bluto wrote:xd ED wrote:I wonder if this guy from the midnight ammo company is appreciating all the free pub he's getting for his apparently illicit operation
Now be fair as none of us know what he has or does not have, I will talk to him friday and see what the deal is, I can understand what you guys are saying but lets find out before we lynch the guy internet style.
I am not for supporting a illegal operation but aside from doing business at his kitchen table and baggies as transport vessels ( I brought my own box when I went a few months ago ) I am hoping he is legit as even freedom-ammuntion or any of the others cannot come close, freedom wants $163+ ( in ohio ? ) for 250rds of JHP like ron's and from him it will be $80 so I am willing to talk to the man and get the scoop.
Erud wrote:Seriously though, what are we arguing here? He can't be trusted unless the government says he's ok, no matter what he knows, or how capable or qualified he may be?
Erud wrote:Seriously though, what are we arguing here? He can't be trusted unless the government says he's ok, no matter what he knows, or how capable or qualified he may be?
Seismic Sam wrote: If you DO know about reloading and have been doing it for decades, they you are painfully aware of the civil liability of selling ammo, and any experienced reloader in here will tell you there is no way in hell they will let somebody else shoot their stuff
Bessy wrote:Seismic Sam wrote: If you DO know about reloading and have been doing it for decades, they you are painfully aware of the civil liability of selling ammo, and any experienced reloader in here will tell you there is no way in hell they will let somebody else shoot their stuff
The blanket statement that there is no way in hell any serious reloader would let somebody else shoot their stuff is pretty harsh. Yeah, it IS pretty harsh, and unless you've experienced having part of your own body turned into hamburger, you really can't imagine how harsh the reality of that situation is.
I wouldn't let anyone shoot my stuff that didn't understand the risks involved, or someone who was prone to sue in the event of injury. They can think they fully understand the risks all they want, and have never sued a person before in their life, and once TSHTF all bets are completely off.
I certainly wouldn't sell it to strangers. That's exactly what this guy is doing.
Seismic Sam wrote:Bessy wrote:Seismic Sam wrote: If you DO know about reloading and have been doing it for decades, they you are painfully aware of the civil liability of selling ammo, and any experienced reloader in here will tell you there is no way in hell they will let somebody else shoot their stuff
The blanket statement that there is no way in hell any serious reloader would let somebody else shoot their stuff is pretty harsh. Yeah, it IS pretty harsh, and unless you've experienced having part of your own body turned into hamburger, you really can't imagine how harsh the reality of that situation is.
I wouldn't let anyone shoot my stuff that didn't understand the risks involved, or someone who was prone to sue in the event of injury. They can think they fully understand the risks all they want, and have never sued a person before in their life, and once TSHTF all bets are completely off.
I certainly wouldn't sell it to strangers. That's exactly what this guy is doing.
Bessy wrote:This may come as a surprise to you sam but you don't have a monopoly on reloading accidents or firearm related injury.
You are a smart man, I'm sure if you tried you could make your points without the condescension. Especially when it's not warranted.
Seismic Sam wrote:Bessy wrote:Seismic Sam wrote: If you DO know about reloading and have been doing it for decades, they you are painfully aware of the civil liability of selling ammo, and any experienced reloader in here will tell you there is no way in hell they will let somebody else shoot their stuff
The blanket statement that there is no way in hell any serious reloader would let somebody else shoot their stuff is pretty harsh. Yeah, it IS pretty harsh, and unless you've experienced having part of your own body turned into hamburger, you really can't imagine how harsh the reality of that situation is.
I wouldn't let anyone shoot my stuff that didn't understand the risks involved, or someone who was prone to sue in the event of injury. They can think they fully understand the risks all they want, and have never sued a person before in their life, and once TSHTF all bets are completely off.
I certainly wouldn't sell it to strangers. That's exactly what this guy is doing.
Seismic Sam wrote:Like hamburger from a reloading accident is any different from hamburger any other way?? Are you REALLY going to try and tell me there's a difference after the fact?? REALLY?? Either way, there's this tremendous impact, you're damaged goods for the rest of your life, and you'll never be the same again, and you gotta live with it. So here you go sunshine:
Coulda been a reloading accident, but it was a snowblower back in 1968 with a clutch so you could stop the blades without stopping the engine. I clutched it 31 times, and cleaned it out 32 after 3 hours of work, and it was getting dark, and I was tired. Only problem was we were snowed in, so no medical attention for three full hours, and I got to sit in a chair and watch the marrow ooze out of what was left of the bones. You wanna tell me that a double charge of Blue Dot would have made the slightest difference in the level of trauma involved?? If you had lost the eye altogether, I'm pretty sure you'd be whistling a different tune. What turns you into hamburger is entirely irrelevant. Reloading accident, snowblower, Claymore, drunken driving, it's all the same after the first 20 milliseconds.
Seismic Sam wrote:I'm just going to ignore the sarcasm, and tell you about another experience that happened less than a year later that pretty much embodies the seriousness of reloading, and the consequences. Was taking an advanced inorganic synthesis lab as a junior, and you picked an organometal compound off a list without knowing what was involved, and then had to make the stuff. I drew the short straw, and got something that required a reaction with sodium shot in the first step in ether, and then a reaction with vanadium tetrachloride, which was so unstable it would even react with oxygen, so you had to do this in a nitrogen atmosphere. It was also toxic as hell. I get sent up to a blowout room to do this, and this is a room with steel reinforced concrete walls, a 1" thick steel door opening inwards, and the outer wall is mounted on clips so if you blow yourself up the outer wall will just blow off its clips and preserve the integrity of the building. The best feature was this big 9' high by 18' foot wide woven potholder like you made in Boy Scouts, except it was made with 3/4" diameter steel cable. The purpose of this was to keep the pieces of you and your experiment from blowing all over the campus quadrangle and ruining the scenery. If you left so much as a speck of sodium the size of a pinhead in the 1st step, or maybe even less, the VCl4 would detonate when you added it in the 2nd step, and you would be very toxic toast. The room had no telephone, no fire extinguisher, and no emergency call button in it. With diethyl ether, all of those are completely useless. When that steel door slammed shut behind you, you were TOTALLY on your own, and the penalty for the slightest mistake was a very gruesome death. Compared to that, reloading is a walk in the park, but once you put your ass 100% on the line like that, you're never going to be able to rationalize that you can be a little more sloppy than that with some nice, stable nitrocellulose that "only" generates 55,000 PSI when you use it properly. You recovered from your accident and I got permanently disfigured. If our positions were reversed, you'd be the butthead and I'd be the one questioning what your effen problem was.
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