What Happens When Ammo Burns — SAAMI Video Reveals Truth
A year ago, SAAMI released an important video concerning ammo and fire. With professional fire-fighters standing by, over 400,000 rounds of ammo were incinerated in a series of eye-opening tests. If you haven’t had the chance to view this video yet, you should take the time to watch it now.
The Sporting Arms and Ammunition Manufacturers’ Institute (SAAMI) has produced an amazing 25-minute video that shows what actually happens to sporting ammunition involved in a fire. This video shows the results of serious tests conducted with the assistance of professional fire crews. We strongly recommend you watch this video, all the way through. It dispels many myths, while demonstrating what really happens when ammunition is burned, dropped, or crushed.
Watch SAAMI Ammunition Testing Video
Video Timeline
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Over 400,000 rounds of ammunition were used in the tests. Some of the footage is quite remarkable. Testers built a bonfire with 28,000 rounds of boxed ammo soaked in diesel fuel. Then the testers loaded five pallets of ammo (250,000 rounds) in the back of a semi-truck, and torched it all using wood and paper fire-starting materials doused with diesel fuel.
The video shows that, when ammo boxes are set on fire, and ammunition does discharge, the bullet normally exits at low speed and low pressure. SAAMI states: “Smokeless powders must be confined to propel a projectile at high velocity. When not in a firearm, projectile velocities are extremely low.” At distances of 10 meters, bullets launched from “cooked-off” ammo would not penetrate the normal “turn-out gear” worn by fire-fighters.
We are not suggesting you disregard the risks of ammo “cooking off” in a fire, but you will learn the realities of the situation by watching the video. There are some amazing demonstrations — including a simulated retail store fire with 115,000 rounds of ammo in boxes. As cartridges cook off, it sounds like a battery of machine-guns, but projectiles did not penetrate the “store” walls, or even two layers of sheet-rock. The fire crew puts out the “store fire” easily in under 20 seconds, just using water.
Additional Testing: Drop Test, Projectile Test, Crush Test, Blasting Cap Test Drop Test
The video also offers interesting ammo-handling tests. Boxes of ammo were dropped from a height of 65 feet. Only a tiny fraction of the cartridges discharged, and there was no chain-fire. SAAMI concludes: “When dropped from extreme heights (65 feet), sporting ammunition is unlikely to ignite. If a cartridge ignites, it does not propagate.”Rifle Fire Test
SAAMI’s testers even tried to blow up boxes of ammunition with rifle fire. Boxes of loaded ammo were shot with .308 Win rounds from 65 yards. The video includes fascinating slow-motion footage showing rounds penetrating boxes of rifle cartridges, pistol ammo, and shotgun shells. Individual cartridges that were penetrated were destroyed, but adjacent cartridges suffered little damage, other than some powder leakage. SAAMI observed: “Most of the ammunition did not ignite. When a cartridge did ignite, there was no chain reaction.”Bulldozer Crush Test
The test team also did an amazing “crush-test” using a Bulldozer. First boxes of loaded ammo, then loose piles of ammo, were crushed under the treads of a Bulldozer. A handful of rounds fired off, but again there was no chain-fire, and no large explosion. SAAMI observed: “Even in the most extreme conditions of compression and friction, sporting ammunition is unlikely to ignite. [If it does ignite when crushed] it does not propagate.”Blasting Cap Test
Perhaps most amazingly, the testers were not able to get ammunition to chain-fire (detonate all at once), even when using blasting caps affixed directly to live primers. In the SAAMI test, a blasting cap was placed on the primer of a round housed in a large box of ammo. One cartridge ignited but the rest of the boxed ammo was relatively undamaged and there was no propagation.
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- BLAZING AMMO — The Great SAAMI Ammo Fire Test
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Tags: Ammo test, Ammunition Testing, Controlled Burn, Drop Test, Fire Test, SAAMI
I cry a little for all of the ammo wasted.
Ohhhhhh, the humanity … er, ammo!
Yeah, not much happens with small arms ammo. Propellant cooks off, pops the bullet out, opens the case up and that’s about it. Even larger stuff (20-30 mm cannon) is pretty boring. Though the HE filled ones can be a bit more dangerous if they detonate, though I did not see any no en-mass detonations. Normally, like the small arms ammo, the propellant fails (cooks off) first, popping the HE head out of the case. Only with some HE fills, or the head gets trapped in the flames, do you get true high-order detonations.
Fascinating and very, very reassuring, thank you SAAMI.
Very interesting article.
Harry
Thanks for doing such a good job.Keep up the good work.
This video will haunt me every time Bass Pro is out of my ammunition.
Hazmat shmazmat
Very interesting! It makes me feel much better about storing ammo in the garage. The sheer number of rounds being destroyed brought a tear to my eye though.
I am curious what would happen to rimfire ammo in the blasting cap and bullet impact tests. I would think that it would be more likely to chain react (detonate). It doesn’t look like it was tested here and I wonder why. Perhaps they were not able to get any, just like most of us right now.
In responce to John’s Nov. 6th note. I am The Fire Lieutenant / rifleman / Bomb Tech. shown in the film. Yes .22 rim fire was used in the film, not in an impact test, just in the burns. I dont think it would have reacted much differntly than the centerfire with bullet impact or blasting caps.
I am also a sport shooter and cryed watching that much ammo being destroyed, but it was for a good cause.
Wait, diesel fuel can deform steel? That’s unpossible! The 9-11 truthers insist jet fuel doesn’t burn that hot.
/sarc
I had a ” tin ” container of surplus 30 cal ( 1940 to 1945 vintage ) that went thu a house fire, after the fire, the tin had a top seam and a side seam pushed out and busted open and the cartiages inside were ruptured or had the bullets popped out the end. the loose ammo I had there was about the same, ruptured along the side or bullets popped out the end, with a lot of the bullets being from 1 to 2 feet away.
I remember seeing/reading about a test done on burning ammo years ago. The various cartridges were placed in cardboard boxes and then the boxes were dropped into a fire pit. IIRC the “exploding” cartridges didn’t even get through the sides of the boxes.
I could have saved them a lot of money. Whenever I burn leaves on my shooting range, there will be a few live rounds mixed in that cook off. Makes you jump, but no real danger.
No wonder I can’t find ammo in the store
no wonder we can’t find ammo up here…
What about ammo stored in an ammo can?