I find this story impossible to believe. Somehow a .22 generated 100x or more the normal recoil, and enough to “fly out of the sled”. That makes zero sense.
My guess would be a seriously over loaded .22 LR round, like powder right up to the round itself.
While there are numerous safety checks in place at ammunition plants to detect over loaded cases, sometimes a bad round will slip through the cracks.
Glad you are ok.
I'm no expert when it comes to .22 powder charges, but I don't think even a case filled with powder would do that type of damage. Aren't most .22 powder charges ~1.5gr?
doneI'm no expert when it comes to .22 powder charges, but I don't think that even a case filled with powder would do that type of damage. Aren't most .22 powder charges ~1.5gr?
I have read that for testing purposes, Interdynamic AB (Sweden) loaded .22LR hotter than .17 Hornet, which would potentially be over 50,000 psi.
No idea how they did it, but something that hot could definitely blow a 10/22.
Wasn't that for their Interdynamic MKR rifle? It was some type of frankensteined .22 WMR going 3300 fps?
Anywho, hogie has a good idea. Maybe some pictures of the damage might give us a clue.
yes, when the blast directs down the mag well it launches the rifle... I had a Ruger GSS blow up on me, it launched out of my hands and cartwheeled over my shoulderWould a 300 win mag even blow a rifle out of the sled?
I measured one once. 1.0 grains and it was either CCI SV or SK Magazine. Cannot remember which one. Not sure how much you could fit in there.I'm no expert when it comes to .22 powder charges, but I don't think that even a case filled with powder would do that type of damage. Aren't most .22 powder charges ~1.5gr?
I find this story impossible to believe. Somehow a .22 generated 100x or more the normal recoil, and enough to “fly out of the sled”. That makes zero sense.
doneAll right, here is what I think happened based on all your descriptions
Option 1: The barrel was clear, I agree, evident from your shot on target, but the CCI ammo was loaded extremely hot, or had a case failure. Either way the round made it to the target since its designed to run on blowback. The extra gas and carbon spat backwards into your face and you jolted so hard you launched the rifle out of the sled and on the ground as you ran away. Completely natural response, and only probable reason a 22lr launched a rifle out of the sled.
Option 2: You moved your ear pro off slightly, and didn't expect it to be so loud right next to your ear, Adrenaline took over and it wasn't a case ammo failure, you jolted from the noise, ran away to the truck and the gun bumped out, just human nature. You recollected backwards but adrenaline in the moment made everything seem exaggerated.
Take a look at your rifle, if nothing is damaged, then should be one of these cases