Always keep ammo in the boxes just in case one blows up and the factory asks for lot number. Also the cardboard keeps it in better condition if stored properly
You can keep one box with the lot number on it but how do you figure cardboard that retains moisture and potentially corrosive chemicals will keep the ammo in better condition than loose in an ammo can?
@@Varrylickers so you believe contact with damp cardboard is worse than direct contact with water? How do you reckon that? Not to mention the fact that they’re packed in plastic trays, which means the only part that could make contact with the cardboard is the rim of the cartridge. It seems to me that keeping them in the boxes would significantly prevent corrosion, especially given that they won’t be in contact with the other rounds.
@@NG.. when did I ever say that direct contact with water is better than damp cardboard? Tf? 556 and 7.62x39 like shown in this video is not usually packed in plastic trays. The best way to guarantee ammo doesn’t corrode is to dump it in a metal ammo can without the cardboard and put desiccant packets in there. That will trap the moisture away from the ammo better than a cardboard box would.
always keep your ammo inside the box until you shoot it, incase you have a catastrophic malfunction with the ammunition you will have the lot number on the packaging box that you saved
Exactly. How ya can anyone even ne sure what grain ammo is in there. I can see why folks may do it with a few hundred rounds maybe to make it easier to load. But it don't even save any space tbh. Then in emergencies if ya wanna grab a few hundred rounds and go it's possible without a bag etc. What do ya do if you hear a certain maker of ammo had a recall and issues a batch number?? Then yeah as you said if some turns out to be explosive, or just full of duds, now it's just mixed with tons of other good ammo. And no. It dosent draw moisture. Moisture is either in the container, or it's not. Then even if it is, the cardboard will at least soak some of it up and hold it. If there's none, we'll it will all turn into rust, corrosion or oxidation and seep into the primers etc. It won't hurt anything at all. In fact it's dangerous also. Primers can go off alot easier than many think. They have paper boxes for reasons. Leave them on. Then just buy better ammo boxes
Almost had this happen with bad "Frontier" brand ammo. Overcharged. Case rims blowin off. I was ABOUT to mix them when I decided to go shooting instead.
I don't recommend mixing different ammunition like that. First off, brass cases can cause the steel ones to corrode quicker. Second, different brands can have different pressures which will cause increased inaccuracies when firing. Lastly, if you got a bad batch of bullets, such as being too high pressured, the whole box now has to go because you can't determine which ones are from the bad batch.
Im not that bad but it is like people dont know that not all rounds even by the same brand shoot the same. I saw this and thought "good luck with grouping" but realized it was prob for an AK so meh. Accuracy by volume I guess.
yeah ammo dump videos are pretty moronic. A whole box of ammo is faulty? good luck figuring out which bullets will fail on you. One of your guns dislikes a certain brand of ammo? Have fun picking through your rounds.
@@junglejim9551Fr these videos are irritating. Not only is everything you said true but loading mags will be way easier if you've got the ammo already lined up ready to be grabbed, reloading is already tedious as all hell but having to look at which round you picked up and fiddle around with it to get it straight would just make the whole process so much worse
Even better are those silica gel packs you get in the boxes of consumer electronics. Even if they are a little swollen with water you can put them on a baking sheet in the oven for a few minutes and they're good as new.
You’re supposed to leave the ammo in the boxes and stack them up in the ammo can. The reason why you would want to do this is so when you close and seal the ammo can the moisture in the air inside the ammo can will have to go somewhere and that would be on the ammo or in the ammo but if the ammo is in boxes in the ammo can the moisture will instead get soaked in the cardboard boxes and not corrode your ammo. You would be very surprised how big of a difference it makes overtime and is key to long term ammo storage.
The packaging already contains moisture, and can include various things that break down and negatively affect the ammo. You can remove the packaging and toss in some moisture absorption packs. For long term storage you can vacuum seal ammo with a moisture pack included in each pack you make.
See what RailRoad says - Lucky Gunner did a great video on the topic. Though I personally keep my ammo in all the original packaging, just have a really heavy duty dehumidifier in my safe
IMO you leave them in their box if you get a bad box of ammo. If you mix a ton of boxes together, & you're getting random misfires and/or failures to eject/load every few magazines, now it's impossible to know what rounds are bad in a mix of 500 or 1000 rounds, instead of isolating it down to one box
Those plastic ammo cans are not made for that kind of weight. I have two of them where the latch has broken off and the handle was ripped off because of doing the same thing😂
@anthonyb.9365 Yeah, they work fine for loaded rifle mags for example, density is low. I haven't had trouble with packaged ammo either, the density is generally low enough in .30cal and smaller profiles or in the shotgun ones because shotgun rounds are not very dense. .50 cal cans I find silly for personal use fo ammo, they are just too big and get heavy fast.
When I worked at a gun range (instructor), whenever I went to the armory there would always be 1-2 dudes just sitting in front of 3 1000 round ammo boxes and filling different mags for a few hours a day. When I went through 1 heavy metals soap, those dudes would probably finish 5 bottles each
@@abbcc5996 I mean, you should avoid getting metals in your bloodstream. If you work somewhere where matels get chipped or sheared, it's best to make sure none is stuck on your skin
It feels so good to see your can fill up with ammo at your dumping the little 20rd boxes in there. Seeing you stick your hand in there makes me want to dig a can of 7.62x39 out and dk the same.
Just for future reference. Leave those little paper separators in that can of ammo. They can be great moisture identifiers in the various depths of the can
I recommend metal GI can if it’s all loose because it will be so heavy for the plastic the seal won’t be tight or will break every time you move the container
I may doing a Q&A soon so ask questions here
What type of rifles do you have?
Pero mano cuanta pasata se a dejao este tigre en munision
Filling that box in the video with 7.62 bullets, how much does the box weigh?
Have you ever woke up at night to see your grandma just watching you while she was eating the family dog?
Yeah. Why TF you go from a metal ammo can to a plastic one? It hurts me.
Now you have to pick up that ammo can lol
Id back my truck up to it......
It is around 70lbs, not super heavy.
@@bmsk0076Huh, pretty light
Not the fact that it’s heavy but the fact that it’s plastic is honestly rather have a big wooden box
"pick up that can *brip*..."
Bro had beef with the first box of ammo
Yea he did that one dirty 🤣
@@Texasplit😅😅😅😅😅😅 из под
Being the middle child be like 😂😂
Que dia no Brasil teremos esta oportunidade?um dia será?
My wallet cried when I read the title.
I was so happy when I realized he didn’t blow all his ammo into trash.
Always keep ammo in the boxes just in case one blows up and the factory asks for lot number. Also the cardboard keeps it in better condition if stored properly
You can keep one box with the lot number on it but how do you figure cardboard that retains moisture and potentially corrosive chemicals will keep the ammo in better condition than loose in an ammo can?
@@Varrylickersif there is any moisture in the can, it’s better the cardboard absorb it as opposed to the ammo.
@@NG.. yes, that’s the problem… the ammo is in contact with the cardboard so it will lead to corrosion or tarnishing.
@@Varrylickers so you believe contact with damp cardboard is worse than direct contact with water? How do you reckon that?
Not to mention the fact that they’re packed in plastic trays, which means the only part that could make contact with the cardboard is the rim of the cartridge. It seems to me that keeping them in the boxes would significantly prevent corrosion, especially given that they won’t be in contact with the other rounds.
@@NG.. when did I ever say that direct contact with water is better than damp cardboard? Tf? 556 and 7.62x39 like shown in this video is not usually packed in plastic trays. The best way to guarantee ammo doesn’t corrode is to dump it in a metal ammo can without the cardboard and put desiccant packets in there. That will trap the moisture away from the ammo better than a cardboard box would.
That box has officially become Thor's hammer..😂😂😂
with a hidden debuff: chanse of a round going off inside.
so each hit with it can make you get hit also!
This guy reminds me of how to basic
I thought it was going to be on fire
Handle rips right off the top when you try to pick it up.
😂😂😂
Metal all the way old school
Harbor Freight quality. Use a 30 cal metal can.
@@mk84ldbfor 1700 rounds? You’ll need a 50 cal and a 30 cal metal cans for 1700 rounds
why i only buy metal
Remember when that was $6 worth of ammo….
76 2 x 39 is too expensive now it’s like $15 for that small box
@@ParkerHigdon no its not its like 10 dollars
@@NutritiousVidsfor that amount of bullets it’s worth the money how would that be expensive 💀
@@Hamzaorabi91 I'm saying its cheaper than what Parker is saying for a small box
@@NutritiousVids that’s exactly how much it costs for that amount of bullets in a box
That one faulty brass bullet in the mix: 😈
NEXT VIDEO IDEA: how to make 7.62x39 grow on trees
good one
@@last-surviver20dhgodhgo😢❤😂🎉😮😅😊
A quarter of a Texans yearly harvest right there.
So that’s why 762 is so expensive, this dude bought it all.
Я один ждал, когда пуля ударит в капсуль и начнется фейерверк?))
always keep your ammo inside the box until you shoot it, incase you have a catastrophic malfunction with the ammunition you will have the lot number on the packaging box that you saved
For people that store them long term the cardboard just absorbs moisture.
Exactly. How ya can anyone even ne sure what grain ammo is in there.
I can see why folks may do it with a few hundred rounds maybe to make it easier to load.
But it don't even save any space tbh. Then in emergencies if ya wanna grab a few hundred rounds and go it's possible without a bag etc.
What do ya do if you hear a certain maker of ammo had a recall and issues a batch number??
Then yeah as you said if some turns out to be explosive, or just full of duds, now it's just mixed with tons of other good ammo.
And no. It dosent draw moisture. Moisture is either in the container, or it's not. Then even if it is, the cardboard will at least soak some of it up and hold it. If there's none, we'll it will all turn into rust, corrosion or oxidation and seep into the primers etc. It won't hurt anything at all.
In fact it's dangerous also. Primers can go off alot easier than many think. They have paper boxes for reasons.
Leave them on. Then just buy better ammo boxes
@@357stoitch7put the cardboard in the ammo box and add some silica packets to keep dry.
Surplus ammo is usually out dated with a manufacturer that doesn't exist anymore.
SKS ammo from Yugoslavia be like
And if you have one bad box of ammo, you're gonna be wondering why every other mag has a dead round in it.
Why would that be
@@E-Recktableone bad box of ammo, Say 50, will surely have faulty bullets. Now mixed with good bullets too.
Almost had this happen with bad "Frontier" brand ammo. Overcharged. Case rims blowin off. I was ABOUT to mix them when I decided to go shooting instead.
Reckon any of the stuff he was using is "good quality" xD@@AKguru762
X39 ammo for some reason didn't have such a bad rap like 5.56 did with PPU and Norma
I miss the days when it was 180 bucks for a 1000 rds 😢
Bro doin asmr out of bullets.
(Pretty satisfying ngl)
bruh, as a gunsmith it hurts me to see the mixed 7.62 types😩
Mwahahaha
I agree. Makes me twitch. Not to mention, about 60 lbs of ammo in a plastic can.
Why? Sounds like as a person with Obsessive/Compulsive tendencies mixed ammo of the same caliber in a single ammo can bothers you.
@@RailRoad188they have different POI
250 dollars worth in 2018😢
To i tak nie jest drogo
W Polsce jeden strzał na strzelnicy 15złoty
Więc za tą skrzynkę trzeba by było zapłacić 20 tysięcy minimum 😓
300$ in Russia😎
@@user-bk2bk9zh8qshocker shitty steel case tula is cheap where its made
@@user-bk2bk9zh8q offset by the cost of living in Russia
@@user-bk2bk9zh8qonly 50% chance to explode, taking off arms blyat
Bro the aggression during the opening of the first box made me laugh hella hahaha
I don't recommend mixing different ammunition like that. First off, brass cases can cause the steel ones to corrode quicker. Second, different brands can have different pressures which will cause increased inaccuracies when firing. Lastly, if you got a bad batch of bullets, such as being too high pressured, the whole box now has to go because you can't determine which ones are from the bad batch.
Well you know how the saying goes!
“If it won’t eat up steel casing, then it doesn’t deserve brass casing!”
Lol and he doesnt even have a gasket on the ammo box, hes gona have crusty ammo🤣
Legend has it that ammo can still sits there to this day.
My man felt like swimming in that shot like Scruge Mcduck by the end.
Unless you're just using that for pumpin and dumpin off into blue yonder, mixing brands like that will make for extreme inconsistencies in accuracy.
For anyone wondering, its just over 61 lbs
How much In kg Merica?
@@1972harrypotter30 kg
27.73 kg
It’s not close to how heavy my sins are…
Your profile picture is after He lifted them.
@@craterdiggerWhat does 27kg sound like to you? 10kg?
I'm so uptight i could never mix them. By caliber by brand by grain by type. Sorted. But like i said im uptight.
Im not that bad but it is like people dont know that not all rounds even by the same brand shoot the same.
I saw this and thought "good luck with grouping" but realized it was prob for an AK so meh. Accuracy by volume I guess.
yeah ammo dump videos are pretty moronic. A whole box of ammo is faulty? good luck figuring out which bullets will fail on you. One of your guns dislikes a certain brand of ammo? Have fun picking through your rounds.
@@junglejim9551Fr these videos are irritating. Not only is everything you said true but loading mags will be way easier if you've got the ammo already lined up ready to be grabbed, reloading is already tedious as all hell but having to look at which round you picked up and fiddle around with it to get it straight would just make the whole process so much worse
The first one is fmj and the second one is fmj tracer I think
I also like knowing the batch numbers.
So that's where all the Global Ordnance ammo went
I'm sensing some underlying anger in those hand motions.
Just a suggestion, when storing ammunition for long term, leave those little pieces of paper in with the ammo. It will absorb moisture.
Even better are those silica gel packs you get in the boxes of consumer electronics.
Even if they are a little swollen with water you can put them on a baking sheet in the oven for a few minutes and they're good as new.
@@james3181. Just don’t put them in the cookie jar. Some people will eat anything they think is a cookie.
Еще лучше оставить патроны в заводской упаковке!
You’re supposed to leave the ammo in the boxes and stack them up in the ammo can. The reason why you would want to do this is so when you close and seal the ammo can the moisture in the air inside the ammo can will have to go somewhere and that would be on the ammo or in the ammo but if the ammo is in boxes in the ammo can the moisture will instead get soaked in the cardboard boxes and not corrode your ammo. You would be very surprised how big of a difference it makes overtime and is key to long term ammo storage.
The packaging already contains moisture, and can include various things that break down and negatively affect the ammo. You can remove the packaging and toss in some moisture absorption packs. For long term storage you can vacuum seal ammo with a moisture pack included in each pack you make.
See what RailRoad says - Lucky Gunner did a great video on the topic. Though I personally keep my ammo in all the original packaging, just have a really heavy duty dehumidifier in my safe
IMO you leave them in their box if you get a bad box of ammo. If you mix a ton of boxes together, & you're getting random misfires and/or failures to eject/load every few magazines, now it's impossible to know what rounds are bad in a mix of 500 or 1000 rounds, instead of isolating it down to one box
Bro is definitely baiting with those aggressive ones
With this much ammunition he can go to a war and win it single handedly
Those plastic ammo cans are not made for that kind of weight. I have two of them where the latch has broken off and the handle was ripped off because of doing the same thing😂
Yea those are for art supplies
@@PaulG.369 they are good for spare parts like buffer tubes, pistol grips, mlok accessories, firing pins and assorted Springs but that's about it
@anthonyb.9365 Yeah, they work fine for loaded rifle mags for example, density is low. I haven't had trouble with packaged ammo either, the density is generally low enough in .30cal and smaller profiles or in the shotgun ones because shotgun rounds are not very dense.
.50 cal cans I find silly for personal use fo ammo, they are just too big and get heavy fast.
Oh that's nice they even put rolling papers in there boxes 😂😂
There's a stretch of time I'll never get back.
That's only half of the ammo that one scav ate in Escape from Tarkov 😂😂😂
I used to do this until I had to fish out 500 rounds of 9mm in a 3k round bucket bc they were defective
Exactly I recently had a box of 308 with problems had I mixed my ammo I would have had more problems
In germany we say :
Ordnung muss sein
bro opened some of those boxes with the precision of a loan shark not having his money
The ammo Can is the best thing to have When we love shooting
"And There you go Homeboy, 7.6 Pinacolda " 😂
That plastic container is going to crumble and fold like a cheap suit when you try to pick it up.
I give that plastic ammo can a month tops before it gives to the 762 🤣👀
Never use a plastic ammo box with all that weight. GI surplus .50 cal cans are plentiful and not too expensive.
How he opens those ammo boxes is how I open my birthday gifts
i love how the container started to bend out of shape
I can smell the gum powder alrighty 🤤🤌
Gun* gun* GUN POWDER* 🤣🤣🤣
Теперь этот ящик с патронами можно бросить в огонь и наблюдать за фейеверком . 😂
Bro getting ready for Zombie apocalypse 😂😂😂
Make sure to throw some desiccant in there
Leaving it in that cardboard and paper would have been a good start. 😂
@@quietobserver4636 right!!
Pasta
When I worked at a gun range (instructor), whenever I went to the armory there would always be 1-2 dudes just sitting in front of 3 1000 round ammo boxes and filling different mags for a few hours a day. When I went through 1 heavy metals soap, those dudes would probably finish 5 bottles each
should i be worried about heavy metals? this is the first time im hearing about this
@@abbcc5996 I mean, you should avoid getting metals in your bloodstream. If you work somewhere where matels get chipped or sheared, it's best to make sure none is stuck on your skin
These satisfaction shorts are so underrated
Guy 1: How much bullets do we need for the zombie apocalypes?
Guy 2: yes
We shootin full mags with this one🗣🗣🗣🔥🔥🔥🔥
That plastic ammo can is not going to like all that
I too enjoy zero shifts as my rifle cycles through different ammo in the same mag.
Bro looted the whole map😂😂
The last shell that went in was for the boys noice throw mate
Bro is preparing for Zombie Apocalypse.
No no, this is just for range day with the boys
We need be you were warned remember that God bless. 😊
@@longhairdontcare122 God bless you too, my friend.
When u dropped the last bullet, the ending should have been just a house exploding 😂
Bro having ammo❌ammo having bro✅💀
Remember to lift with your legs, not your back.
I love how the sheer weight of rounds is warping the box 🤣
И в костер это все! И... "Темная ночь, только пули свистят по степи..."😂
That sound is so soothing
Dive into the ammo like an American Cartoon duck 🦆
I love that sound....
Channeling the inner Lord of War i see.
i see so many moments that could have gone horribly wrong
American students preparing for school 💀
says the arab/african sharpening their blade ready to enrich you.
This is very true to how we get ready
(This is a joke)
How'd you know
(Its a joke)
@@NCR_vet_ranger2347 im also american
@@fredrickmansav6852found the yankee
I learnt this in grade 3 ,it's called "volume" and you could have got more if you put them in an organized manner!!!
It feels so good to see your can fill up with ammo at your dumping the little 20rd boxes in there. Seeing you stick your hand in there makes me want to dig a can of 7.62x39 out and dk the same.
HowToBasic Ammo Can Edition.
Mixing ammo types and brands I see
Ak don’t care comrade
@@Teamskt-qf3ng daddy Kalashnikov, best gun for fellow comrad
I expected saltbae move.
Just for future reference. Leave those little paper separators in that can of ammo. They can be great moisture identifiers in the various depths of the can
Enjoy the corrosion.
omg u cant shoot steel1!11!!
Non of those rounds are corrosive
smells like freedom!
Bro look like he hit the jackpot on the slots all of that metal lol
Hold on. Lemme reload.
- this guy. Probably.
Legends say its still standing there
Music to my ears
Bro on big mission 😂
He really dumped his ammo😂
Best asmr on the fuckin planet
In war :Hey can you pass a round gives the whole box
"Impressive. Most impressive. Now... Pick up that can."
Im drooling rn look at all that ammo
love it, keep going. never know when there will be another shortage. good job
I recommend metal GI can if it’s all loose because it will be so heavy for the plastic the seal won’t be tight or will break every time you move the container
he filled the can calmly
Am I the only one who thought for a split second that those packages had Hi-c's in them?
That man is playing with fire that shoots projectiles if those are the older rounds those can go off really easy
Reminds me. Gotta stock up more on this stuff. Used it all up last session. 😂
reminds me of that one guy that throws candy
aggressively in a plastic box.
this is basically that but with ammo lol
Accuracy out the window with all those mixed batches won't ever get consistency
Its an ak, hes not gona be shooting past 100 yards most ranges dont go farther
that's a bucket of golf right there
Rich kids be flexin different these days
How to basic vibes. Thought he was gonna start growling and throwing eggs at it 😂
Sounds like freshly momted money. LOVE IT!!!