As a retired firefighter, my powder and primers are stored, apart, in the basement, with a dehumidifier. Store them on, or barely above floor level. In a fire, all your heat rises, and the floor stays "cool", unless you get a contained smoldering fire. Those are explosive, in themselves. Also, if you don't have a basement, store your powder, and primers, on the lowest floor, preferably in an outside corner. Fire, like heat, tends to rise. If you can build a small box, with steel studs and drywall, in an outside corner, on the floor, that's going to be about the best you can do, short of building a concrete block container. Store all your loaded ammo, down as low as possible too.
I’d think a concrete shed proud of the house outer wall with its own house-side wall and with weatherproofing as well as hinges mounted on hardware designed to shear off the doors harmlessly in the worst case scenario while maintaining storage security would be ideal, albeit overkill... Next best thing is a metal box with a heavy, insulated sideways hatch access for the inside and the same weatherproofed shearing hinge mount doors to the outside. The idea is to have the door give at a way lower amount of force than the hatch.
My primers are stored in food saver vacuum bags with a pack of diccisant then put in an ammo can, powder cans are also stored in Ammo cans with packs of desiccant, my metal cans of 3031 I got in the early 80's have ZERO rust. cover box with concrete board, my reloading room is lined with concrete board, waterproof and much more heat resistant, the storage cabinet is also double wall fire resistant, magnets and detent springs hold the doors closed.
This kind of storage is so important in particularly humid parts of the US. In CO, we are so dry that we really don't worry about moisture related issues. Proper storage is usually in a wooden box, or maybe even a wooden shelf, in the basement, where it is always cool, dark, and dry. Happy New Year!
I consider myself as a qualified basic reloader so I enjoy listening to people who teach me new things. I’ve always wondered how powder stored in a typical Texas garage for 10 years would work if used? At what point would a powder become unstable to use? Same question for primer storage and would different powders respond better or worse than others? Like you, I keep mine under strict environment control and I never buy someone’s gun powder unless it’s from a close friend and I KNOW it was stored properly.
Long time subscriber and fan. Hadn't really thought about it before, but now that I've watched this and reasoned it out in my head, I'm moving my sleeved primers from the metal ammo cans into plastic ones.
My cooler I have used for over 20 years as my daily lunchbox for work is the same model. :D The colors are red and white instead of green, burgundy and white. It's also the one I take with me out in the boat fishing.
i started out with a couple plastic totes for primer and powder but that soon became cumbersom a 10 on the fussy scale then it was a non working dorm fridge and now is a non working upright freezer with about 2 pounds of desicant in the bottom.
I was lucky enough to "acquire" a really nice large fire rated chemical cabinet years ago from a job that I did. It works great to store ammo and reloading components. I also mounted a couple of the automatic fire extinguishers. One I put right over my reloading bench and the other is inside the cabinet.
I'm commenting here so you might see it, my comment is about powder coat. Try mixing Eastwood silver powder coat with Eastwood blue or green. I've noticed when I do this I get good coverage, a nice iridescent color and almost no sticking together and the few that might stick leave no bad spots. It really works great.
Vacuum seal, ammo box, gun,fireproof gun safe and safe room there you go!!!!So that's my deal!!!So my house burned, and both of my safes went through a tremendous fire and then water on top of that from the fire department so I have first-hand experience, my gun safe, save my guns and my powder and my primers and my ammo I cannot believe it that was before I had any ammo can storage and any vacuum seal.All my reloading supplies were in a fireproof safe. I still have them today and they still work. Every round shot so far has went off after the fire. So better protect what we got because it's gonna be very hard to get more from now on, if not impossible in the next few years to come!
You can buy a big bag of kitty litter that is 100% silica and put that in coffee filters or whatever for moisture control. It’s the same stuff that is in the small bags in products you buy. Amazon sells big bags of it
Just got into reloading I’ve been researching and planning for years and just went ahead and made the jump and found your channel and just want to say thank you..... all of your insight has been really helpful and have been watching all your videos while in the loading room..... great info ! But now I just ordered molds and sizers and furnace to get started molding ..... and thanks to you I know what powders to get (haven’t ordered that yet but fixin too ! Using your fussy chart ! ...... Thanks again and really appreciate your time you put into all your videos ! Keep um comin ! Looking forward to your next ones .....
Tell these guys to quit leaving powder in the dispensers! But yes I had a metal 40mm box I was storing primers in until I realized I had a f×ckin bomb in the basement. Now they are in gallon freezer bags . I don't ad silica to the bags. I let the powder and primers commit to their own equilibrium of solvents in their respective chemistry. I like the cooler idea , you're making us country bumpkins look smart ! I don't know if we need that attention.
I've put powder in a mason jar with some silica gel packs because I accidentally spilled it on my carpet and I stayed up every bit that I could but a lot of other junk came with it and I have yet to go through it and pick all the little teeny pieces of leaves and grass out lol I also keep all of my shotgun shells that I don't plan on using anytime soon side of a air tight PVC canister that I've made and that has big kitchen towel filled with rice and rubber-banded so it'll suck up moisture from that end and I have silica gel packs inside of it above a couple layers of shotgun shells and so far so good I kept shotgun shells in it up to about five years and the ones that I did have in there worked well
I have my powder and primers in a shed with no ventilation. It gets hot in the summer cold in the winter. Its dry as a bone but I cant keep it cool very well. Is that a big problem?
All my powder is in the original tubs out in my garage. I keep a dehumidifier running but it's not heated. Sometimes I worry about it being in the 20's but so far I haven't had any issues with powder going bad.
Great tips, buddy. I’m going to share this on the Reloading FB channel. Lots and lots of brand new reloaders there. BTW...sheetrock is a great idea, and there is a type called, firerock...used in garages.
I keep my powder and primers in my walkin pantry building. Heated in winter, cooled in summer. Temp stays between 50 and 65 degrees. Everything is on wire shelving, off the floor, and plenty of circulation.
I use old school lockers with the louvered doors to secure my primers and powder. They are in a climate controlled location so I have all my stuff in wooden boxes in separate lockers
Wouldn't the rubber seal on the ammo box melt away there by venting the box before the primers got hot enough to go off and build pressure? Maybe a good experiment to try
Elvis opens the cooler inside the wood box and said there's "some primers" I almost cried LOL I haven't seen primers since last July except for 200 that I found two days before Christmas and it's like money burning a hole in my pocket I want to shoot them so bad because I'm tired of some recycling primers this primer shortage needs to end so bad
I always keep full 5,000 sleeves of each size on hand. Luckily for me it' never less than 40,000 so 8 sleeves of each. I never gave more than $128.50 for any one of those sleeves. I still am taking it easy since last April shooting and reloading because I know the shortage will go on years, not weeks or months. It may end up being all 4 years of Joe Biden's Presidency. I won't rule it out or plan any differently.
I store mine in a mink lined cedar wooden box with a tube of venison summer sausage to trap any moisture. Then shrink wrap the box three layers of black plastic (gotta be black), and run an ultra violet lamp and a three bladed fan in the room 24/7. Any more than three blades tends to create a vortex that can waft through the plastic and cause ignition degradation. Seems to work. 😕
Also, I have a refrigerator that I store my powder in the bottom and primers in the freezer. This is in an unheated with no air-conditioning out building. It is locked and secured. Opinion please. My options are kind of limited.
I do like the idea of the powder be in in an insulated enclosure. This allows the temperature change to be more controlled slower rise and fall. Less chance of moisture. It’s not all bad. Just keep an eye on it
@@elvisammo Yes and a refrigerator also serves as a class 4 locker. All the gun shops around here use them with a padlock as I do. The door seal acts like a pressure break and the inside is coated and/or aluminum which makes it non-sparking.
@@elvisammo I also have a golden rod inside it and keep charcoal briquets inside it to absorb moisture. I just have to change the out or heat the briquets up a bit in my toaster oven to remove moisture
Don’t kid yourself. The local fire Marshall himself asked me if I reloaded or had a lot of Ammo. I refused to answer and he told me the first pop they hear they will stand back and let it burn. The fire dept is not putting out your house fore if you have any ammo or reloading components.
@@elvisammo Lmao, I for sure don't want you in any danger. What I need is an old gun that fires to see (firing remotely). I believe the iron oxide from the rust might make it very interesting.
@John Beige agreed. I am keeping only for just in case. So far I have 1.5 lbs that are bad. One I have plenty of. The full lb not so much. Once this shortage is over whenever that is I will dispose of all of it.
I bought fire proof file cabinet. But it is so air tight. It wooshes as you shut drawer. But if it can start fire and self ignition. Do you want it to breath a tiny bit.?? Like Maby do wood box then fire brick . Make your own. Breathable. Fire box.????
black powder is the most dangerous propelant to store , never put nitro ,primers or bp in a strong kabinet or safe never together even if it is fireproof ,thats only for a short time the case. a wooden kabinet is more safe if you keep a amount a water in plastic bottles inside ,they will melt and the water takes heat ,but the isolated box is good idea ;-)
I like your ideas's elvis but U.S. ammo cans are rated to certain pressures and heat range before failure. Did not believe it myself but 2 years i was moving and the UHAUL caught fire and all my stuff burnt my primers were in ammo cans they blew but the integrity of the ammo can held
There is a bunker company that does alot of vids on TH-cam that recently had a fire, To my surprise, the cans that had 50 bmg. were not as damaged as I would expect, My only guess is the gaskets melt away first allowing *some* pressure to escape. For it to survive igniting all the powder and primers from a bunch of 50 bmg is kinda impressive. That had to have been a lot of pressure.
I was going to mention that.especially with the styrofoam ice chest........E.S.D. (electro static discharge) they make a special conductive plastic called velostat for use with explosives ect...
storing in a ammo can is safe . i hate to disagree with you elvis . i realy do . i had 5 ammo cans full of ammo . some in boxes and some lose . and they were in a fire . lots of dents in the ammo boxes but none of the rounds got through . the fire was so hot that when the ammo boxes were opened up there was no brass left inside of them ! the fire vaporized the brass and bullets ! had one can full of primers , it stayed intact and everything inside was vaporized allso . the fire was at a friends place i was staying at right after my divorce started . glad everything else i had was in storage . the fire safety association i think that is their name . says don't store smokeless powder in a safe . if it was to get to flashpoint it would become a bomb . they say to make a wooden cabinet with one weak side so that the pressure would come out that side . i think the metal powder boxes are made with a weak side . but i am not sure on that . talk to your local fire dept , they will gladly help you make storage of reloading supply and ammo safe . not just for you but for them also if god forbid you have a fire . great video i know you are talking about more than a fire in this . most new and some old reloaders don't know just how to store stuff . and never store ammo , powder or primers under a staircase . firemen might need to use it if it is usable . don't want it going off underneath them !
Hi that's because ammo cans are designed to store ammo larger amounts gun powder need a container that has a way for the to escape you can look the code on legal storage boxes they're made with 1 inch thick wood sides
I have a 5 gallon bucket of 4227 sealed up with a couple thousand primers dumped into the same bucket... That way they can better work together when loaded. And i put it into a 50 gallon drum of cement to keep it safe from fire and let the cement all harden. But i put a straw through the cement into the bucket to make sure it can breath. I feel like I'm pretty safe from fire. Lol jkjk I'm not that retarded. 😂😂😂😂😂🤷🏼 that thing is jusy waiting for a flame hehehe
I've been told its almost impossible to ruin primers.. maybe I'm wrong but their shelf life is extremely long..? Put the powders I can see.. but against fires is a good reason.
temperature changes makes powders desintegrate ,if stored a long time ,also the primers compound will lose the binding of the components ,and then you got misfires
I've tried most everything imaginable to deactivate primers. Soaked for days and alternately flushed with cold/hot water and detergents, and could always get a bang out of them between an anvil and a hammer. But, a big BUT, they were muffled and inconsistent. Some loud, some weak. I believe proper storage has more to do with consistency, than "does it still go bang?"
@@aolinger680 thats tru.the pil in the primer is made of bounded britlle crystals .they are sensitve to impact. A blow with a hammer is not the impact of a firingpin.that is only a small point .with the hammer you generate a lot of heat and the complete primer is hit ... A primer will loose its compact hard design most by temperatur changes and then you get misfires.thats why keeping them in dry cellar or isolated box wil.keep them more consistant
With the price of primers these days I keep mine stored in a zip lock bag in my toilet tank. Thieves won't look there and in case of a fire they won't burn!!!
Yahshua - you know Him as Jesus - was born to a virgin, turned water to wine, taught, healed the sick, raised the dead, casted out demons, walked on water, calmed the storm, and fed a crowd of thousands with a few fish and a few loaves of bread on two separate occasions, among many other things. He was killed on the cross as payment for the sins of all mankind, three days later He rose from the dead. Forty days later He ascended into heaven where He sits at the right hand of the Father. He is returning very soon, but before He does, Satan, the devil, is coming to pretend to be Jesus/God (2 Thessalonians 2:1-4 and Revelation 2:10). Satan is an angel, and he will have certain supernatural powers with which to try to fool everyone. He will, for example, be able to make fire come down from heaven in the sight of men. He will only be on earth a short time before the real King of Kings, Jesus Christ, God in the flesh, returns. When the real Jesus comes we will all be transformed into our spiritual bodies at the same moment. Jesus came in the flesh to offer forgiveness of sins and eternal life to anyone who believes and calls on His precious name! if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved. - Romans 10:9 KJV Now when Jesus was in Bethany, in the house of Simon the leper, There came unto him a woman having an alabaster box of very precious ointment, and poured it on his head, as he sat at meat. But when his disciples saw it, they had indignation, saying, To what purpose is this waste? For this ointment might have been sold for much, and given to the poor. When Jesus understood it, he said unto them, Why trouble ye the woman? for she hath wrought a good work upon me. For ye have the poor always with you; but me ye have not always. For in that she hath poured this ointment on my body, she did it for my burial. Verily I say unto you, Wheresoever this gospel shall be preached in the whole world, there shall also this, that this woman hath done, be told for a memorial of her. - Matthew 26:6-13 KJV Seek ye the LORD while he may be found, call ye upon him while he is near: Let the wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts: and let him return unto the LORD, and he will have mercy upon him; and to our God, for he will abundantly pardon. Be ye also patient; stablish your hearts: for the coming of the Lord draweth nigh. To anoint your self, the sick, or a building for spiritual protection: Get a small bottle of olive oil and pour off a small amount into a smaller vessel like a vial or baby food jar. Use the rest of the bottle for cooking. Ask the Lord to bless your vial of oil in Jesus name. Anoint yourself with the oil by placing a dab of oil on tip of finger and touch it to your forehead, and ask the Lord to bless you/heal you. To anoint your home or other building: place a dab of oil on your finger and anoint the door posts and order all negativity and evil out of the house, and order that nothing negative or evil can enter into your home including piggybacking on a person entering, order it to be so in the name of Jesus. Anoint all potential entrances to your home. To anoint the sick: place oil on tip of finger and touch it to the head of the sick and say a prayer of healing over them in Jesus name. See James Chapter 5:14-15..,,.,,
Sorry brother, I love your videos but your logic is flawed in this case. A cooler is horrible unless it's in a temperature controlled space. If a cooler changes temp from hot to cold and back.. it will fill with water due to condensation. Not trying to be rude, just letting you know. Peace
As a retired firefighter, my powder and primers are stored, apart, in the basement, with a dehumidifier. Store them on, or barely above floor level. In a fire, all your heat rises, and the floor stays "cool", unless you get a contained smoldering fire. Those are explosive, in themselves. Also, if you don't have a basement, store your powder, and primers, on the lowest floor, preferably in an outside corner. Fire, like heat, tends to rise. If you can build a small box, with steel studs and drywall, in an outside corner, on the floor, that's going to be about the best you can do, short of building a concrete block container. Store all your loaded ammo, down as low as possible too.
Hi you can look up the code for legal storage boxes they're made with 1 inch thick wood sides
I’d think a concrete shed proud of the house outer wall with its own house-side wall and with weatherproofing as well as hinges mounted on hardware designed to shear off the doors harmlessly in the worst case scenario while maintaining storage security would be ideal, albeit overkill...
Next best thing is a metal box with a heavy, insulated sideways hatch access for the inside and the same weatherproofed shearing hinge mount doors to the outside.
The idea is to have the door give at a way lower amount of force than the hatch.
Thank you this is great to think about. Safety first means a lot less worry if the worst happens.
My primers are stored in food saver vacuum bags with a pack of diccisant then put in an ammo can, powder cans are also stored in Ammo cans with packs of desiccant, my metal cans of 3031 I got in the early 80's have ZERO rust. cover box with concrete board, my reloading room is lined with concrete board, waterproof and much more heat resistant, the storage cabinet is also double wall fire resistant, magnets and detent springs hold the doors closed.
That’s some fine detail... sounds Right! 👍👍👍🇺🇸🇺🇸thanks for the info
I wish you would make a video. This sounds like a really well prepared area which deals with such volatile chemistry.
This kind of storage is so important in particularly humid parts of the US. In CO, we are so dry that we really don't worry about moisture related issues. Proper storage is usually in a wooden box, or maybe even a wooden shelf, in the basement, where it is always cool, dark, and dry.
Happy New Year!
Thank you Elvis. In addition to coolers, I use an old (not operational) dorm size refrigerator.
@John Beige
Quite a good application of ‘rollers’ sir! Heavy sukkers are fridges. Thankya.
I consider myself as a qualified basic reloader so I enjoy listening to people who teach me new things. I’ve always wondered how powder stored in a typical Texas garage for 10 years would work if used? At what point would a powder become unstable to use? Same question for primer storage and would different powders respond better or worse than others? Like you, I keep mine under strict environment control and I never buy someone’s gun powder unless it’s from a close friend and I KNOW it was stored properly.
Long time subscriber and fan.
Hadn't really thought about it before, but now that I've watched this and reasoned it out in my head, I'm moving my sleeved primers from the metal ammo cans into plastic ones.
Not first.
In construction a firewall with a 2 hour burn rating is made of 2 layers of 5/8 sheetrock overlapped on each side of the wall.
Good info right there... this should be helpful..👍👍👍🇺🇸🇺🇸
is this for documents or photo albums ???,not much heat is needed to get the ignition of powders and primers.
My cooler I have used for over 20 years as my daily lunchbox for work is the same model. :D The colors are red and white instead of green, burgundy and white. It's also the one I take with me out in the boat fishing.
Great topic and advice EA, definitely got me thinking about my storage. I think I’m going to be building some Sheetrock lined boxes.
Boom! Good to see ya Elvis!!!!
I know I said this before but HOLY S#!+ I'm glad you're back.
Can’t get enough... love to hear it!!!👍👍thanks!!!
As always, a great video and very informative. I personally like to store my powder in little brass cylinders. I do do use the desiccant packs.
i started out with a couple plastic totes for primer and powder but that soon became cumbersom a 10 on the fussy scale then it was a non working dorm fridge and now is a non working upright freezer with about 2 pounds of desicant in the bottom.
Some great thoughts and ideas. Will rethink what I'm doing now. So thanks Elvis.
Getting the wheels turning is my favorite thing to do!!👍👍👍🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
Thanks Elvis, just gave me some ideas on storage.
You welcome brother!
I was lucky enough to "acquire" a really nice large fire rated chemical cabinet years ago from a job that I did. It works great to store ammo and reloading components. I also mounted a couple of the automatic fire extinguishers. One I put right over my reloading bench and the other is inside the cabinet.
I'm commenting here so you might see it, my comment is about powder coat. Try mixing Eastwood silver powder coat with Eastwood blue or green. I've noticed when I do this I get good coverage, a nice iridescent color and almost no sticking together and the few that might stick leave no bad spots. It really works great.
Vacuum seal, ammo box, gun,fireproof gun safe and safe room there you go!!!!So that's my deal!!!So my house burned, and both of my safes went through a tremendous fire and then water on top of that from the fire department so I have first-hand experience, my gun safe, save my guns and my powder and my primers and my ammo I cannot believe it that was before I had any ammo can storage and any vacuum seal.All my reloading supplies were in a fireproof safe. I still have them today and they still work. Every round shot so far has went off after the fire.
So better protect what we got because it's gonna be very hard to get more from now on, if not impossible in the next few years to come!
Just used your mold bolt stripped out trick on my 00 buck mold today... rainy day casting seattle
Awesome brother! Rainy day made better! 😄
ammo it's always raining , always casting
I never thought of using coolers like that. That's pretty brilliant. Another helpful video. Thank you good sir
I think this was a great idea that most of us probably don't think about very much
You can buy a big bag of kitty litter that is 100% silica and put that in coffee filters or whatever for moisture control. It’s the same stuff that is in the small bags in products you buy. Amazon sells big bags of it
Just got into reloading I’ve been researching and planning for years and just went ahead and made the jump and found your channel and just want to say thank you..... all of your insight has been really helpful and have been watching all your videos while in the loading room..... great info ! But now I just ordered molds and sizers and furnace to get started molding ..... and thanks to you I know what powders to get (haven’t ordered that yet but fixin too ! Using your fussy chart ! ...... Thanks again and really appreciate your time you put into all your videos ! Keep um comin ! Looking forward to your next ones .....
Tell these guys to quit leaving powder in the dispensers!
But yes I had a metal 40mm box I was storing primers in until I realized I had a f×ckin bomb in the basement. Now they are in gallon freezer bags . I don't ad silica to the bags. I let the powder and primers commit to their own equilibrium of solvents in their respective chemistry.
I like the cooler idea , you're making us country bumpkins look smart ! I don't know if we need that attention.
I've put powder in a mason jar with some silica gel packs because I accidentally spilled it on my carpet and I stayed up every bit that I could but a lot of other junk came with it and I have yet to go through it and pick all the little teeny pieces of leaves and grass out lol I also keep all of my shotgun shells that I don't plan on using anytime soon side of a air tight PVC canister that I've made and that has big kitchen towel filled with rice and rubber-banded so it'll suck up moisture from that end and I have silica gel packs inside of it above a couple layers of shotgun shells and so far so good I kept shotgun shells in it up to about five years and the ones that I did have in there worked well
geat info.. im just starting out.just learning and buying the equippment and misc..
I like the wood box, may start building some.
As always, great video :-))
I keep my primers in plastic ammo cans in the bedroom closet. Powder stays in original containers on top of the safe. Air conditioning is key.
I have my powder and primers in a shed with no ventilation. It gets hot in the summer cold in the winter. Its dry as a bone but I cant keep it cool very well. Is that a big problem?
I put those dessicant bags in the case dryer, then in a sealed container.
All my powder is in the original tubs out in my garage. I keep a dehumidifier running but it's not heated. Sometimes I worry about it being in the 20's but so far I haven't had any issues with powder going bad.
if you had a cellar or water tight pit inyour garage ,it would be a more constant temperature
Great tips, buddy. I’m going to share this on the Reloading FB channel. Lots and lots of brand new reloaders there. BTW...sheetrock is a great idea, and there is a type called, firerock...used in garages.
👍👍👍Thankya
Oh wow, look at all those primers.
Good to see those suggestion. Charlie may not like being called an old timer.
I might have screwed up!!!! I guess you figured out who it was!?
We all figured it out, he LOVES being called OLD TIMER.. HE GUMS HIS WOMEN; JUST SAYING !
@@elvisammo yep that man is a legend he must be busy I tried to call him and rat you out lol. Happy New years Elvis from across the county line.
Good stuff thanks
I keep my powder and primers in my walkin pantry building. Heated in winter, cooled in summer. Temp stays between 50 and 65 degrees. Everything is on wire shelving, off the floor, and plenty of circulation.
You would probably freak seeing where my primers and powder are, outside. But we have very little moisture here in PHX.
Ah Freak out!! 😂😀😝😜😁🤪👍🇺🇸
@@elvisammo ,, dude,, disco still sucks
Good show You just made me think of way to store powder A small unlocked fire proof file safe witch you can get for around 30 or 40 bucks
Ha! Primer and powder storage! I wish i was concerned with this.
I use old school lockers with the louvered doors to secure my primers and powder. They are in a climate controlled location so I have all my stuff in wooden boxes in separate lockers
Wouldn't the rubber seal on the ammo box melt away there by venting the box before the primers got hot enough to go off and build pressure? Maybe a good experiment to try
Thanks for the video
How long does it take to dry out the packs in the oven
Some good info
Great video
Elvis opens the cooler inside the wood box and said there's "some primers" I almost cried LOL I haven't seen primers since last July except for 200 that I found two days before Christmas and it's like money burning a hole in my pocket I want to shoot them so bad because I'm tired of some recycling primers this primer shortage needs to end so bad
I always keep full 5,000 sleeves of each size on hand. Luckily for me it' never less than 40,000 so 8 sleeves of each. I never gave more than $128.50 for any one of those sleeves. I still am taking it easy since last April shooting and reloading because I know the shortage will go on years, not weeks or months. It may end up being all 4 years of Joe Biden's Presidency. I won't rule it out or plan any differently.
Is it ok to store primers and powder in the oven? Asking for a friend.
Don't forget to preheat.
I store mine in a mink lined cedar wooden box with a tube of venison summer sausage to trap any moisture. Then shrink wrap the box three layers of black plastic (gotta be black), and run an ultra violet lamp and a three bladed fan in the room 24/7. Any more than three blades tends to create a vortex that can waft through the plastic and cause ignition degradation. Seems to work. 😕
Also, I have a refrigerator that I store my powder in the bottom and primers in the freezer. This is in an unheated with no air-conditioning out building. It is locked and secured. Opinion please. My options are kind of limited.
I do like the idea of the powder be in in an insulated enclosure. This allows the temperature change to be more controlled slower rise and fall. Less chance of moisture. It’s not all bad. Just keep an eye on it
@@elvisammo Yes and a refrigerator also serves as a class 4 locker. All the gun shops around here use them with a padlock as I do. The door seal acts like a pressure break and the inside is coated and/or aluminum which makes it non-sparking.
@@elvisammo I also have a golden rod inside it and keep charcoal briquets inside it to absorb moisture. I just have to change the out or heat the briquets up a bit in my toaster oven to remove moisture
Don’t kid yourself. The local fire Marshall himself asked me if I reloaded or had a lot of Ammo. I refused to answer and he told me the first pop they hear they will stand back and let it burn. The fire dept is not putting out your house fore if you have any ammo or reloading components.
A question for you, the powder with the rust in it, would you load it? Do you think the rust would affect the powder immensely and adversely?
Man. I guess if I really really had to I would check it out. But for no other reason. Don’t make me test the stuff out!😎
@@elvisammo Lmao, I for sure don't want you in any danger. What I need is an old gun that fires to see (firing remotely). I believe the iron oxide from the rust might make it very interesting.
@John Beige agreed. I marked it and stored it.
@John Beige agreed. I am keeping only for just in case. So far I have 1.5 lbs that are bad. One I have plenty of. The full lb not so much. Once this shortage is over whenever that is I will dispose of all of it.
Good info
I think You should move that metal ammo can full of primers out from behind the woodstove James🤣
@@georgiaboy4410 Are you saying it's not a good spot to keep it ?
Great idea the way you store your extra powder measures. Did you drill the holes in your ingots or form them when you poured the ingots?
I bought fire proof file cabinet. But it is so air tight. It wooshes as you shut drawer. But if it can start fire and self ignition. Do you want it to breath a tiny bit.?? Like Maby do wood box then fire brick . Make your own. Breathable. Fire box.????
black powder is the most dangerous propelant to store , never put nitro ,primers or bp in a strong kabinet or safe never together even if it is fireproof ,thats only for a short time the case. a wooden kabinet is more safe if you keep a amount a water in plastic bottles inside ,they will melt and the water takes heat ,but the isolated box is good idea ;-)
I like your ideas's elvis but U.S. ammo cans are rated to certain pressures and heat range before failure. Did not believe it myself but 2 years i was moving and the UHAUL caught fire and all my stuff burnt my primers were in ammo cans they blew but the integrity of the ammo can held
There is a bunker company that does alot of vids on TH-cam that recently had a fire,
To my surprise, the cans that had 50 bmg. were not as damaged as I would expect,
My only guess is the gaskets melt away first allowing *some* pressure to escape.
For it to survive igniting all the powder and primers from a bunch of 50 bmg is kinda impressive. That had to have been a lot of pressure.
@@joedirt7604 yes the rubber will melt first then all the gas escape. It looks like hells infurno trying to escape it wicked lookin
Look into FEL powder magazine requirements
the military has been using ammo cans to store ammo, for maybe a hundred years, but its not good for powder or primers? got it
Where can I find this powder and primers I hear talk of?
With plastic containers, does anyone worry about static electricity? Is it a concern?
I was going to mention that.especially with the styrofoam ice chest........E.S.D. (electro static discharge) they make a special conductive plastic called velostat for use with explosives ect...
What about one of the plastic ammo cans?
Yep! 👍👍
if it soft plastic not a problem , but any hard or brittle box can be a grenate ,but it is not isolated thats not good
The fire insulation in safes is Sheetrock too
Pretty much it!
I store my primers after removing them from the box on top of the medicine cabinet in the bathroom next to the shower.
Your a mess!!!🤣😂😝😜🤪
I’ve stated saving my old primers too. I have a small lathe and mill so I can make tools I need. All I need is the compound! Got any ideas?
Cap gun caps are a good component for primers
@@Overland_Vanlife thanks!
I’ve got too much powder to store in anything! Probably have about 12 pounds of just black powder alone!
@@tomburson5554 dont store more then a pound bp together ,it will explode at once al 12 pounds
storing in a ammo can is safe . i hate to disagree with you elvis . i realy do . i had 5 ammo cans full of ammo . some in boxes and some lose . and they were in a fire . lots of dents in the ammo boxes but none of the rounds got through . the fire was so hot that when the ammo boxes were opened up there was no brass left inside of them ! the fire vaporized the brass and bullets ! had one can full of primers , it stayed intact and everything inside was vaporized allso . the fire was at a friends place i was staying at right after my divorce started . glad everything else i had was in storage . the fire safety association i think that is their name . says don't store smokeless powder in a safe . if it was to get to flashpoint it would become a bomb . they say to make a wooden cabinet with one weak side so that the pressure would come out that side . i think the metal powder boxes are made with a weak side . but i am not sure on that . talk to your local fire dept , they will gladly help you make storage of reloading supply and ammo safe . not just for you but for them also if god forbid you have a fire . great video i know you are talking about more than a fire in this . most new and some old reloaders don't know just how to store stuff . and never store ammo , powder or primers under a staircase . firemen might need to use it if it is usable . don't want it going off underneath them !
Hi that's because ammo cans are designed to store ammo larger amounts gun powder need a container that has a way for the to escape you can look the code on legal storage boxes they're made with 1 inch thick wood sides
no venting in a box or kabinet is enough to prevent a explosion with ,nitro ,bp or primers.
Don't use sheetrock, use rock board. It is less likely to absorb water.
How about vacuum pack with a moisture packet
I use an old refrigerator, Lol
I put my in ammo cans in my safe. 1300 degrees 60 minutes. Lol
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Ali Ka Boom Bye Bye agrees with you as well! Remember to always practice safety!
@@elvisammo you are right though even in the Safe it could reach Temps high enough without being on fire.
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My buddy reloads in his small shead/ reloading room with a wood burning stove ???
@@jrwatkins3872 thanks for the comment..👍
I don't care that the ATF reads this, but I got so turned on when you flashed your primers at us...then you closed the lid and I was let down.
I have a 5 gallon bucket of 4227 sealed up with a couple thousand primers dumped into the same bucket... That way they can better work together when loaded. And i put it into a 50 gallon drum of cement to keep it safe from fire and let the cement all harden. But i put a straw through the cement into the bucket to make sure it can breath. I feel like I'm pretty safe from fire. Lol jkjk I'm not that retarded. 😂😂😂😂😂🤷🏼 that thing is jusy waiting for a flame hehehe
I live in Colorado. Can you please explain this moisture thing you speak of? I don't follow. 🤣🤣🤣
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I store all my primers in brass cases.
never store in a hard container primers ,powders .
He didn't get it...lol
@@wisemechanic1758 i store them in nickel and steel cases too
Lol me too
I've been told its almost impossible to ruin primers.. maybe I'm wrong but their shelf life is extremely long..? Put the powders I can see.. but against fires is a good reason.
temperature changes makes powders desintegrate ,if stored a long time ,also the primers compound will lose the binding of the components ,and then you got misfires
I've tried most everything imaginable to deactivate primers. Soaked for days and alternately flushed with cold/hot water and detergents, and could always get a bang out of them between an anvil and a hammer. But, a big BUT, they were muffled and inconsistent. Some loud, some weak. I believe proper storage has more to do with consistency, than "does it still go bang?"
@@aolinger680 thats tru.the pil in the primer is made of bounded britlle crystals .they are sensitve to impact.
A blow with a hammer is not the impact of a firingpin.that is only a small point .with the hammer you generate a lot of heat and the complete primer is hit ... A primer will loose its compact hard design most by temperatur changes and then you get misfires.thats why keeping them in dry cellar or isolated box wil.keep them more consistant
With the price of primers these days I keep mine stored in a zip lock bag in my toilet tank. Thieves won't look there and in case of a fire they won't burn!!!
Excellent idea!😂😀😁🤪
Yahshua - you know Him as Jesus - was born to a virgin, turned water to wine, taught, healed the sick, raised the dead, casted out demons, walked on water, calmed the storm, and fed a crowd of thousands with a few fish and a few loaves of bread on two separate occasions, among many other things. He was killed on the cross as payment for the sins of all mankind, three days later He rose from the dead. Forty days later He ascended into heaven where He sits at the right hand of the Father. He is returning very soon, but before He does, Satan, the devil, is coming to pretend to be Jesus/God (2 Thessalonians 2:1-4 and Revelation 2:10). Satan is an angel, and he will have certain supernatural powers with which to try to fool everyone. He will, for example, be able to make fire come down from heaven in the sight of men. He will only be on earth a short time before the real King of Kings, Jesus Christ, God in the flesh, returns. When the real Jesus comes we will all be transformed into our spiritual bodies at the same moment. Jesus came in the flesh to offer forgiveness of sins and eternal life to anyone who believes and calls on His precious name!
if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved. - Romans 10:9 KJV
Now when Jesus was in Bethany, in the house of Simon the leper, There came unto him a woman having an alabaster box of very precious ointment, and poured it on his head, as he sat at meat. But when his disciples saw it, they had indignation, saying, To what purpose is this waste? For this ointment might have been sold for much, and given to the poor. When Jesus understood it, he said unto them, Why trouble ye the woman? for she hath wrought a good work upon me. For ye have the poor always with you; but me ye have not always. For in that she hath poured this ointment on my body, she did it for my burial. Verily I say unto you, Wheresoever this gospel shall be preached in the whole world, there shall also this, that this woman hath done, be told for a memorial of her. - Matthew 26:6-13 KJV
Seek ye the LORD while he may be found, call ye upon him while he is near: Let the wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts: and let him return unto the LORD, and he will have mercy upon him; and to our God, for he will abundantly pardon.
Be ye also patient; stablish your hearts: for the coming of the Lord draweth nigh.
To anoint your self, the sick, or a building for spiritual protection:
Get a small bottle of olive oil and pour off a small amount into a smaller vessel like a vial or baby food jar. Use the rest of the bottle for cooking. Ask the Lord to bless your vial of oil in Jesus name. Anoint yourself with the oil by placing a dab of oil on tip of finger and touch it to your forehead, and ask the Lord to bless you/heal you. To anoint your home or other building: place a dab of oil on your finger and anoint the door posts and order all negativity and evil out of the house, and order that nothing negative or evil can enter into your home including piggybacking on a person entering, order it to be so in the name of Jesus. Anoint all potential entrances to your home. To anoint the sick: place oil on tip of finger and touch it to the head of the sick and say a prayer of healing over them in Jesus name. See James Chapter 5:14-15..,,.,,
Sorry brother, I love your videos but your logic is flawed in this case. A cooler is horrible unless it's in a temperature controlled space. If a cooler changes temp from hot to cold and back.. it will fill with water due to condensation. Not trying to be rude, just letting you know. Peace
Ya cant store what ya cant get.....