Paddy
member
I wonder if you could soak them in something to intentionally disable the fire risk?
Tracers were fun to use in the military but so were grenades, claymores and other stuff that civilians have no legitimate use for. They might be interesting as a display but personally I'd trade them for something more useful, like a box of Bergers.
spitballer wrote:
...claymores and other stuff that civilians have no legitimate use for.
paddy wrote:
I wonder if you could soak them in something to intentionally disable the fire risk?
The only way I know of to reliably deactivate tracers is setting the compound on fire and allowing it to burn away.I wonder if you could soak them in something to intentionally disable the fire risk?
Sooo...Tracers were fun to use in the military but so were grenades, claymores and other stuff that civilians have no legitimate use for. They might be interesting as a display but personally I'd trade them for something more useful, like a box of Bergers.
hdwhit wrote:
As far as getting the rest of it out, I don't know what the tracer compound is made of so I don't know what it would be soluble in.
Spitballer wrote:
...civilians have no legitimate use for....
While I appreciate that is your opinion and you are entitled to have it and express it, I find it kind of chilling since that is precisely the rationale the anti-gun people apply to various guns that they want to take out of our hands:.
- What is the "legitimate" use of an AR-15?
- What is the "legitimate" use of a "Saturday Night Special"?
- What is the "legitimate" of a Mossburg Shockwave?