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Posted: 6/22/2011 6:13:08 AM EDT
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Are there different "levels of corrosive" when it comes to the currently available surplus ammo out there?
I've never shot any of it but it's becoming tempting with the availability of it floating around out there for a good price. I have a couple cases of that Yugo, brass-cased stuff that comes loaded on stripper-clips in 40-rnd boxes. 1120 rnds per case. It's says "corrosive primers" in the description at the ammo store... So does that mean that it's less corrosive than other corrosive types of ammo out there since just the primers are corrosive? I've never seen this topic dragged up and gone through so thought I'd ask. |
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How quickly corrosion sets in and how fast it proceeds has more to do with the relative humidity after the rifle is fired than with the compound used in the corrosive primer.
Corrosive primers leave behind salts. Salts attract water. Water + steel = corrosion. When there's more water in the air corrosion starts sooner and proceeds faster. Some people do not understand the process and believe that some primers are "mildly corrosive". |
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Quoted:
How quickly corrosion sets in and how fast it proceeds has more to do with the relative humidity after the rifle is fired than with the compound used in the corrosive primer. Corrosive primers leave behind salts. Salts attract water. Water + steel = corrosion. When there's more water in the air corrosion starts sooner and proceeds faster. Some people do not understand the process and believe that some primers are "mildly corrosive". This cannot be overstated. With enough humidity, any powder residue at all becomes "corrosive", in that it will hold moisture. |
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Pretty much all of the ammunition used by third world conscripts is corrosive. They seem to be doing just fine with it. Hell look at Vietnam. Their ammunition was corrosive, and you know it was humid there. Their rifles still functioned fine.
Just clean your weapon the same day you shoot it and try to keep it dry and you will be fine too. I always like to use WD40 and just spray a little bit on the internals and gas system after I am done shooting. I really don't know if it helps any at all but it makes me feel better and I have never had a problem. But I always clean within the same day of shooting corrosive ammo. |
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