I volunteered to be a line safety officer for the Arizona pistol championships so I could get the feel of bullseye shooting before I jump into it next month.
A gentleman was shooting in the .45 service pistol competition and had his pistol blow.
He is alright, his hand was pretty stung(only word I could come up with).
He was shooting factory Federal ball match(I believe),just glanced at the box.
The grips were blown off, magazine in pieces, it took us about 15 minutes to get the gun apart.
When we got it apart, the barrel lugs were sheered off and the .45 case had blown out toward the rear at the 6'o clock position and the primer was blown out.
I have never seen one, but have read about this happening.
Bottom line is that he is okay and he packed it up and left after that(I do not blame him, would have done the same thing).
He was lucky, to say the least.(he left with all 4 fingers and a thumb).
Clarence;
Saw a blown .45 this weekend
Moderators: Bullseye, Moderators
Sounds like the pistol fired out-of-battery. Several possible causes for this, so without an inspection it is hard to say exactly what happened. I've seen this a few times, mostly with reloaded ammunition that is not crimped correctly. One of the last pistols I saw blow like this was a S&W Model 52. The owner had the grips blow out, powder scorch marks on his hand, and some tender, red, swollen fingers. Are you certain it was factory loaded ammo? Sometimes people reuse commercial ammo boxes to carry reloads. I've also seen plenty of factory rounds with the case mouth dinged, and the cartridge didn't fit into the barrel's chamber properly. I always "drop check" my ammo before a match. Ensuring that there's no ammo related malfunctions is all part of my match prep.
R,
Bullseye
R,
Bullseye

-
- Regular contributor
- Posts: 181
- Joined: Tue Mar 04, 2008 7:31 am