Large Storage Bag for .50 Cal Ammo Can?

kbm6893

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What would be a good size, heavy duty bag to line a 50 cal ammo can with? The CMP used to ship their surplus .30-06 ammo with heavy duty plastic bags in the ammo cans. Not looking for some cheap bag that’s gonna rip.
 
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Amazon sells “Anti Corrosion .50 Caliber Ammo Can Liners”. They’re about $7.50 each. I’ve never used them.

I’ve got ammo in original boxes, in ammo cans and in wood crates that’s decades old and still fine, but I keep it in a climate controlled environment.

If you ammo is subject to temperature swings and changes in humidity, the liners may do you some good.
 
I plan on storing ammo in the ammo cans. I just tried a 2.5 gallon freezer bag. Seems to work ok. I have some dessicant packs in there too.

If you're going to just store & leave it alone the dessicants won't last very long depending on the seal of the can & the relative humidity in your storage area. Even the larger ones have a very finite life before they need to be dried out - FWIW.
 
Many of my ammo cans are old, probably Vietnam or prior era.

I clean the rubber gaskets on the inside of the lid and then spray heavily with spray silicone. Keeps them sealing for many more years.

If I know it's not gonna be opened anytime soon - I'll toss in a medium-sized desiccant pack.
Seems to work.
 
Many of my ammo cans are old, probably Vietnam or prior era.

I clean the rubber gaskets on the inside of the lid and then spray heavily with spray silicone. Keeps them sealing for many more years.

If I know it's not gonna be opened anytime soon - I'll toss in a medium-sized desiccant pack.
Seems to work.


My only additional suggestion, for those who threw away the OEM boxes, would be cut up a few cardboard boxes to line the interior of the can (assuming you are worried about ammo clanking around and such).

RE: desiccant packs. I use re-chargeable desiccant packs in my food storage containers to keep the humidity down. One pack is about the size of a boxed bar of soap, and good to use on 15-cubic feet of storage (way more than the Husky dry-sealed storage containers). Ammo-cans, they are so air-tight that they will never fail (IMO) when stored in an inside temp-controlled environment. Geez, I still have a few Remington .222 reloads my father reloaded in the 1950s, and they still shoot fine (obviously after culling out split/cracked necks and such). And these were stored in nothing more than the nightstand for 60-some years.

I still have 5rd left to shoot on a perfect range day, so I can compare my current .222 reloads with. BTW, they are still dead-on at 200yd... ;);)
Just sayin'...
 
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If you're going to just store & leave it alone the dessicants won't last very long depending on the seal of the can & the relative humidity in your storage area. Even the larger ones have a very finite life before they need to be dried out - FWIW.

The cans are in a plastic tote in my garage. The dessicant packs are the rechargeable ones that turn pink when they need recharging. I check them once a month or so. They stay blue for 6 months or so. I recharge them and put them back. The garage is attached to the house. Not air conditioned or anything but it doesn't get freezing cold or very hot in there.
 
What I have is a different brand but look about the same.
[ame="https://www.amazon.com/Anti-Corrosion-Caliber-Ammo-Liner/dp/B00FQRN7AC"]Amazon.com : Anti Corrosion .50 Caliber Ammo Can Liner : Gun Stock Accessories : Sports & Outdoors[/ame]
 

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