Once used brass and a blown up gun
Moderators: Bullseye, Moderators
- bigfatdave
- Master contributor
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- Location: near Camp Perry
- bearandoldman
- Ye Loquacious Olde Pharte
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- Joined: Tue Aug 16, 2005 10:30 am
- Location: Mid Michigan
I agree with the use of the word explodinate and it's past tense, that damn gun explodinated in my hands!!!bigfatdave wrote:I submit a motion to this commitee on the English language then.
"Explodinate" shall be designated a word and "Brandish" shall be struck from the language due to decades of misuse.
Coach1, thanks for the updates, please do report on the response from the ammo "manufacturer".
It has been added to my spell check dictionary as of right now.
You have great day and shoot straight and may the Good Lord smile on you.


- bigfatdave
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- blue68f100
- Master contributor
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- Location: Piney Woods of East Texas
Re: What I can say for now
Yes, Do contact the mfg of the reloader. They all carry insurance and will cover all repair cost. A lot of times they just replace the gun complete, this way there is no hidden damage.Coach1 wrote:
* The reloads were bought from Sillman Cartridge at the NC Fairgrounds show. http://www.sillmancartridgecompany.com. They seem to be a repuyable NC based company. We will see what response we get at this weekend's show. They will have a booth there. We bought reloads and new factory ammo from Georgia Arms at prior shows and had No problems.
David
SS MKIII 6 7/8" Fluted Hunter. Mueller Quick Shot, Bushnell 2x Scope, Hogue Rubber Grips
Custom Built 1911
SS MKIII 6 7/8" Fluted Hunter. Mueller Quick Shot, Bushnell 2x Scope, Hogue Rubber Grips
Custom Built 1911
BFD - the Alumagrips should hold up fairly well under these circumstances. I can only speculate on that brand as I have not witnessed or examined a set of these after a case separation.
Coach- your next round in the magazine was struck by a piece of the blown out casing or by concussion of the hot gasses during the detonation. The extra rounds in the magazine are always susceptible to secondary detonation with a case separation event. This is where the grips blowing out and venting out the excess pressure is not a bad thing. This is a better alternative than having all those hot gasses and excessive pressure fed downward and directly into a magazine full of fresh cartridges. Of course, the shooter's hand must have adequate protection but the amount of force secondary detonations can cause could turn the whole pistol into a hand grenade.
R,
Bullseye
Coach- your next round in the magazine was struck by a piece of the blown out casing or by concussion of the hot gasses during the detonation. The extra rounds in the magazine are always susceptible to secondary detonation with a case separation event. This is where the grips blowing out and venting out the excess pressure is not a bad thing. This is a better alternative than having all those hot gasses and excessive pressure fed downward and directly into a magazine full of fresh cartridges. Of course, the shooter's hand must have adequate protection but the amount of force secondary detonations can cause could turn the whole pistol into a hand grenade.
R,
Bullseye

- Coach1
- Regular contributor
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- Location: Apex North Carolina
Wow You guys are frightening me.
A grenade! Really? I am an admitted novice at pistol shooting.. and am having the best time - in a long time - for an old guy.. getting into the shooting sports. I guess I am just learning that being safe with handling the gun is important.. but it is not a no-risk sport. That said - I am staying with this!.. Just going to avoid gun show reloads.. at least for a while.
The 45 rounds were FMJ as I recall. I will check with my S-i-L to confirm. The mag blasted out of the frame.. and my assumption was that most of the gasses and bits went out with it. The next round (with the dented casing) did prompt a fleeting thought: "What if that one had a sympathetic detonation?" I have not posed that to John. But Bullseye's comments ring true.. it can happen.
He has not heard from Sig as yet. The LGS sent the whole gun to them on Tuesday. So, they likely just got it today. We will see the ammo vendor on Sunday. John's dad is visiting from Sydney and wants to go shooting with us on Saturday. Fun for the entire family!
BTW. I sent John this GTO URL and a recommendation... the Best Darn Gun Forum on the web! He talks with an accent but you avoid that with text
The 45 rounds were FMJ as I recall. I will check with my S-i-L to confirm. The mag blasted out of the frame.. and my assumption was that most of the gasses and bits went out with it. The next round (with the dented casing) did prompt a fleeting thought: "What if that one had a sympathetic detonation?" I have not posed that to John. But Bullseye's comments ring true.. it can happen.
He has not heard from Sig as yet. The LGS sent the whole gun to them on Tuesday. So, they likely just got it today. We will see the ammo vendor on Sunday. John's dad is visiting from Sydney and wants to go shooting with us on Saturday. Fun for the entire family!
BTW. I sent John this GTO URL and a recommendation... the Best Darn Gun Forum on the web! He talks with an accent but you avoid that with text

"You can't always get what you want. But if you try sometimes, you just might find, you get what you need." The Rolling Stones
Definition
ex·plod'·ify
Pronunciation: ik-splohd-ify
1. to expand grips, frame, and slide with force and noise because of bore obstruction or double charge, as opposed to poor cartridge support (e.g. Glock .40 Kaboom).
2. to burst, fly into pieces, or break up violently with a loud report, as a Sig with gun-show reloads.
3. to burst forth violently or emotionally, especially with pain, cursing, violent speech, etc.: "He explodified with cursing and horror, as his hand released the weapon".
—Related forms
explodifider, noun
explodified, explodifiding, verb
unexplodifided, adjective
Word Origin & History
explodify
English, 2011, from bigatdave "to explodify a Sig," originally, "explodinate a proofed gun (Sigs are proofed, right?)", later, "Explodify", to describe an intentional event, such as, ""I loaded up that teddy bear with tannerite, backed off to 50 yards, and explodified it" or "I was impressed at how well I was able to explodify that little propane cylinder"
Medical Dictionary
ex·plod·ify
to undergo a severe hand pain and astonishment instantly. The unexpected hand pain and mental surprise causes onset of shock, whether actual physical injury has or has not occurred.
Famous Quotations
"Explodinate" shall be designated a word and "Brandish" shall be struck from the language due to decades of misuse.
"It takes quite a screwed-up load to explodinate a proofed gun."
"If "Explodinate" isn't a real word, it should be. It sounds like what it describes!"
ex·plod'·ify
Pronunciation: ik-splohd-ify
1. to expand grips, frame, and slide with force and noise because of bore obstruction or double charge, as opposed to poor cartridge support (e.g. Glock .40 Kaboom).
2. to burst, fly into pieces, or break up violently with a loud report, as a Sig with gun-show reloads.
3. to burst forth violently or emotionally, especially with pain, cursing, violent speech, etc.: "He explodified with cursing and horror, as his hand released the weapon".
—Related forms
explodifider, noun
explodified, explodifiding, verb
unexplodifided, adjective
Word Origin & History
explodify
English, 2011, from bigatdave "to explodify a Sig," originally, "explodinate a proofed gun (Sigs are proofed, right?)", later, "Explodify", to describe an intentional event, such as, ""I loaded up that teddy bear with tannerite, backed off to 50 yards, and explodified it" or "I was impressed at how well I was able to explodify that little propane cylinder"
Medical Dictionary
ex·plod·ify
to undergo a severe hand pain and astonishment instantly. The unexpected hand pain and mental surprise causes onset of shock, whether actual physical injury has or has not occurred.
Famous Quotations
"Explodinate" shall be designated a word and "Brandish" shall be struck from the language due to decades of misuse.
"It takes quite a screwed-up load to explodinate a proofed gun."
"If "Explodinate" isn't a real word, it should be. It sounds like what it describes!"
Last edited by lucam on Fri Feb 18, 2011 1:52 pm, edited 1 time in total.