As a FORMER firefighter, I think that's not really responsible of you to infer that if storage regs for powders are non-binding, they shouldn't be followed.
I'm saying that you need to follow the letter of the regulation. That the stuff that is optional or recommended, is exactly that,
optional.
It's like transporting your non-restricted rifle in your car. It has to be unloaded. It doesn't have to be in a separate compartment, it doesn't have to be trigger locked, it doesn't have to have the barrel unscrewed and travelling in a different vehicle... sure there are people that might recommend those things, there are even cops that are convinced that some of those are part of the law. So do you weld your action shut or do something else to go "above and beyond"? That's fine if you do; but you don't have to.
...but since you've already id-ed yourself as a FORMER firefighter, shouldn't MORE safety be the thrust of your comments,...
Nope. The thrust of my comments is, and I believe should be "enough safety".
Because the ultimate position for "more safety" is "Don't do it!"
And I'm not about to do anything like that.
_ Look at it this way... in the last 20 years, (yup, 7300± days) there has been 1 definite, and one possible incident whee reloading components have initiated an incident which caused a large fire or serious injury (that I have been able to find anyway).
Think on that a moment.....
2 serious incidents
in 20 years.....
Contrast that to -candles- Which cause around 100 fires every year and around 60 deaths.
Candles.. 60 deaths a year... Reloading components... 2 serious incidents in 20 years.
Now refresh my memory... how many candles are you allowed to keep in a detached dwelling house? And how many in an attached dwelling (obviously much fewer, right? because of the hazard of the fire spreading to innocent families)
What about the box that you have to keep them locked in?
Dude... storing powder in your house is probably the safest thing you can put in there. Find me something else that results in roughly 1 serious incident (let's say even 1 death!) every 10 years, that is fairly widely practised.