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by Eric Lamberson
Sat Sep 05, 2015 10:26 pm
Forum: Never Again!!
Topic: When you think you've see everything!
Replies: 2
Views: 2443

Re: When you think you've see everything!

The issue would be shooting a plated bullet at a high enough velocity to shed the plating would likely deposit excessive lead/copper in the bore. High pressure rounds such as the 10mm firing a plated bullet fast enough to strip the plating and essentially turn the bullet into a blob of lead could create a higher potential for a ruptured case. A bad thing with a high pressure round. I once had a 40 S&W reload rupture in a Glock. It felt like someone hit the palm of my hand with a baseball bat.

He should have been loading jacketed bullets or using lighter loads.
by Eric Lamberson
Sat Sep 05, 2015 6:39 pm
Forum: Never Again!!
Topic: When you think you've see everything!
Replies: 2
Views: 2443

When you think you've see everything!

My "you've got to be kidding" experience for the week.

I was the Safety Officer for an IDPA squad today at the local match. It was a close range rifle match that had some pistol transitions. One gentleman fired a stage that required engaging two targets with two pistol shots each. When we went to score those targets there were gaping holes (2 in each) that were 1.5" plus in diameter but no obvious pistol-caliber holes. There was nothing between the shooter and the target that he could have hit.

Puzzled, I started to score the shots as misses when the shooter stated the large holes were his shots and that the holes resulted from the plated bullets shedding the copper jacket. Imagine my astonishment. I asked him what caliber he was firing and he replied--10mm--he was shooting these bullets through a Glock 10mm. Additional discussion followed.

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