Count to 10 after missfire

I had a PFC in my Platoon lose his eye doing exactly what you saw on the video. The primer blew out and into his eye. Last time I saw him was when I visited him at Walter Reed. He was medically disabled and retired as a PFC.
 
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I was also taught to wait 30 seconds, and I passed that advice on to every person that I helped start into shooting. But I have never had a round cook off or experienced any time of firing due to a delayed primer burn, or anything else. But I still wait, just in case. I did once have a squib, which was an odd experience. But the sound and feel of that was strange enough that I was not foolish enough to fire another round until after I had cleared out the barrel.
 
Started life with muzzleloaders, so learned not to be in too much of a hurry to lose a finger or eye. Hope that troop is ok.
 
Hi,

My first boss at the trap and skeet range told us to count to 10, at the same pace many of us worked! ;)

I had a batch of milsurp .303 British ammo quite some time ago. They weren't that old (25+ yrs?) but must have sat on a loading dock in the Pakistani heat a bit too long. Some were so bad they pushed the 30 second rule. Tore all of 'em I hadn't tried to shoot down for the bullets. And didn't buy any more with a POF headstamp.

Rick C
 
I don’t understand what happened in the video. He had a misfire, he waited longer than 30 seconds, opened it up, EJECTED the cartridge, and then a boom from the gun! What happened?
gramps
 
I don't think he ejected the cartridge... will have to go back and look... he did pull the bolt back but I guess the cartridge did not eject and that might have been why it did not fire... Soldier did have Sun Glasses on and that might have been a good thing.
 
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