What gun should Henry make next?

Id also like a kit to convert my current Survival rifle to a pistol (grip & short barrel). It would be cool if you also offered a full package that had a modified stock that would act as the pistol holster. Basically going for a modern survival C96 Mauser look.
 
Karl from InrangeTV has had a carbine detonate while loading the tube mag because he just dropped them down the tube instead of inclining it like Tactical Lever said in post #599.

Okay, just spitballing here...When a rifle is fired, the cartridges in the tube are, by their own inertia, held in place while the gun recoils backward. They try to move forward with respect to the gun; just like a scope slips "forward" in loosely tightened rings during firing as its inertia attempts to keep it stationary. They will be slightly compressing the magazine tube spring with each shot. The spring immediately bounces them backward to their original position in the tube. How much would they actually move? A tiny fraction of an inch? How much energy could be applied to the primer in this case?

Wben inserting cartridges into a front-loading tube mag, I've always held the gun at an angle and allowed them to slide down into the tube. In this case the cartridges are moving much further, but also much more slowly. Again, how much energy is applied by the bullet tips to the primers?

When "Karl"...I have no idea who he is, but he's obviously an expert because he makes videos...loaded his rifle did he drop them down the tube vertically as an experiment...or is that the way he typically loads the thing? Those cartridges are falling the full length of the tube, and doing so at more-or-less free fall velocity, less the incidental friction they would encounter from brushing the tube walls on the way down. Is he intentionally trying to cause a primer ignition? Or is he just stupid?

We are handling devices that use springs held in compressed states by delicate triggering mechanisms, that are then released to intentionally ignite flammable compounds which in turn develop near-instantaneous dangerously-high levels of pressure...to propel a projectile through a barrel at high velocities...and we are doing it for fun! Of course there is an inherent element of danger; the degree to which individuals accept this varies.

We're way. way off base from the original intent of this thread; apologies to Henry for the massive derail.
 
There have been tube mag detonations from just dropping the rounds into the tube. The primer need only be a little proud of the base for your day at the range to become a day at the hospital.

Also, as to the proud primer theory, the anvil needs to be supported against the bottom of the primer cup to to provide the necessary “pinch” between the anvil and the firing pin. A proud primer would actually help to absorb the impact of the bullet tip hitting it as it slid deeper into the pocket. It wouldn’t be any more likely to fire.


Also, also... when dropping bullets into a tube mag, if it free falls the full 18 inches, it will be traveling at just under 3 meters per second. Now, a firing pin, (as near as I can tell) travels at a speed between 15 and 20 meters per second. Assuming the firing pin weighs about the same as a 9mm round, (and given the squared velocity affecting energy) that works out to firing pin delivering between 25 and 44 times the amount of energy that a bullet dropped into the tube would. Not to mention, that the firing pin is made of harder steel, and has a much sharper point than the bullet does.

So that’s not to say it can’t happen, but the odds are certainly against it.
 
Winchester model 61 please

with a precision cold hammer forged barrel

Or a stainless cut rifled barrel
 
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A 460 S&W, also handle 45 colt,Casull and short shotshell capability in a stainless single shot, synthetic stock and just enough barrel to burn the 460 powder. drilled, tapped and a set of williams peep sights.
 
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