Re: [guns] Cs core ammo

From: Michael S. Lorrey (mike@lorrey.com)
Date: Tue Jun 08 1999 - 14:23:08 MDT


James Rogers wrote:

> Actually, a standard copper jacket will be adequate, and would probably be
> required when using a material as soft as cesium. High-velocity rifle
> bullets have copper jackets for the similar reasons i.e. to prevent the
> lead core from distintegrating under the stress of extremely high RPMs.
> (Bullet jackets are also used to control expansion and keep a barrel from
> "leading", but that isn't terribly important here.)

This gives me an idea for a non-lethal round: not quite as soft as lead, the
round will spin out to a nice pancake in x many yards, delivering a nice
disabling smack to the target without penetration.

>
> For pistol bullets, your best bet would be to have a total metal jacket
> made of copper, and a hollow-point with a thin, protective layer deposited
> over the cesium. A rifle bullet would probably be best built by using a
> "ballistic tip" design: a fully jacketed cesium core in a hollow-point
> configuration, with a polycarbonate spitzer tip. This would insure both a
> sealed core and dramatic fragmentation on impact. Cesium is not the kind
> of material you want to have exposed to air.

I like the Hornady .45 200grain ammo I use with my muzzle loader, fully
jacketed, even inside the hollow point. Putting cesium inside that puppy will
definitely make sure a deer drops quickly without suffering.

>
> BTW, isn't cesium radioactive?

No its natural form is not, but a radioactive isotope of cesium is generated by
fission processes.

--
TANSTAAFL!!!
Michael S. Lorrey
Owner, Lorrey Systems
http://www.lorrey.com
ArtLocate.Com
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Director, Grafton County Fish & Game Assoc.
http://www.lorrey.com/gcfga/
Member, Extropy Institute
http://www.extropy.org
Member, National Rifle Association
http://www.nra.org
"Live Free or Die, Death is not the Worst of Evils."
                  - General John Stark


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