tmwinds
Gold $$ Contributor
Not made now?Nice article. NOW stop making and shooting BP guns. There is a reason they are not made now.
Not made now?Nice article. NOW stop making and shooting BP guns. There is a reason they are not made now.
Smokeless powder in a black powder rifle.I will keep the club name and location out of this report. This article was in our town's weekly newspaper. This is the first I have heard of this incident.
Quoted from newspaper article.
"Sheriff's deputies responded to calls of a person injured at >>>XXXX<<< club the morning of Sept. 9th. The victim, who was bleeding profusely, was originally taken from the scene by some acquaintances but was transferred to an ambulance which went to a hospital. The male victim received serious non-life threatening injuries.
According to the sheriffs office the victim was practicing shooting a black powder rifle when the wrong type of powder was used, causing the gun to explode. The guns barrel ruptured at the trigger area cutting the shooters arms and chin. The barrel was peeled back into several pieces.
"There is no reason to suspect any type of criminal activity" stated the sheriff's office. The victim's identity was not released as no crime was committed.
These types of accidents continue to happen. Be careful out there.
Not amazing it fired, but I don't understand how it damaged the barrel. Knuckleheads fire 9mm in .40Short'n'Weak chambers all the time, and the worst consequence I've ever observed was a failure to extract.
What was the damage?
Could he have already had one down the barrel? I've never tried to put a 9 in a 10. Don't know if it's possible.... JohnThe slide and the barrel were stuck together. The guy called me over for help. The first thing I noticed was the extreme belling of the 9mm case then realized he used 9mm ammo in a 10 mm pistol. When I told him that he used the wrong ammo you won't believe his relpy, "Didn't think 1 mm would make a big difference." You can't make this stuff up.
The slide and barrel were jammed together. Don't have a clue of why or how. Also, I'm a revolver guy so I'm not very knowledgeable on semi-auto pistols.
Have you considered changing which ranges you frequent?
Is #3 now on Social Security disability and at the range many times a week ?
Could he have already had one down the barrel? I've never tried to put a 9 in a 10. Don't know if it's possible.... John
9mm is 0.355, 10mm is 0.401. Cant imagine it obturating enough to not roll on out.It's possible - I saw the spent 9mm casing so it fired.
Don't know if he had one down the barrel - maybe. The guy was so inexperienced it is possible that one got lodged in the barrel and he racked the slide and fired one after it. With he gun "jammed" he departed to my great relief - wasn't in the mood to encourage him to stay at the range so I didn't put much effort into trying to get his pistol to work.
"Didn't think 1 mm would make a big difference." You can't make this stuff up.
That’s funny. Hahaha. I like that!Too bad it didn’t blow off his testicles.....there are some genes that need culling from the pool.
I can’t remember what brand gun it is but there’s a piece of the trigger guard with a round knob extended off of it that I recognize if I remember what type of rifle it was I will post itI was at the range this morning doing some maintenance work. I had no trouble locating the bench where the accident happened. I found lots of bits and pieces of the gun. Can anyone identify which brand rifle it was?
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There it is that’s exactly what I was talking aboutGood 'ol Google tells me this was a TC Omega. The screw, hammer and unique trigger guard attachment looks like what I picked up.
https://www.biggamehunt.net/blogs/gear-review/thompson-center-arms-omega-muzzleloader-review
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This is more common then you think... periodically I find 9mm that are blown out/swelled to 40cal. The main culprit is Glock, which has a couple of models that allow you to swap out the barrels between 9mm and .40 with the rest of the pistol remaining the same. Participants in IDPA and USPSA elect different calibers to classify for a specific division and sometimes they forget to swap out the .40 barrel to their 9mm barrel. Glock's extractor aggressively hold the 9mm case against the right side of .40 barrel, and the case diameters are close enough that the firing pin still hits the 9mm primer... Bang. The tail-tail for this happening in a Glock is that the case bulge will appear off-center / lopsided. As result of 9mm case being held to one side of .40 barrel the case bulge occurs on the opposite side of case expanding to fill the void in chamber.
Most shooters don't realize their mistake until after a couple of stage when their hits are unpredictable (9mm flinging out of 10mm bore) and scores are off.
Interesting. I'd guess a barrel obstruction, perhaps the previously mis-fed cartridge.The slide and the barrel were stuck together. . .
I literally can't even. . .When I told him that he used the wrong ammo you won't believe his reply, "Didn't think 1 mm would make a big difference."