I was wondering if I carry my CCW weapon with premium ammo and practice with the el cheapo ammo, and that CCW ammo has been around in my pocket since the 1990's, will it expire over time and fail to fire when needed?
Thanks,
![tiphat :tiphat:](./images/smilies/tiphat.gif)
Moderator: carlson1
I agree.HankB wrote:Unless you've been soaking it with oil, good ammo will fire many decades after manufacture. (And even if oil-soaked, it's still likely to work just fine.)
I understand the cost issue, but when it comes down to it, your life may depend on it working, so AT LEAST on a yearly basis, you ought to fire your carry ammo in practice and replenish it with fresh stuff. (A fresh box of ammo per year isn't much.)
Thanks, Bullwhip. Your experience should be widely circulated among shooters. Many do not know the difference between a hangfire and a misfire, and I have more than once been accused of meddling when I attempted to point this out to someone who, after a FTF immediately racked the slide, letting the unfired round fall where it might. Once upon a time I was curtly advised that "This is a Glock, not a flintlock, hangfires do not happen with modern handguns, and this was the way I was taught at a combat course." Naturally, when someone is in fact shooting back at you it is a different ballgame, but the fact that an event may be "rare" does not mean that it will never happen.Bullwhip wrote:...Had some pakistan .303 from the 60s-70s wasn't worth a flip. Might go bang or might go pffffffffft and bang 5 minutes later.
What would be the consequences of a hangfire of an ejected pistol round during a practice session compared to the consequences of not quickly fixing a malfunctioning gun during a gun fight? I've had hangfires before, around 35 years ago with some old 250 Savage ammo. I've had literally hundreds of misfires since then and my first priority is always to get the gun back up and running. I don't ever make the mistake of training incorrectly in practice and hoping I'll do it correctly in a fight.b322da wrote:Thanks, Bullwhip. Your experience should be widely circulated among shooters. Many do not know the difference between a hangfire and a misfire, and I have more than once been accused of meddling when I attempted to point this out to someone who, after a FTF immediately racked the slide, letting the unfired round fall where it might. Once upon a time I was curtly advised that "This is a Glock, not a flintlock, hangfires do not happen with modern handguns, and this was the way I was taught at a combat course." Naturally, when someone is in fact shooting back at you it is a different ballgame, but the fact that an event may be "rare" does not mean that it will never happen.
Elmo