- Reaction score
- 3,398
- Points
- 1,120
Rifle appears to have had a round fired in it that was loaded using a Dillon 650 press that didn't have the pistol powder properly cleared out before they started loading rifle ammo.
Here's my explanation:
"I'm guessing that the left side intubulator was mi-aligned with the bindle-rotor, and the phase shift of the timing cycle-rotor presented an encapulating torsion spike which had the dual expressor of bifurcational deconstruction AND failure of the microspool. This is a classic example such as has been demonstrated in incidents involving 40 megawatt range plasma systems. The operator is blessed not to have been reduced to a ring-gap filler compound. The best way to avoid situations like this is to engage the microspool from the home office, and maintain remote access monitoring of the cycle-rotor. "
Of note, if you're going to step into the world of reloading ammo, please....learn what you're doing before you blow up your gun.
Also, no-one was injured or killed (or maimed) in this incident.
Wear your eye-pro, and don't put pistol powder in rifle rounds.
NS
Here's my explanation:
"I'm guessing that the left side intubulator was mi-aligned with the bindle-rotor, and the phase shift of the timing cycle-rotor presented an encapulating torsion spike which had the dual expressor of bifurcational deconstruction AND failure of the microspool. This is a classic example such as has been demonstrated in incidents involving 40 megawatt range plasma systems. The operator is blessed not to have been reduced to a ring-gap filler compound. The best way to avoid situations like this is to engage the microspool from the home office, and maintain remote access monitoring of the cycle-rotor. "
Of note, if you're going to step into the world of reloading ammo, please....learn what you're doing before you blow up your gun.
Also, no-one was injured or killed (or maimed) in this incident.
Wear your eye-pro, and don't put pistol powder in rifle rounds.
NS