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Moderator: carlson1
I think you could take it to the Police station and have them dispose of it properly. I would just call first or ask the next LEO you see at the local "Stop 'N Rob"The Annoyed Man wrote:I've never had it happen with a pistol, but I have had it happen with a .308 bolt rifle about 14 years ago. The rifle was a Ruger M77 MkII All Weather, and the ammunition was some old NATO 7.62 ball of Brazilian manufacture. I had 2 or 3 rounds in a row fail to fire - dimpled the primer, but no bang. The next one fired, but it also perforated the primer and vented out the gas escape hole. Since that rifle never failed to fire any other ammunition it was fed, regardless of manufacture, I attributed the problem to the ammo rather than the rifle.
I put thate stuff away. I still have it just because I didn't know what to do with it.
Most ranges have a place to put the cartridges that do not fire.Target1911 wrote:I think you could take it to the Police station and have them dispose of it properly. I would just call first or ask the next LEO you see at the local "Stop 'N Rob"The Annoyed Man wrote:......
I put that stuff away. I still have it just because I didn't know what to do with it.
Target1911 wrote:Hmmmmm.......not saying the above procedures are incorrect....but....I dont know of one Competition Shooter that waits up to 30 seconds to clear a mis/hangfire.
Keeping the hang fire pointed downrange for 20-30 seconds is what I was taught.Mike1951 wrote:I was always taught to consider the possibility of a hang fire and to keep the firearm pointed downrange for at least 20-30 seconds.
I do. I know a bunch of them. My shooting skills, limited though they are, I owe to training and shooting with the Army Marksmanship Unit. With this group, comprised of some of the finest competitive marksmen in the world, failure to follow the procedures laid out above by KaiserB could result in dire consequences. I never want to be at the bench next to a shooter who ignores this basic safety procedure. I take that back -- I don't want to be at the same range with him or her.Target1911 wrote:Hmmmmm.......not saying the above procedures are incorrect....but....I dont know of one Competition Shooter that waits up to 30 seconds to clear a mis/hangfire.
That section comes almost verbatim from chapter 4 of the Army's Field Manual FM 23-31, issued 1994. The only change in text is in line c.(1): Instead of reading "Keep the weapon pointed downrange..." the original reads, "Keep the M203 pointed downrange..." Because FM 23-31 deals with the 40mm grenade launcher.KaiserB wrote:Immediate action should be taken in the event of either a hangfire or misfire. Either can be caused by an ammunition defect or by a faulty firing mechanism. Any failure to fire must be considered a hangfire until that possibility is eliminated....
A hangfire could go off in 5, 30, 60, 90 seconds, etc. The important thing is to keep the muzzle is a safe direction until the round is removed from the chamber. I have no big fear of a round going off after it is removed from the gun.57Coastie wrote:I do. I know a bunch of them. My shooting skills, limited though they are, I owe to training and shooting with the Army Marksmanship Unit. With this group, comprised of some of the finest competitive marksmen in the world, failure to follow the procedures laid out above by KaiserB could result in dire consequences. I never want to be at the bench next to a shooter who ignores this basic safety procedure. I take that back -- I don't want to be at the same range with him or her.Target1911 wrote:Hmmmmm.......not saying the above procedures are incorrect....but....I dont know of one Competition Shooter that waits up to 30 seconds to clear a mis/hangfire.
Jim
Please give the ammo the does not go bang to me for proper disposal...I'll take one for the team and risk my life with that faulty ammo during my next range session. Seriously, most of the time, it's just fine to cycle that ammo again. About 1 in every 50 rounds or Remington UMC "Yellow Box" ammo will fail to ignite in my Glocks. Assuming the immediate action drill doesn't launch the rounds into a black hole, when I recover those rounds I just stuff them in my magazine again. They usually go bang the second time around but, sometime they don't.Daltex1 wrote:Is this just me or when you have a round that you pulled the trigger on and it does not go "bang" when you clear the round and look at it and the primer has been struck do you get the feeling that it is going to go off in your hand?Then I feel I have to put the round somewhere safe so it doesnt go off!
Just freaks me out!
OR CAN IT???????