Hey, it’s my powder and I want to burn it now!
It's my powder and I'll burn if I want to
burn if I want to
burn if I want to
You would burn too if it happened to you.
Hey, it’s my powder and I want to burn it now!
It's my powder and I'll burn if I want to
burn if I want to
burn if I want to
You would burn too if it happened to you.
going to take a wild guess here but I bet you are wondering why your cows now have fiery atomic farts?I just pour it in the pasture makes the grass really green. Cows love it but it is really high dollar fertilizer.
Serious question, what happens to old smokeless powder that has begun or is already deteriorated?To answer all the recent “old” and “why” questions, powder is a relatively inexpensive component in the grand scheme of things. As far as why I wouldn’t sell it, liability. I have no issue with selling sealed cans of powder that is only a few years old.
The risk of having this sit around, likely unused for another 20 years was not worth it in my opinion. As there is no accurate way to judge when a powder has deteriorated, I would rather err on the side of caution. Maybe it’s all the safety training at work these days, but I have no qualms about destroying it.
Dave.
My old shooting friend jeff ely found out the hard way at the super shoot yrs. ago he poured powder into a measure and put the jug by his feet without the cap. loading away he finished a smoke and threw it down sure enough it went into the jug and lit him up his skin literally melted off him.. it was the last match he shot....
I just pour it in the pasture makes the grass really green. Cows love it but it is really high dollar fertilizer.
Yes you got it correct , I'm not saying it was the smartest move no he should not have been smoking let alone with a jug of open powder between his legs. just telling how bad it was and it was very bad. months in the hospital. Another one one was R. Hoehn was driving home with a trailer full of powder flipped a cigarette out the window went back on trailer and it lit up. Ron was burned pretty bad in that one also....
No judgement man, I get it. I was just thinking if I burned all my old powder I'd be broke and with my luck, would discover that my lot of vintage powder once shot the greatest groups ever recorded...but is unobtainium....since I just burned it!To answer all the recent “old” and “why” questions, powder is a relatively inexpensive component in the grand scheme of things. As far as why I wouldn’t sell it, liability. I have no issue with selling sealed cans of powder that is only a few years old.
The risk of having this sit around, likely unused for another 20 years was not worth it in my opinion. As there is no accurate way to judge when a powder has deteriorated, I would rather err on the side of caution. Maybe it’s all the safety training at work these days, but I have no qualms about destroying it.
Dave.