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#3 | ||||||
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David, as others have said, sorry about the gun, but glad that you're ok.
So, how many reloads is too many for a hull ( I know it will vary per brand)? I tend to visually inspect my hulls before using them to check the brass and the ends for splits, etc. It sounds like this may not be good enough, and no matter how good the shell looks it should be discarded after a few uses? Mike
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"A strong body makes the mind strong. As to the species of exercises, I advise the gun. While this gives moderate exercise to the body, it gives boldness, enterprise and independence to the mind. Games played with the ball, and others of that nature, are too violent for the body and stamp no character on the mind. Let your gun therefore be your constant companion of your walks." - Thomas Jefferson |
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#4 | ||||||
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Mr Yeatts,
Again I am sorry this happened and am glad you are well. I am not trying to pick anything apart. Just making some observations and putting some questions out there. That is one big section of metal that is missing. And the barrel is really bulged out. All of the damage appears to be proximal to the forcing cones and located at the chamber over the shell. Is there any info out there that correlates position of rupture with cause of destruction? (ie: split out way in front of forearm = stuck hull, chamber rupture= double powder charge or some major obstruction) Don Kaas posted a few years ago some pictures how his 32" 16 barrel was split due to a stuck wad out past the forearm ( that was a few years ago so I am going off of memory) That seemed to be a split longitudinally and in a fluid steel barrel. (search catastrophic failure. I don't know how to attach it to this) The amount of metal missing and the expansion of the barrel seems to be most impressive to me. ( mr yeatt's pictures that is) |
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#5 | ||||||
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David, as others have said I'm happy you weren't injured. Thank you for posting.
I shoot a lot of Short Tens both for hunting and clays. Regarding Federal 10-gauge hulls, they do of course have a paper base wad that's more/less held in place by compression at the bottom of the hull. I've attached a pic of a sectioned 10 gauge Federal hull. Note that the plastic wall is crimped/held by the rim, but the base wad is not. I discard these Federal hulls after 4 loadings (to include the first factory loading if I am using once-fired hulls from RST shells). And I've developed the "trap shooter" habit of blowing through the barrel(s) after each shot to see the typical smoke at the muzzle and thus check for a base wad that's come loose. It's not commonly understood but when a shell is fired a partial vacuum is created in the barrel when gas exits the muzzle, and that can "suck" a loose base wad into the forcing cone or barrel. Shot seems normal and an obstruction is in place for the next shot. Most of my Short Ten shooting nowadays is with the olive-green Remington hulls that have the low plastic base wad.
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| The Following User Says Thank You to Frank Srebro For Your Post: |
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#6 | ||||||
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If there is the potential of a base was loosening, consequently becoming an 'obstruction' I wonder why the shotshell manufacturers believe they are necessary.
The early solid brass shotshells of the 19th century didn't have base wads and were intended to be reloaded indefinitely....
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#7 | ||||||
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"I have had several shells blow up on me..."
What does that mean? |
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#8 | ||||||
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As Drew stated, difinative Lab testing is quite expensive. I do a fair amount of work as a Firearms Expert Wittness. I have been retained in many, many chamber failure cases with shotguns, rifles and handguns. Wether squib load, cocked wad,overload or underload,Inthe vast majority of these cases the culprit is the ammunition not the Firearm. Overpresure failures have several unique signatures, these appear present in the pictures.
I would personally focus my investigation on the ammunition. I am curious to know what the head of the stock looks like inside. Brad |
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| The Following 5 Users Say Thank You to Brad Bachelder For Your Post: |
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#9 | ||||||
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I'll catch flack for this...but this incident is a good example of why I never reload. It seems like the majority of gun failures I read about happened when a reload was involved.
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| The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to greg conomos For Your Post: |
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#10 | ||||||
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Not "flack", Greg, just deaf ears. There are few alternatives to reloading when it comes to short tens and eight gauge.
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