Strange Range Pick-Ups

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I was at my gun range scrounging brass after one of the local police agencies had finished practicing; found this and thought it would be of interest:

Apparently it's what happens when you mistakenly load a 9mm cartridge into a 40 magazine. The loaded rounds were also from the same practice field.

ETA: NOT the bagged ones; they're mine!
 

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Far more common than you think

We transitioned form the Beretta 92 to the Beretta 96. Many of the boys bought their old service pistols and we had wrong loaded magazines or wrong firearms come to the firing line all the time when we did qualifications
 
I wouldn't have thought it would have fired. you'd think the 9mm would just slide forward in the 40S&W barrel.
 
I wouldn't have thought it would have fired. you'd think the 9mm would just slide forward in the 40S&W barrel.
In most firearms the extractor spring is strong enough to hold the cartridge against the firing pin strike

So the cartridge head spaces on the extractor and not the case mouth
 
Burning up extra rounds after qualification with my Glock 23 and started to fire a loaded magazine. The round didn't fire so I racked the slide thinking that it didn't feed. The gun fired and the slide locked open with a bulged barrel. Examination of the rounds in the magazine showed 9mm mixed in with the.40. 9mm and .40 do not belong on the range together.
 
I bought a box of 40 that was returned when a customer brought in the gun he had bought yesterday saying things didn't look right. He fired two rounds out of the box in his new 45. It appeared that one person sold him the gun and the other the ammo but same shop same receipt.
 
9mm and .40 do not belong on the range together.

Neither does 40 S&W and 45 ACP..

Bought a P220 from an older guy, he told me that during a training drill ( others involved ) While reloading his P220 mag he picked up someone else's 40 S&W chambered and fired it..oops..

Gun was fine..
 
I managed to inadvertently fire a very hot 38 Super round in a 1911 45 ACP pistol. The brass expanded to 45 ACP dimensions but the round went down range. The worst practice mishap is firing 38 Super under a roof after forgetting to put muffs on!!
 
I'm always amazed @ how many people who know nothing about calibers try to buy ammo. Conversation @ gun shop:
"I need some Smith & Wesson ammo".
"What caliber?
"S&W"
"That's the gun maker, what caliber?"
"S&W! Colt make .45, S&W makes the other one!"
"Bring the gun in & we'll match it up."
Often followed by "Can you show me how to put it in the gun?" (a revolver) :o
 
I'm embarrassed to mention that when I got my Hungarian Femaru I assumed it was a 32 (Wartime) Auto, so of course it was the 380 version. Surprisingly, that combination worked OK, but the brass was ruined of course. Fortunately I had already planned to quit after just one mag full, and I'll shoot the rest in an actual 32! ;)

Froggie
 
I have seen this happen at private security classes and requals. I was an instructor at a school where many different calibers were used. The school provided all ammo which was laid out side by side. Some students did not pay attention to what they were loading. Other times a second student would help loading another students magazines.

Once a student loaded a 40 caliber backwards. Unfortunately the round chambered in the barrel. He attempted to use a cleaning rod to force the round out. We had to explain that you don't try to strike the rear of a cartridge. Yikes!!
 
I'd be more concerned with the ignorance of a man, "trained" in the use of firearms out in the public protecting citizens. Just because they are LEOs does not mean they are firearms experts...
 
I took a young hunter out for deer many years ago. He was carrying his father's rifle, a 7.5mm Swiss. I forget why I checked the magazine, but the ammo included not only 7.5mm but also .303 British and .284 Winchester. I'm not sure who loaded the magazine, the 12 year old kid or his college president father.
 
I didn't pick this up at the range, I removed it from a K frame, probably can't reload that one again. :-)

Have a blessed day,

Leon

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