Getting a hint of oil on the primers of any stored ammo. It is supposed to TOTALLY destroy the primer, making the gun firing that round go click instead of bang.
Then I saw this article.
And I relaxed.
Don't get oil on your stored ammo. But don't obscess over it, refusing to bring ammo into a ROOM that might have a can of WD-40 lurking in it somewhere. Read it. They pretty much soaked the primer end of a cartridge in petrochemicals for weeks.
That whole website is another informational new-to-me site I've been perusing.
Those are the Box O Truth guys. They like to actually test out theories and document it for us. Not as good as testing yourself, but better than merely taking some guy that posted to a forum's word for it. Much of it is testing how well various rounds shoot. They have figured it out that one milk jug is about the same as 3 inches of ballistic gelatin. But milk jugs are MUCH cheaper to test with. So if a round goes through 4 jugs in a row, then enters jug 5, it penetrated a bit over 12 inches.
They do other tests. How many inches of sand stop a bullet of just about any caliber (six! but low velicity pistols penetrate better. The low speed means the bullet doesn't break up so fast. ) They test against a Buick. Stuff like that. Nifty. I'm all for new and good data points in my learnin.
Climate data is just made up
-
I've posted many times about how the temperature data is modified after its
initial collection, but this takes the cake. One third of UK weather
station...
56 minutes ago
No comments:
Post a Comment