Or if the gun barrel is in direct contact with the element (as in “hid” on the bottom of the stove).
Or if the gun barrel is in direct contact with the element (as in “hid” on the bottom of the stove).
Well that is on you for looking inside the box. Do you know nothing about quantum gun ovens?
Oh if I tested this it would be full on danger oven. The most expensive part would be the ruined pistols (extra difficult in my country where we can no longer legally buy new ones)
I would need to ether dig a whole and also have a bullet stopping roof on it or build a four berm range. I was thinking the better way to test it would be to hand load some rounds with the same powder load and bullet weight (needed to cycle the action) but with a bullet equivalent that is not capable of much penetration (like a fine lead powder).
I think I would start with 2 rounds and the firearm fixed in place (to test if the action will cycle at all). Then go to oven with gun on baking sheet and 2 rounds. Then go oven rack and 2 rounds. And then maybe baking sheet and full mag if it all worked as theorized. I don’t think you need a way to pull the trigger since the firearm while heating is inherently in an unsafe condition, you would have to instead leave the thing to cool for a long time (also to rule out hang fires) and unload the rounds for inspection (not to be reused).
I would assume even if a few rounds went off in the barrel once a set temp was reached they would all cook off. The mechanics of this is really interesting.
I really want to test this, but the idea of inventing a more random version of Russian roulette where the gun is in a box and will shoot at random in a random direction you can not see…
Damn it, I need to test this.
This is the same person that put a loaded firearm in the oven we both know there was a round in the chamber.
And no, in my experience very few hand guns have the “limpwrist” issue.
Possible with a semi auto, since the chamber and barrel would transmit heat better to a chambered round then the magazine and all the safety parts don’t really assume cook off. Yeah a round fires, slide racks back and loads next round, next round cooks off, over and over until all rounds are the same temp.
Spooky stuff.
Yeah, I don’t block anyone. I do want to hear many views but I can’t get into another poorly made usa centric argument with another .ml user and remain sane.
I will still see the odd .ml post and go, neat but most of the time its the same old hexbear light sort of stuff. At this point my policy is more look but don’t touch.
Yes, it 100% is. And the mind blowing thing is it just seems to reinforce your meme. Its like a self own but they really lean into it.
Well I was thinking this might have been a but over the top and then I see this: https://lemmy.ml/post/19820595
In the reference picture of this clock the degree symbol does that. This is something you can see outside of the US on almost all temp readings, my phone for example does not have F or C next to it. (It is still in Celsius since I am not a monster)
Hate to point this out, but the fact there is a “C” on the sign kinda shows that no America did not adopt the metric system. If the US did there would be no reason to have “F” or “C” by the degrees as they are the last hold out.
I guarantee there is a full time person making a lot of money that has to come up with a good reason.
Not out yet. But you can manually set your clocks and disable boost.
Yeah, just leave that particular waveform uncollapsed please