About 2 months ago, folks were doing a "gender reveal" using tannerite and colored chalk. If tannerite itself doesn't start fires, apparently adding chalk does.
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About 2 months ago, folks were doing a "gender reveal" using tannerite and colored chalk. If tannerite itself doesn't start fires, apparently adding chalk does.
And yes, it's been the driest winter I have seen in my 19 years up here at 9000 feet. We have maybe 50% of the ground under snow that's a few inches deep in mid March. And I see no significant precip on the radar forcast out till the 20th. Unknown after that. Not good for the "snowiest month of the year".
Be careful.
My god. It stuns me, the level of stupidity that ome people exhibit.
Apparently, this is the subset that requires "Caution: Flammable" warnings on matchbooks.
Passed on cans of surplus M856 during the ObamaPanic for this exact reason (cheaper than M193/855 at the time). Can't really shoot it anywhere in CO without this risk, year round. Even a nice sandy backstop makes me nervous.
I do have a box (20 rounds) of the stuff that I'll never shoot.
Hmmm.... I wish they'd change the name from Tannerite to something else. It's a generic term now. (Sorry HBAR, I'll shut up about it... I seem to have struck a nerve. My sincerest apologies.)
Anyways, am I the only one who digs a sand pit and/or cuts/clears a small area if shooting in dry/grassy areas?
Another question, what's the deal with everyone shooting tracers? I see the need in combat, etc... but for everyday plinking, what am I missing besides "'Murica and stuff"?
How many of us have a fire extinguisher/gallons of water in the car?
I used to shoot a lot of tracers, because I could buy pulled down bullets for significantly less than just lead/copper, and reload them.
While I was doing that, we managed to start 2 fires at the range that we used, but that was it. Both were extinguished at less than 100sqft, and then repeatedly checked for any "hot spots" before we left.
I always have a 20lb extinguisher with me in the truck (partly because of work requirements, but also it's just a good practice), and have used it several times and had to refill it.
I'll explain it. Dehydrated plants are mainly cellulose. If the cellulose becomes a fine powder, it becomes an explosive. Tumbleweed and other plants become a powdered cellulose. Tannerite sets off a crude explosive and causes a fire.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dust_explosion