Maximising Ammo Storage Space
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All handloading data posted on Full-Bore UK from 23/2/2021 must reference the published pressure tested data it was sourced from, posts without such verification will be removed.
Any existing data without such a reference should be treated as suspect and not used.
Use reloading information posted here at your own risk. This forum (http://www.full-bore.co.uk) is not responsible for any property damage or personal injury as a consequence of using reloading data posted here, the information is individual members findings and observations only. Always verify the load data and be absolutely sure your firearm can handle the load, especially older ones. If in doubt start low and work your way up.
Re: Maximising Ammo Storage Space
Thanks for the answers guys. It looks like a may have to raid the club bin when I see someone throwing away ammo boxes. Charger Clips would be a tidy solution for the 303, but would cost a fortune for my ammo holding. Bags, I hadn't thought of.
I guess like gun safes, you just have to keep adding ammo safes or getting bigger ones.
I guess like gun safes, you just have to keep adding ammo safes or getting bigger ones.
- meles meles
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Re: Maximising Ammo Storage Space
You can never have too much ammo unless you're drowning or on fire...
Badger
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Quidquid latine dictum sit altum viditur.
"Quelle style, so British"
CEO (Chief Excavatin' Officer)
Badger Korporashun
Quidquid latine dictum sit altum viditur.
"Quelle style, so British"
Re: Maximising Ammo Storage Space
That would make a good T-shirtmeles meles wrote:You can never have too much ammo unless you're drowning or on fire...

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Re: Maximising Ammo Storage Space
Although in the Reserve Forces, we used to say "if you can still run, you're not carrying enough ammo..." (we were all old and unfit anyway..
)

Re: Maximising Ammo Storage Space
The idea of large quantities of ammo in a locked fairly well sealed gun safe / ammo safe that gives a good level of 'confinement' isn't one you would want to experience in a fire ................ :-)
pop
poppop
popopopopop KABOOM!
Love the t shirt slogan though :-)
pop
poppop
popopopopop KABOOM!
Love the t shirt slogan though :-)
Quality control of Scottish Ethanol. & RDX/HMX
& my fav chemical is :-) 1,3,7-trimethylxanthine.......... used to kill frogs.... but widely consumed & in vast quantities by the French? Eh?
& my fav chemical is :-) 1,3,7-trimethylxanthine.......... used to kill frogs.... but widely consumed & in vast quantities by the French? Eh?
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Re: Maximising Ammo Storage Space
You got the pop poppop popopopopop bit right but not the Kaboom.Ammunition in a safe doesn't catastrophically explode in the event of a fire......hitchphil wrote:The idea of large quantities of ammo in a locked fairly well sealed gun safe / ammo safe that gives a good level of 'confinement' isn't one you would want to experience in a fire ................ :-)
pop
poppop
popopopopop KABOOM!
Love the t shirt slogan though :-)
http://www.libertysafe.com/what-happens ... -2734.html
If your house is on fire I would say the possibility of a gas explosion is a much greater risk........
"The only real power comes out of a long rifle." - Joseph Stalin
Give a man a gun and he can rob a bank.....give a man a bank and he can rob the world!.
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Give a man a gun and he can rob a bank.....give a man a bank and he can rob the world!.
More than a vested interest in 7.62x54r!
Re: Maximising Ammo Storage Space
The key term I used is 'Confinement'. an explosives phenomena where gas pressures change exponentially & thus velocities of shockwaves / reaction waves / detonation rates go up. Its why a bomb has a steel casing, the effect of that casings confinement on the initial reaction multiplies the blast or detonation velocity thus greatly enhancing the blast effects (as well as fragmentation). A blast is nothing more than a very fast exothermic reaction say~5000m/s generating a large volume of expanding gas. Those reaction rates go up with temperature & pressure (PV=nRT).snayperskaya wrote:You got the pop poppop popopopopop bit right but not the Kaboom.Ammunition in a safe doesn't catastrophically explode in the event of a fire......hitchphil wrote:The idea of large quantities of ammo in a locked fairly well sealed gun safe / ammo safe that gives a good level of 'confinement' isn't one you would want to experience in a fire ................ :-)
pop
poppop
popopopopop KABOOM!
Love the t shirt slogan though :-)
http://www.libertysafe.com/what-happens ... -2734.html
If your house is on fire I would say the possibility of a gas explosion is a much greater risk........
An ammo safe rammed full of ammo in a fire will behave in a similar way, external heating will cook off ammo at the edges & a runaway reaction will generate more & more gas increasing pressure that accelerates the shockwaves of primers & cartridges detonating. Eventually the safe will rupture (that could in itself be a significant explosion) & the resulting hot unburnt propellant air mix can detonate too (that could be even bigger!). The video link displays unconfined propellants in open fire conditions (as well as pointless running over with caterpillar tracks?). Not the same scenario.
Take the video at 15mins replace the mesh box with a closed locked steel safe / gunsafe & see what happens ...but trust me stand a heck of a lot further back!

Ever seen how far a simple detonating cap will blow the lid off an empty 450rnds NATO ammo can? ...out of the football ground is the answer.
Gas mains are not a 'big problem' in a house fire, they contribute ~40Kw energy. Their danger is a gas leak mixing with air pre ignition. that's the conditions for a gas explosion, in many house fires gas appliances connections rupture & the uncontained gas ignites adding significantly to the heat of combustion, they dont tend to explode. All those aerosols under the kitchen sink however ...............

An ammo safe will however give you a few extra minutes to get out before it 'goes off'. A small amount of ammo isn't a problem but with the levels of FAC ammo holding increasing (because people want more firearm types, shoot more, or do disciplines that use more) we approach the condition of ammo less its primary packaging in a rammed full safe which is what this thread was exploring.
So my view is Do Not over pack an ammo safe, if needs -get another & keep the primary packaging (but yes GGG boxes are better than RWS) because they are designed to not only protect / display the product but to help prevent flash over & cook off of a relatively insensitive munition. In the UK the pack of any propellant or ammunition is approved by DOSG as part of its import licensing...not just marketing ............... & certainly not by the importers logistics, stores & shipping!
Quality control of Scottish Ethanol. & RDX/HMX
& my fav chemical is :-) 1,3,7-trimethylxanthine.......... used to kill frogs.... but widely consumed & in vast quantities by the French? Eh?
& my fav chemical is :-) 1,3,7-trimethylxanthine.......... used to kill frogs.... but widely consumed & in vast quantities by the French? Eh?
- meles meles
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Re: Maximising Ammo Storage Space
Of course, you could get a chitty from us and bury ikkle caches of ammo in the back garden. We'll look after it...
Badger
CEO (Chief Excavatin' Officer)
Badger Korporashun
Quidquid latine dictum sit altum viditur.
"Quelle style, so British"
CEO (Chief Excavatin' Officer)
Badger Korporashun
Quidquid latine dictum sit altum viditur.
"Quelle style, so British"
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Re: Maximising Ammo Storage Space
I use a break down shotgun safe (which holds quite a lot) and an internal ammo safe. The break down safe is quite large, in fact just over half the length of a 6 gun safe and nearly the same width.
Regards,
Geek
AI AT (.308/6.5CM), Ruger PR (6.5CM), American Rimfire (.22LR), Remington 700 (.223), Marlin underlever .38/.357/.44, Savage 6BR, RimfireMagic .22LR, Fabarm Lion (s1), Fabarm Axis Baikal S/S
Geek
AI AT (.308/6.5CM), Ruger PR (6.5CM), American Rimfire (.22LR), Remington 700 (.223), Marlin underlever .38/.357/.44, Savage 6BR, RimfireMagic .22LR, Fabarm Lion (s1), Fabarm Axis Baikal S/S
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