Man Is Injured While Hammering Bullets 20
There are a few basic rules that everyone knows: don't run around on your roof holding an antenna during a thunderstorm, don't pull the mask off the old Lone Ranger, and don't try to smash bullets in your driveway with a hammer. 21-year-old Matthew Dugger never learned the bullet rule. Dugger went to the hospital after one of the bullets he was slamming with a hammer exploded, blowing shrapnel into his leg. The hammering was witnessed by several kids belonging to Dugger's roommate, who was already under investigation for inadequate supervision of the children. "Anyone nearby could have certainly been hit by it. It's such a monumentally stupid idea," said Travis Brunson, owner of Chiquita Guns.
ok, wait... (Score:2)
This is a profoundly stupid, "darwin award"-grade act, but let's make it clear that the bullet isn't going to go flying off and shoot you. It's the casing fragments that are dangerous, and they tend to be lightweight and don't penetrate well. Enough to put an eye out, which I guess would give you a great story about why you wear that patch.
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... It was me first day with th' hook?
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agreed, they do well when snugly supported in the chamber, and when their back is being supported as well, but don't do nearly so well when unsupported. Reminds me of the occasional mention of morons that throw .22's into bonfires... but really, A HAMMER? Makes one wonder what he expected.
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I saw an old Mythbusters episode the other day about various items they put in an open fire to see what happens. Bullets was one of the items. The results obtained there is very similar to what happened here with the only difference the cause.
It's confirmed then - there is no medicine for stupidity :-)
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It's confirmed then - there is no medicine for stupidity :-)
Um, you know if the bullet is used properly, one can argue there is something that will cure stupid once and for all.
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Not very far. The casing is actually quite delicate compared to the forces involved. Without support of the chamber, the casing will always fragment, letting the gas escape before the bullet gets much energy. Injuries from ignition outside the gun are invariably from case fragments.
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True story-
When I was 12, I was walking past my friend Tom Egbert's house (he was 12 too) and he's in his back yard. "Steve! Come here!" he said. I got back there and asked "what?"
"I'm gonna hit this bullet with a hammer!" he said.
"You're going to WHAT?" I said. "Are you crazy?"
"Nah, it won't hurt nothin'".
I ran inside his house and stood by a wall. His mom was washing dishes (it was primitive in 1964, nobody had dishwashers back then) and she said "what are you doing?"
I said "Tom's going to hit a bullet wi
Gun Control (Score:2)
I kinda prefer a literal interpretation of the First Amendment, so I took great Umbrage when the People's Republic of California required I pass a test to get a permit to buy more handguns. When I took the test I was horrified to consider that some people were actually lame enough to not pass it. Maybe some people should not have guns. Proper testing could identify some perhaps.
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Cartridges not Bullets (Score:2)
Cartridges are the complete assembly of casing, powder, primer, and bullet.
Hammering on a bullet is a non event, nothing happens.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bullet
The Gods Themselves (Score:1)
Makes me think about Isaac Asimov's Sci-Fi piece The Gods Themselves. For those of you, who have not read it, it has three parts.
They are:
1. Against Stupidity
2. The Golds Themselves
3. Fight in vain.
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I meant...
2. The Gods Themselves
I guess I proved the point: Nobody can save me from my own stupidity...
Let natural selection happen (Score:2)