Dustin
Regular Member
imported post
G20-IWB24/7 wrote:
Sounds like you work for Glock more than anything :lol::lol::lol:
I guess it was good that the other rounds didn't fire off too. Then what would have happen ? :banghead:
G20-IWB24/7 wrote:
And ? :uhoh:
Which is more likely to KB ? and Which one do we have the most examples of KB.ing ?
The answer is unsupported chambers. :?
G20-IWB24/7 wrote:
esstac wrote:A fat lip, and some small piece of plastic in my hand. Most of the pressure was directed downward into the magazine and the top 2 rounds were pretty gauged. It did fire off the round and eject the shell, with a huge buldge/opening in the web of the case where there is no support on the chamber/feedramp.
Sounds as if the GLOCK design did what it was supposed to do when catastrophically failing under the pressure of some foul ammo, and that is, to blow down and into the magazine, absorbing the majority of the explosion and saving your hand. Sounds as if it was a double-charged load and/or the barrel was partially obstructed.
Sounds like you work for Glock more than anything :lol::lol::lol:
I guess it was good that the other rounds didn't fire off too. Then what would have happen ? :banghead:
G20-IWB24/7 wrote:
As a general side-note: If an unsupported chamber "CAUSED" guns to KB, they would do it the very first time the gun was fired (which is at the factory, prior to shipment), not randomly, thousands of rounds into its service life.
And ? :uhoh:
Which is more likely to KB ? and Which one do we have the most examples of KB.ing ?
The answer is unsupported chambers. :?