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Look what I found from garage :-O
Posted: 15 Sep 2008 08:23 pm
by jtbo
Ammunation from m/39, finnish evolution version of WWII Mosin Nagant.
Joy of buying old house, one gets surprises, I'm not particularily sure if this is happy or not so happy surprise as if there is even more of those it would be better not to weld and use angle grinder in garage, little accident could become tad bigger if I manage to start small fire that causes bullet to launch into my lung or brain whom I prefer without additional holes

Posted: 16 Sep 2008 01:11 am
by Chesh740R
If the fire had happened. It would have been the casing that would have fired across the room not the actual round and unless you were standing pretty point blank range it would not be fatal.
If your feeling brave, Put the casing in a vice, Grab a nail and a hammer and fire the round!!!!!
Don't do that!!!!! But thats what kids that knew no better did in the 2nd world war.
Posted: 16 Sep 2008 10:33 am
by Chris_C
Chesh740R wrote:If the fire had happened. It would have been the casing that would have fired across the room not the actual round and unless you were standing pretty point blank range it would not be fatal.
If your feeling brave, Put the casing in a vice, Grab a nail and a hammer and fire the round!!!!!
Don't do that!!!!! But thats what kids that knew no better did in the 2nd world war.
Lol!!!
Nice find Jani! We found a snare trap in our loft when we moved to the island... loaded... tied to teh rafters with a bit of rope. No idea what they thought was in the loft!
Posted: 16 Sep 2008 03:45 pm
by jtbo
Perhaps it was not meant for something that was in loft, but what goes there? Anti theft device?
Well, I must now start looking if I can find m/39 from some hideous location, surely rounds are good for shooting?

Perhaps better not to test

Posted: 16 Sep 2008 10:49 pm
by MJ
Good find, maybe you should get a metal detector.
A friend of mines grandad moved house sometime after the war, and they found some unused grenades

. I think they asked someone to come and collect them

Posted: 17 Sep 2008 10:18 pm
by V6 Man
Chesh740R wrote:If the fire had happened. It would have been the casing that would have fired across the room not the actual round and unless you were standing pretty point blank range it would not be fatal.
If your feeling brave, Put the casing in a vice, Grab a nail and a hammer and fire the round!!!!!
Don't do that!!!!! But thats what kids that knew no better did in the 2nd world war.
In about 1987 or thereabouts a group of 14 yr old lads at the Judd Grammar School in Tonbridge in Kent found a couple of 0.303 rounds in one of the former WW2 underground bunkers that were on site used exclusivley by military personell and that had been exposed to the elements by the fabled '87 hurricane.
Now these lads were of an inquisitive frame of mind and happened to wonder if the rounds were live, and if indeed were still capable of being fired. Rather than hand them in, or suggest that a trial firing or these bullets in one of the School Cadet Forces Lee Enfield rifles it was felt that the best course of action was to wait until a chemistry lesson, hold a bullet in a set of tongs and place the bottom of the cartridge in the hot blue flame of a Bunsen Burner..........
Assuming the school chemistry labs haven't been refurbished (I hope not, they were good old fashioned solid affairs) there should still to this day be a large chunk missing from the 4" solid oak front desk and a large chip out of the frame of the old fashioned roll type blackboard. The hole in the wall got plastered over though.
Yes, I went to Judd School.
Yes, in 1987 I was 14.
Yes, I did explore the underground bunker.
Yes, I was present in that Chemistry lesson.
That's all I'm prepared to say without my lawyer present........
Posted: 19 Sep 2008 08:42 pm
by jtbo
Those other boys surely were quite something back then
I take a peek into dark corners of garage tomorrow, let's home there is no mines or grenades
