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So quite possible and I know its wrong to assume but it may not have had a safety on it but to clamp a rifle in a vice with a piece of string to the trigger then hiding behind a brick wall is not a serviceability test in any sense.
But the main thing is despite the near catastrophic nature of this incident no one was seriously injured and hopefully the end user wises up about weapons usage and reloading practices.
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03-07-2016 08:57 AM
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Ironically, the Lee Enfield design is about as idiot proof as a service rifle can be, this shows that there are many levels of IDIOT, James Paris Lee didn't take account of this particular dimwit!
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Yes PC the press often feed on the negatives of our profession, mind you I passed my lunacy questions in the firearms test exceedingly well, also excelling at shooting a cow instead of a pig target and finally my group sizes were just to big at a 100m think it was 390mm for 3 shots had to be under 75mm.
Could not figure how I managed not to acquire my shooting licence. (All a big fib this lot) The press love hammering every little mistake but to them I say if the sh*t goes south and a war erupts you will sorely need civilians who can shoot well and posses good field craft tactics as pens and paper make a poor substitute in stopping an invading army hell bent on killing you.
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Originally Posted by
mrclark303
Ironically, the Lee Enfield design is about as idiot proof as a service rifle can be, this shows that there are many levels of IDIOT, James Paris Lee didn't take account of this particular dimwit!
The first electronic instrument I ever made was supposed to be foolproof.
The first user nevertheless managed to FUBAR it*.
*By removing the cover** and poking around inside with an earthing lead - as a candidate for the Darwin Award would naturally do with high-power 3-phase equipment.
**Which had a large red warning against precisely such misuse engraved on the front panel.
Lesson for life: there is no such thing as idiot-proof. Merely various level of idiot-resistance.
Last edited by Patrick Chadwick; 03-07-2016 at 10:47 AM.
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The main issue, as outlined by others previous, is the lack of facts in this incident account.
The only thing that can be reliably concluded is there was a firearms malfunction, and the shooter was not seriously hurt.
Claims:- Ishapore 2A1 in .308 had a case head separation
- The case remained stuck in the chamber without the head.
- Used unspecified powder from an unknown source to reload own ammunition.
- Fired 1 round of this ammunition.
- "Bolt" blew backwards, towards the shooter.
- (Some part of the rifle) Struck and broke shooter's eyewear, and small projectile injury to the forehead.
- Shooter found powder to be contaminated with other powder flakes.
- Rifle bolt is damaged.
- "Bolt head" "departed" but not the bolt.
- Bolt and striker function normally.
- Shooter supplied photo shows a damaged bolt head that is missing the extractor

- Had to open bolt with a hammer.
- Shooter supplies load data from round fired:
Lake City Brass, once fired, surplus. (Sentryduty comment: Could be Machine Gun fired surplus brass, which would have a "very hard" 1st firing, combined with incorrect powder could be a contributing factor in the case separation)
Powder was "assumed" to be H380 loaded to 40 grains
Bullet 168 gr Sierra.
Primer CCI
- Shooter custom loads another cartridge with similar load of unknown powder, and shoots through a different rifle "K-31" - flattened primer and hard to eject. SD Comment - Classic signs of over pressure and poor judgement
- Shooter fires 5 additional rounds of unspecified origin, claims no case head separation. Ejecting cases with cleaning rod, suggests the shooter is still using the damaged bolt head.
Claims end
Sentryduty comments:
Given no other information it appears the 2A1 rifle broke the bolt head locking lug upon firing a round which was loaded by the shooter from unknown powder. This appears to be a result of an over pressure condition/faulty ammunition.
Shooter failed to exercise safe reloading practices by using unknown powder from an unsealed container.
Shooter failed to heed caution by attempting to fire the same powder through another rifle after the incident.
A weakened surplus cartridge case may have contributed to, but would not be a primary factor to the case failure.
I would like to say there are some lesson to be learned here, but there isn't anything new, all of the above could have been prevented with proper knowledge and practices. Reasonably ought to have known better.
Last edited by Sentryduty; 03-08-2016 at 10:19 AM.
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1 PL West Nova Scotia Regiment 2000-2003
1 BN Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry 2003-2013
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Originally Posted by
Sentryduty
Shooter fires 5 additional rounds of unspecified origin, claims no case head separation. Ejecting cases with cleaning rod, suggests the shooter is still using the damaged bolt head.
Fired five additional rounds
a very thorough IDIOT at that ... he really was tempting God to smite him from the planet! This is always the issue at the firing point isn't it, you have to trust the guys to your left and right are switched on and haven't effectively devised a home made walnut and steel IED!
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Originally Posted by
Patrick Chadwick
In this connection, a couple of weeks ago I read in an online newspaper article that a deceased "gun nut" was revealed in the
UK
to have been hoarding all sorts of things that were presumed to be illegal, with masses of ammo to suit. Amongst the photos produced in the article were a couple of steel bins full of EMPTY cases. which, of course, are no longer live ammunition, but scrap brass.
Here is a link to another report on the same subject.
UK’s largest stash of illegal weapons found in parish councillor’s home – video | UK news | The Guardian
Notice the EMPTY cartridge cases and a bin full of inert projectiles shown as pseudo-evidence.
Neither of which would "cause an enormous explosion in the event of a fire" - as claimed by a police spokesman.
But anything that can be twisted into a negative interpretation is grist to the anti-gun lobbyist's mill.
No photos of actual live ammo. Why not? Was there any?
It makes one wonder - how many of those weapons were actually capable of firing?
Patrick, as you say all they had was empty cases and a few pics of "Hide Aways" I would say most of his collection was Deactivated, maybe a few Live parts and one or two Live firers but the story was blown up out of proportion, similar to a few years ago about Someone who collected grenades, he did have a big collection but nothing Live IIRC, just a lot of No36 inert grenades.
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