Catastrophic failure at Tucson

Discussion in 'Trapshooting Forum - Americantrapshooter.com' started by bbblackhills, Mar 7, 2023.

  1. bbblackhills

    bbblackhills Active Member Founding Member

    Anyone have any info on the catastrophic gun failure at Tucson?

    Bruce Bowen
    Sturgis South Dakota
     
  2. cl3

    cl3 Mega Poster Founding Member

    I heard nothing white there during for the Spring Grand.
     
  3. Roger Coveleskie

    Roger Coveleskie State HOF Founding Member Member State Hall of Fame

    What did you hear? ROGER C.
     
  4. Paul T. Cyr

    Paul T. Cyr Member

    Very likely what you are referring to happened on the sporting clays course. A 20 gauge shell in the chamber and a 12 gauge on top. BANG!
     
  5. bbblackhills

    bbblackhills Active Member Founding Member

    Thanks for the clarification about the sporting clays course.

    How did they determine that it was a 20 ga shell in front? Just curious.

    Bruce Bowen
    Sturgis South Dakota
     
  6. Paul T. Cyr

    Paul T. Cyr Member

    That is what I heard from my sources.
     
  7. bobski

    bobski USN Retired Range Owner

    the classic... 20 in a 12. they made all 20ga hulls yellow to help keep that from happening and it still happens.


    a portion of my range rules.........

    • Eye and ear protection required when shooting or in the shooting area.
    • Guns & ammo are subject to inspection. Shoulder stocks are required.
    • Guns entering the clubhouse must be opened and confirmed empty before racking.
    • Shouldering, dry firing, and loading of firearms in the clubhouse is prohibited.
    • A game is 25 targets. Shoot only 1 shot at 1 target.
    • Extra targets not allowed, unless one is thrown broken.
    • Carry only one gauge of ammo when shooting.
    • Load only when you are on a firing station. Otherwise, keep your firearm unloaded with the action open.
    • Load no more than 2 rounds at a time.
    • Load only 1 round on station 8 high house and 1 round for ATA trap.
    • Don’t swing past the center stake on station 8
     
  8. bbblackhills

    bbblackhills Active Member Founding Member

    I just talked to someone that is close to the owner of shotgun. He had a long conversation with the owner. According to this person, the owner is certain that there was no 20 ga cartridge involved.

    I find this very believable. If you consider all the circumstances that would have to fall in line for a shooter to load a 20 ga and then a 12 ga cartridge behind it..very unlikely to occur. Not impossible, just very unlikely.

    In addition, I believe if that had been the case, it would be easy to determine from the condition of the barrel in the area of the forcing cone.

    I believe this is just another case of an unfortunate catastrophic failure with an unknown cause (at least at this time) followed by all the usual theories. ( reloads, 20 ga cartridge, double charges, detonation, case separation, etc, etc) and the really unfortunate part is that the real cause will probably never be known. It is very bad for the sport, not to mention the injuries suffered and the loss of an expensive shotgun. And, it will happen again!

    Keep in mind that I have not seen or examined the gun. I have not talked first hand to the owner. I don't claim to know what caused this to happen. I do have some experience with these types of failures and have tried to replicate them in a controlled environment. I have some theories just like everyone else.


    Bruce Bowen
    Sturgis South Dakota
     
  9. BRAD DYSINGER

    BRAD DYSINGER The Philosophist Founding Member Member Trapshooting Hall of Fame Member State Hall of Fame

    Bruce if you have heard what make of gun and was it and was it an O/U or auto?
     
    trapshooter47 likes this.
  10. bobski

    bobski USN Retired Range Owner

    ok, then its all hear-say for now.
    was anyone hurt?
     
  11. bbblackhills

    bbblackhills Active Member Founding Member

    Brad
    I was told it was a Rizinni.
     

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  12. bbblackhills

    bbblackhills Active Member Founding Member

    Another picture.
     

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    cwtech and BRAD DYSINGER like this.
  13. bbblackhills

    bbblackhills Active Member Founding Member

    And another.
     

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    cwtech and BRAD DYSINGER like this.
  14. bobski

    bobski USN Retired Range Owner

    holy cow...
     
    BRAD DYSINGER likes this.
  15. Flyersarebest

    Flyersarebest Moderator Founding Member Forum Leader

    If it were me I would search out a lab, the Saint Louis Testing Company for instance, and see if they will check out the metal to see if it can be determined if it failed. They do metal failure analysis.
    There are a number of companies found on the net that do this type of work.

    Years ago one of my shooting buddies had an MX8 come apart. Not as bad as this one but the rib peeled back, the barrels separated, and the stock shattered enough to hurt his wrist. He made the mistake of not sending it to a certified company to be analyzed. We all told him what to do but he never bothered.

    Perazzi said “not our fault” and Federal ( he was shooting new ammo) said “nope not us” so he ate it. Almost literally.

    It can’t hurt to get in touch with a company that does this type of investigation.
     
    BRAD DYSINGER and grizquad like this.
  16. BCB

    BCB Active Member

    Looks to me like the upper barrel is still attached to what is left of the mono block and that it was the lower section of the block that failed.
     
  17. BRAD DYSINGER

    BRAD DYSINGER The Philosophist Founding Member Member Trapshooting Hall of Fame Member State Hall of Fame

    Thanks Bruce, hard to believe what that gun looks like. I've never seen any gun blow up that bad before. Have you?
     
  18. bbblackhills

    bbblackhills Active Member Founding Member

    Brad,

    I have information on about 40 catastrophic shotgun failures. I have never seen one that came apart in that many pieces!

    Bruce Bowen
    Sturgis South Dakota
     
    cl3 likes this.
  19. Trap69

    Trap69 Member

    Circa spring as in march of ‘95 I was witness to a jap built weatherby grade 5 Athena o/u(SKB) grenading during a doubles event! Something caught me across upper right arm requiring 7 stitches. Durned near killed the dude firing it. Inconclusive results, but prior pair he scored dead a pair so kinda doubtful was a stuck wad etc etc. No one at club ever found any piece of metal that was 100% identified as belonging to the mono block & the ejected barrels were found muzzle buried in ground near post 5 where he was firing from. Whatever tore me up barely missed gentleman on post 4 as I was on #3 at time
     
  20. That’s incredible, hopefully he was not hurt.
     
  21. Diesel_ss

    Diesel_ss Moderator

    Wow hopefully the shooter wasn't hurt. That looks BAD!!!
     
  22. Clayman

    Clayman Well-Known Member

    Almost more damage than you would expect could be caused by a shotgun shell.
     
  23. Roy D

    Roy D Well-Known Member

    That's the same exact thought I had when I saw the picture! It's like the shell was totally full of gunpowder with no shot or wad. Even then, it seems unlikely that you could produce a grenade job like that.

    -Roy
     
    Clayman likes this.
  24. Digodell

    Digodell Active Member

    Something is certainly amiss here, we can all speculate but I doubt if anyone has seen something that catastrophic before. My theory is loaded with C4. That had to be a trip to the ER. Reinforces the need for glasses, I get lazy when hunting and glasses on occasion.
     
  25. Trap Haus

    Trap Haus Active Member Founding Member

    I see the “D” word hasn’t been breached yet
     
  26. 635 G

    635 G Mega Poster

    If there was a cocked wad, it could have made the shell the equivalent of a shaped charge
     
  27. plaw

    plaw Mega Poster

    Every club should have those pictures on club house wall as a reminder.
     
    Just Joe likes this.
  28. amboy49

    amboy49 Well-Known Member

    Causes are rarely actually determined, but if so rarely divulged it seems. This is a BT-99 a few years ago. Determined to be sabotaged by another shooter who dropped a shell into the gun owners shooting vest that was WAY overcharged with a pistol powder.

    40121D34-3D88-4B24-99F0-E7C73CA1DCD2.jpeg
     
  29. amboy49

    amboy49 Well-Known Member

    Here is another example. Unknown cause.

    F9FF4AF8-5364-4A99-9A1D-E7CD3B0B1CE6.jpeg
     
  30. bbblackhills

    bbblackhills Active Member Founding Member

    You have to keep in mind that burning rates on shotgun powder and pistol powder are very close. Compare Bullseye and Red Dot for example. The reason the real cause is seldom determined is because it is more convenient for everyone involved (except the shooter) to blame it on reloads. A double charge of powder is hard to get into a shot shell that has all the other components and even then the pressures are similar to a proof load. I AM NOT RECOMMENDING THAT YOU TRY IT!
     
  31. Double Trouble

    Double Trouble Active Member

    I would love to hear your theories as to what would cause this type of catastrophic failure. I'm not asking or suggesting you comment on this situation in particular however.

    Could it be metallurgy related? Heat treatment? That level of failure seems like it would be caused by very brittle steel and/or extremely high pressure, or both.
     
  32. cwtech

    cwtech Active Member

    Perhaps these are true examples of "gun violence."

    All mass shootings are done by violent PEOPLE !!
     
  33. Steve Randall

    Steve Randall Member

    I always make it a habit to check the barrel every time I shoot. If there is smoke rolling around in the barrel, I'll blow it out to clear the barrel so I can see if it's clear, also. It doesn't take that much extra time after each shot. You have to look down anyway to put the next shell in the gun...................... I remember years ago, several of us were shooting singles and when one of the guys shot, I heard a thump. I thought for a couple of seconds and just as he mounted his gun, I start hollering, Whoa!! Whoa!! He checked his barrel and sure enough, there was a wad stuck in the barrel. Phew!!
     
  34. 635 G

    635 G Mega Poster

    How about a base wad migrating from the hull, when Winchester changed hulls they had that problem