View Full Version : 20 years old ammo, safe to use?
9mmlover
03-08-2015, 08:35 PM
I have 20 rounds bought in the early 90's. they look like new. The price sticker says $7:)
http://tapatalk.imageshack.com/v2/15/03/08/395b20308f44c0426fa3c2557187e4f3.jpg
Barth
03-08-2015, 08:37 PM
Ammo is all about staying dry.
If it's been stored well?
Really old ammo works just fine.
I wouldn't worry about it.
Only the standard precautions for all ammo apply. Be mindful hangfires and squibs. Neither are likely though.
In the early 1980s I shot barely post WWI military 06 and 45 acp. Both were fine.
Note - except for 30 Carbine ammo, all pre Korean War military ammo is corrosive, leaves salt in the bore.
Commercial ammo past the mid 1930s is non corrosive.
berettabone
03-09-2015, 09:41 AM
" Choot it!!!!!!!!!!"
marshal kane
03-09-2015, 10:14 AM
Bought in the early 90's? Looks fresh as the day it left the factory assuming proper storage! I just shot some government surplus .45 ACP military ball loaded in 1962. It all went "bang". I say you're good to go.
Pistolpacker1911
03-09-2015, 11:13 AM
Just to be the devils advocate, personally, I would not risk shooting old ammo unless it was in an airtight container from the factory.
I say this because moisture is capable of causing a misfire that lodges the projectile in the barrel. If you are shooting rapid fire or double taps, you could blow the gun up in your hands. Just because some of the old ammo fires does not mean all of them are good, and it only takes one to turn what you save in ammo cost into an insurance deductible payment.
Or maybe I'm wrong, only one way to find out, right?:p
Nytcrawler93
03-09-2015, 11:20 AM
I think it goes without saying that a little caution is in order but it is not a big deal.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
yqtszhj
03-09-2015, 12:58 PM
Not too sure about that ammo. Better send me about 19 of those rounds and I'll test them out for you.;)
Higgy Baby
03-09-2015, 01:21 PM
I quit hunting back in the 80's...and had quiet a bit of 12/20, 30.06, 357/38 left in the closet.
My two sons were both here last summer and they pulled out some guns and went for a shoot- not a hitch at all.
Even the 1100 cycled the ammo like all was new.
I even have a little 32 sw that came with my granddads old sw 32 police....that I know hasn't been used since the 50's- it ran fine.
89grand
03-09-2015, 04:36 PM
A few weeks back I shot my 1891 Argentine Mauser with ammo that was probably 40 years old if not more. 90's stuff is new by comparison.
If you are shooting rapid fire or double taps, you could blow the gun up.
Or maybe I'm wrong.
No maybe. You and the statement are both incorrect in any autoloader.
Twenty years isn't old in the least in factory ammunition years. My preferred carry load these days is HST and/or Gold Dot but I still have a bunch of Hydra Shok that dates back to the mid-late 90's that is completely carry trustworthy. A couple of my lesser used nines and .45s are still stoked with it and I use it as proof of lack of feed issues ammunition for new guns.
SlowBurn
03-09-2015, 08:28 PM
Looks like very nice carry ammo, but I don't think I'd carry it. No problem as range ammo, just not 100% confident it will go boom
9mmlover
03-11-2015, 09:39 PM
thanks guys for responding. seems mixed opinions. they look shinny just like new but I am worried about losing my fingers or damage my gun.
Listen closest to the the older gunnies who still have both hands, 10 fingers, and no holes in their feet...:spider:
Armybrat
03-12-2015, 06:58 PM
I've been shootin' some Winchester & Remington stuff from the early '70s without a problem
I've shot probably 15-20 16rd boxes of old German 9mm made in 1941-1943
Bawanna
03-24-2015, 11:29 PM
A detectives dad heard I was looking for 22. He sent me a thousand in two pristine bricks he bought in the late 40's early 50's. It looks like the day it left the factory.
^ Often hard lesson learned through experiences with wimmen....looks ain't everything, functionality be what's mostly important. :spider:
Bawanna
03-25-2015, 03:53 PM
I'll see how it shoots and report back. It's Peters brand and even if it don't shoot the brick boxes and individual boxes are probalby collector items. Perfect condition too.
I usually shoot 22 at a pretty slow rate so I'll watch for squibs.
wyntrout
03-25-2015, 05:40 PM
It's best destroyed... by firing it at the range since you only have that few rounds. I would buy some newer stuff for self defense, but that ammo ought to be fine.
Wynn :)
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