- Jun 21, 2020
- 31,889
- 16,324
- Thread starter
- #41
Yes I know.
But why comment on a thread like this?
Because I just read a few minutes ago and I am a man of fairness and justice
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Yes I know.
But why comment on a thread like this?
Because I just read a few minutes ago and I am a man of fairness and justice
Whoah, whoah, whoah! Wtf man?
This is NOT "Da Joos!" doing this. No!
Da Fuq?!
It's not:
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It's not "Da Joos", brah. No, they're as American as all the other main American types, but Jewish, and that's OK.
At least that's the way I see it.
Then start a new thread fer fucks sake.
Stahp! Go deal with people you know that are nice for a little bit or something.YES its their party man. I am JEWISH and i sick and tired of this FASCISM
Stahp!
Why wasn't that breech designed to take it, though?
Why is it they knew how to make things tough better 100 years ago?
We already know why it happened.
It was an over powered slap round.
Negatory. I looked up some reloading data on the .50 BMG and found the cases on those are usually loaded almost full. 50 BMG uses slow-burning powders like IMR4895, 4895, 4831, H570 and spherical H870, and the average loads for those are 250 grains of powder. There are actually some loads for that caliber that take up 98% of the case capacity. Even if you were have a ruptured case, most rifles have a means of venting the excess pressure from the chamber. There is a possibility that the round was loaded to an out of spec overall length. If the bullet isn't seated deep enough and is jammed into the lands and grooves, it could cause a pretty huge pressure spike on detonation. Or it could have been contaminated or decomposing powder, or a headspace problem caused by an out of spec cartridge case.
But after I watched the video above, an accidental charge of pistol powder or an undercharged case seems correct.