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That first pic shows a Quackenbush safety rifle, a Sharps carbine, a Daisy Red Rider...one can only imagine the seriously collectible guns that went over the side that trip.
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10-18-2016 12:33 AM
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In the early 1970's, A few miles of the coast of my home town, there was dumped at sea, several hundred Lithgow
No1mk111's (and large amounts of mil 1950's Aust made Mk7 ball - purported to be 50,000 rounds plus) - told to me verbally by long past old timer
None ever washed back up to shore
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The Following 2 Members Say Thank You to CINDERS For This Useful Post:
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Originally Posted by
CINDERS
so ponder this can a rifle be fired in outer space! I reckon it could because the propellant supplies the reaction to push the projectile. Now going into Peters realm of I guess Applied Physics the equal and apposing forces rule by Einstein would that mean the astronaut being propelled backwards by the recoil forever and would the projectile go forever or until they both hit something.
Dude, you just blew my mind.
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Originally Posted by
butlersrangers
Photo proof that NY always sucked....
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My brother made a wooden replica of an Owen Gun when we were kids, it floated..... and my eldest sun made a replica SMLE out of balsa, it floated.
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Originally Posted by
CINDERS
the astronaut being propelled backwards by the recoil forever and would the projectile go forever or until they both hit something.
Yes...
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MikeVee, do you have any idea yourself as to the answer to the question that you asked in Post 1?
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Originally Posted by
CINDERS
I heard a fair bit of gear went into a deep sea trench West of Rottnest as well, as for the Mk III floating it will not float in water sea or fresh but it will in outer space, so ponder this can a rifle be fired in outer space! I reckon it could because the propellant supplies the reaction to push the projectile. Now going into Peters realm of I guess Applied Physics the equal and apposing forces rule by Einstein would that mean the astronaut being propelled backwards by the recoil forever and would the projectile go forever or until they both hit something.


Can a rifle be fired in space, yes, I wonder what difference a vacuum would make to muzzle velocity .. bet Peter's got the answer!
It will give the astronauts something to do on route to Mars I guess.
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