Casquillos de pólvora para pistolas de 5 pulgadas: ¿Se pueden reutilizar?



Establecido Títulos ahora está ejecutando una oferta anticipada de Black Friday. Ve a y obtén un 10% de descuento adicional en cualquier compra con el código BATTLESHIP. ¡Gracias a Established Titles por patrocinar este video! En este episodio estamos hablando de los casquillos de pólvora para pistolas de 5 pulgadas. Para nuestros videos anteriores sobre cañones de 5 pulgadas: Para obtener su parte de la baraja: Para enviar un mensaje a Ryan en Facebook: Para apoyar este canal y Battleship New Jersey, vaya a:

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34 pensamientos sobre “Casquillos de pólvora para pistolas de 5 pulgadas: ¿Se pueden reutilizar?

  1. I was on an Adams class DDG back in the 80's. (USS Sellers DDG-11) I recall our 5 inch guns would spit the empty cases out from right under the barrel. They would roll around on the deck afterwards. I also recall our captain getting annoyed when they were allowed to roll off the deck and sink. We weren't at war at the time, so I suppose he was trying to keep to a budget 🙂 After every shoot-ex, the gunners mates would be out around the turrets repairing the non-skid. Those cases came out open-end first, and would cut rather clean looking half moon shapes out of the non-skid!

  2. Seeing the HUGE piles of brass ejected from any gun seems a terrible WASTE. At least reuse the material.
    I even wonder where on earth (yes) all that spent brass and steel is found, for all the weaponry that is shot or destroyed.
    Just look at the cratered field in Ukraine now. THOUSANDS of shells are shot every day.

  3. I believe if you endorse Established Titles through advertising you should open your Battleship videos with "I'm Laird Ryan Szymanski, curator for Battleship New Jersey Museum and Memorial".

    If you can do that with a straight face I would not cringe so hard when the ad section comes up.

    I understand the need for sponsorship, so please do not take this as a serious complaint but as an observation. Thank you for your content I am learning a lot!

  4. I have one 5"/38 Cartridge that was fired at Great lakes before the closed the range there. The Ejector leaves a 5-inch-long dent in the case near the mouth. A friend was a Master Chief Surveyor Retired and had friends at the base. He Served on Destroyers in WW II went to school to become a surveyor. He laid out most of the airfields with his team that US used in Southeast Asia.
    We still trained Armored scouts to crush used TOW Launch tubes back in the 90's. Infantry same rules for M72A1 LAW Tubes.

  5. Even if you didn't reload the five inch shells and they're made out of brass you could melt them down and reroll the brass into coils and then make 40 mm or 20 mm or
    .50 caliber machine gun brass out of it.

  6. In WWII, my father on a Liberty, came back with a cargo of used casings and empty oil drums.
    During Vietnam, ships doing gunfire support put the casings back into their containers and sent them back to an AE in net loads. No idea if they were reloaded.
    Also in Vietnam recovered AK-47 rounds and Russian mortar rounds were modified to explode. A modified AK round, when fired, was so powerful it forced the bolt out thru the back of the receiver and usually thru the head of the VC. The mortar rounds exploded when dropped into the tube, killing the crew. Since VC and NVA were known to recover unused ammo, the modified rounds would be left with or on dead commies. The process was known as operation Elder Son. VC #10

  7. I could pretty much tell which families were navy families by whether or not they had a four point five inch shell casing (from a Leander class frigate) for an umbrella stand when we went around to their house. We still have one that we keep gardening implements in, though it might be returned to umbrella duty soon.

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