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colemanw February 21, 2009, 02:45 AM A couple of guys on another thread mention some old ammo that fired effectively despite being over a century old. What experiences with old ammo have you all had? The good:) the bad:fire: and the ugly:D-
Late 50s Remington .38 Special LRN No problem
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Afy February 21, 2009, 02:55 AM 8MM Mauser from the mid 30's..
No issues..
RandyP February 21, 2009, 02:55 AM Back in '71 we shot up some 1943 .45 hardball on the Army range for pistol team practice. Smoked more than current stock but it all went bang.
NuJudge February 21, 2009, 06:04 AM I've shot some .43 Spanish loaded by Remington about 1900. Most of it did not fire.
I've shot a lot of German and Polish 8x57 from 1936 to 1939. Almost all of it was sure fire.
I have a lot of US 1941 .30-06. I have not shot much of it, but it shoots clean and really accurate.
CDD
KC0QGL February 21, 2009, 06:56 AM I had some old .38 spl. that I think was approx. 80 years old. Out of 15 rounds 6 no fires, 2 slow burns, 1 primer blow out (had to dig small bits of primer out my thumb for a week).
DocBoCook February 21, 2009, 08:18 AM shot some old .45 acp while in the service. dunno how old, but it had more dust on the case than I had ever seen
Eric F February 21, 2009, 08:29 AM I shot a box of 30 remington dated 1908 last year so I guess 100 year old ammo, and yes it all worked.
472x1A/B February 21, 2009, 12:42 PM 11mm .43 Mauser, Production date 1899 Rem. Union Mec. Car. Co.
Shoot 5 shells every year on my birthday. Hope to start reloading these this year.
Peter M. Eick February 21, 2009, 01:40 PM 38/44 Ammo from the middle 30's. I have 3 more boxes of it that I will be shooting soon to chrono.
Some of it fires well, so well, it fires.
The Bushmaster February 21, 2009, 02:05 PM .45 Long Colt from the late 1890's...In, I might add, a 1895 Colt SAA in 5 1/2" dress with a rather colorful history...Unbelievable pleasure and honor...
jjohnson February 21, 2009, 02:10 PM Nothing exotic, but I've shot plenty of WWII milsurp in .30-06, 8mm Mauser, .45 ACP, .30 Carbine, .303 Brit among others. No problems - I don't recall a single one of 'em not firing. I'm still shooting some of that stuff.
Man, makes you wonder how much of that they made if we're still using it 60-70 years later...:eek:
Steve C February 21, 2009, 03:10 PM I've shot some old surplus .303 Brit ammo that was from the 1920's. It all fired but there where a few that was a little slow to go off, kind of a 1/2 second pause after the trigger was pulled.
schmidtundveßon February 21, 2009, 06:30 PM The oldest was probably .38S&W that I believe were from the twenties, maybe even older. I shot only one from a Webley and hit dead center from 10 meters :cool:. Then my friend tried one but it was, as someone called it, a slow burn and the bullet got stuck in the barrel about an inch from the muzzle :uhoh:.
tango2echo February 21, 2009, 09:25 PM Some VERY old .30-06 ammo. Came in a wood block with a wax paper wrapper. Could not read the writing on it, but it appeared military. Fired all 10 rounds with no problems.
T2E
22lr February 21, 2009, 09:30 PM 8mm from 1942, ive gone through 50 rounds so far without a single problem.
748 February 21, 2009, 09:40 PM Oldest I ever shot was old 8x57mm ammo, from about the late 1930s.
I have fired a few hundred of these and all of them functioned.
evan price February 22, 2009, 11:58 AM .45 ACP headstamped RA 34 (Remington Arms 1934) shot fine, brass reloaded good too.
Also lots of 8mm from pre-WWII of various flavors.
homeyclaus February 22, 2009, 02:24 PM I shot a few hundred copper-washed 7.62x54R that I was told was thirties era. The copper was was so oxidized we had to hose and rub each round down with break free so it would extract without having to bash the bolt handle into the table at the range.
Had a couple of hang fires, even on non-lubed round, no duds, could not get it to do better than 5" at 100 though, through a pristine '54 polish M44. More a pattern, than a group.
Gatofeo February 22, 2009, 08:30 PM Ten rounds of .45-70 military ammo dating to the 1880s.
This was done in the early 1970s, so it was 90 years old at the time.
It was the rifle and ammo of a friend of my father's. Two of the 10 rounds wouldn't fire. Eight went KABOOM and the slugs hit an old stump about 50 yards away.
How I wish I had that ammo today for my collection, or enough to fire a few over the chronograph.
orionengnr February 22, 2009, 08:39 PM Bought a crate (~1600 rounds, IIRC) of Euro surplus 9mm about 15 years ago. It was manufactured in the 30's. I used up most of it, and it all went bang, Still have a hundred or two left, and I expect it will do likewise. Don't shoot much 9mm these days.
Thingster February 23, 2009, 02:56 AM Don't know how old they were, but I've shot black powder .38 specials. Figure that would be the 20's at the latest, so between 85 and 110 years old.
jacob.elliott February 23, 2009, 11:03 AM nothing as old as these guys, but i killed a deer this year with some 1960s 6.5 Jap 140 grs. 200 yrds through both front shoulders
MkgReloader February 23, 2009, 11:58 AM Two boxes of 9mm's I reloaded in 1975 and just found after cleaning my basement shelves. All worked fine.
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