Electrical ignition of primers is very real and rifles have been designed to fire that way with no firing pin at all
I agree with you but there is a very big BUT
Primers designed for electrical ignition have different priming material and, of necessity, different internal construction compared to primers intended for impact ignition. When Remington released it's electronic ignition 700 rifle it's ammunition could not be ignited in a mechanical firing pin 700 and a conventionally primed round would not fire in the electronic ignition 700 even though both rounds were physically identical.
So to say a primer can not be fired with electricity is dead wrong
Please don't attribute words to me that I have not written. Where I come from that is known as lying.
I commend reading "Hatcher's Notebook" where he describes a variety of experiments performed to determine the effect of a round exploding in an open situation. He used two methods, one was to use a car battery with one wire touching the primer cup and the other wire touching the case to provide enough Joules to heat the primer to the point of ignition. In other cases he used an arc welder in much the same configuration.
Col. Hatcher went on to became an expert witness regarding rounds going off in somebody's pocket and many other firearm claims in various courts in the US.
but can static electricity do it ? I believe it can in special circumstances that rarely occur
Yes it happens in Hollywood special effects for the entertainment of the gullible.
Tiger650 wrote:I would never tumble loaded ammunition, "powder" balls or sticks are coated with a deterrent such as graphite, wearing that off must logically have an effect [or it would not be there] and the possibility of making actual powder out of ball or stick propellant would increase total surface area of a charge.
Shiny brass looks good but plain clean brass is just as good practically speaking.
A bloke who was trained to shoot at targets that shoot back once mentioned to me that ejecting shiny brass is not regarded as a good career move, critters like crows and deer and such have keen eyes also.
I have not used a case tumbler as such but the common crushed walnut shell vibrator case cleaner sees about one in 6 cases end up with a grain of media stuck in the flash hole so certainly no primed cases in that type of equipment.
northdude wrote:Better be carefull carrying ammo in my pocket then. Anyone ever had one go off in their pocket
Peterwho wrote:I wish my foolish things were limited to when i was young
madang55 wrote:northdude wrote:Better be carefull carrying ammo in my pocket then. Anyone ever had one go off in their pocket
Many...many moons ago, around 1972...I had a collection of those big thick safety matches...and some of those big caps used in the hammer starter pistols...don't ask...anyway, thought I'd do the right thing and dispose of them, put them in a tin can (milo can?) and was walking out the door with them...If only that little voice had worked back then. It would have said something like, "don't shake the can idiot!" After my ears stopped ringing and the smoke cleared, I lifted up my hand to see I wouldn't be biting my finger nails for a few weeks, they were the only thing missing.And, apart from the 2 inch piece of tin can embedded in my thigh, still got the scar, everything was fine.