I was under the impression that the Speer Frangible ammunition in .40 is only issued to police and military. Not clear why it would be on a private range.







I was under the impression that the Speer Frangible ammunition in .40 is only issued to police and military. Not clear why it would be on a private range.







I have destroyed hundreds of thousands of rounds of ammo by shovelling it into the fire. The primer detonates and shoots out the back of the case, at a fair velocity. It may or might not ignite the powder charge. If some of the powder burns, the case will rupture. The bullet goes nowhere. Sounds like popcorn.
Sounds like the oven was too hot, in his book "Gunshot Wounds" Vincent Di Maio writes about experiments where ammo was heated in an oven.
.22 long rifle cartridges detonated about 275F, .38 Special at 290F and 12 gauge shotgun shells at 387F.
An interesting thing was that when heated in an oven the cartridge cases always ruptured, but the primers did not detonate. Which would lead you to believe that powder has a lower ignition point than priming compounds.
Try 150F rather than 350F.
Dan
Hi Dan
My original post was rather long-winded, my apologies.
I guess you didn't notice "Warm function ~75C" - that's about 170F - enough to keep food warm. Although a bit "toastie" to the touch, I can pick the brass up with bare hands as soon as it comes out of the oven (after about a half-hour oven time)
That's why I'm surprised that the primer detonated. It is conceivable that live ammo could be stowed in a parked vehicle that could reach those kinds of temperatures:
"When temperatures outside range from 80 degrees to 100 degrees, the temperature inside a car parked in direct sunlight can quickly climb to between 130 to 172.” – Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
DBW
Don't try to dry lumpy black powder in the microwave. Trust me on this one...
I also have trouble imagining a primer or a cartridge ignited at 75C, but I suppose the underlying message here should be that it's not clever to cook live ammo in an oven at any temperature. Carelessness can hurt you.
Got any pictures?
No. Just imagine a roundish microwave.
I have destroyed hundreds of thousands of rounds of ammo by shovelling it into the fire. The primer detonates and shoots out the back of the case, at a fair velocity. It may or might not ignite the powder charge. If some of the powder burns, the case will rupture. The bullet goes nowhere. Sounds like popcorn.
DBW
Don't try to dry lumpy black powder in the microwave. Trust me on this one...



























