It blew the pipe bomb cap straight back at the shooter's face in the exact same manner...The second rn50 didn't blow into the neck. The "ears" on the receiver stayed put.
Without any question I dont want to be near any rifle if it energetically disassembles itself.
Over out.
And artillery and our every day lives, for certain. I used two head bolts to lift and engine from a tractor the other day.Threads have proven to be strong enough for firearms on many occasions.
Any gun is a pipe bomb if you're well over SAAMI spec, as in 2x, 3x, 4x.
I've heard those "pipe bomb" statements from others, the people making them are often not particularly bright given their lack of undestanding as to how mechanically strong threaded breeches are.
Stay within normal pressures, you'll do just fine. If you're that scared of that firearm then don't pretend as though you were ever in a position to purchase it, don't bother commenting on it.
There is no failsafe for 180,000psi that is guaranteed to save someone.What people are arguing is not that threads and such aren't strong, but that the design has no mechanism to fail gracefully when stuff inevitably happens.
Like the hole savage and Remington put on the action right at the front of the bolt face on the opposite side of the shooters face. Not sure if that's standard practice with 50bmg.Actually that brings up another point about why the RN50 is a questionable design. I don’t see a way for the case to fail before the action fails in the manner we’ve observed. If the case could fail and vent pressure you might not hit that 180kpsi.
Look at the interrupted threads locking the breech on canon and naval gunsDoesn’t the breach plug on a muzzle loader thread on? Threads have proven to be strong enough for firearms on many occasions.