Take notes, noob:
- Ice arrow with iron on the end. Deathly and without fringer prints.
- Kill him with any method and bury him 2 meters under a (also buried) dog. The police will think the trained dogs smelled that and leave the place.
-Force him to listen to Justin Bieber. He will commit suicide by himself.
Have a nice day, and don't try this at home.
If you have a bullet mold (not used very much in modern times so ask an older relative or something) fill it with ice and put it in the freezer. A couple hours later take it out and put the bullet in the gun and shoot your victim. The bullet will melt and no one will ever know anything. Well except that he's dead of course (don't ask me if I'm a serial killer because I learned this from encyclopedia brown)
I would assume that the ice would either explode or melt from the heat of the explosion before reaching the target
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· 10 years ago
An ice arrow works, but not an ice bullet. Because of what micky said and because it would be empty of gunpowder, so it wouldn't even go out the gun. Plus you will need a perfect mold of the ammunition you are using, which is unlikely
You don't need the bullet out of the barrel. You can shove it back in the cartridge and so long as it has a new primer, it will work. I use it with hot glue bullets I make for cheap, safe shooting in my yard. Very good training tool for those new to handguns. It isn't nearly as effective, obviously, but point blank, it just might work. So quit spouting out stuff you've got no clue about.
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· 10 years ago
I don't know what you mean by "you don't need the bullet out of the barrel" (non native english, sorry).
A modern gun uses no explosives in themselfs, it's all in the ammuniton. So, when you trigger the shot, you are hammering the bullet to make a controled explosion that makes part of it "fly" and the other fall to the ground. If you use only hot glue bullets you are only giving them the hammer power, not an explosion as the bullet.
Therefore, you can damage with them, but not near as kill. Neither with glue or ice bullets. Plus the before said, that the ice would break as you hammer it.
Quit trying to be a known-everything and treat people with respect, because as you can see, the one who doesn't have a clue about guns, neither about physics (because of the ice blast resistance and the force you give to your ammunition) is you.
PS: If you are firing with air-compressed guns, of course your hot glue ammo will work, but that is not the thing here.
The bullet is the top, NOT the entire thing. Whoever started this misconception needs their vocal cords removed.
When you discharge the firearm, you're hitting the firing pin which "punches" the primer in the cartridge. The primer is an explosive. The primer reacts to the force from the firing pin to produce a heat and a small blast that ignites the propellant, which happens to be the gun powder. The gun powder, which comes in slow, normal and fast burning variants depending on what you've got (shotgun, handgun, rifle, etc.) which creates pressure inside of the chamber and cartridge to push the bullet forward. This is what causes the rearwards recoil, the pressure that pushes it out. horizontal and vertical recoil is produced by the gas escaping from the muzzle. Depending on the action, gas can also be used to cycle the firearm and eject the round. Most modern semi-automatics either use the recoil to cycle the action or gas trying to make its way out of the barrel goes through
the gas tube to push it back and cycle it.
"You don't need the bullet out of the barrel." I'm not sure why I put that, I believe it was a typo and I meant that you don't need the bullet out of the cartridge, or in other words, that you don't need the powder to fire it.
Also, a hot glue bullet inside of a cartridge with a new primer is completely OK. Not once did I mention air pressure as being the way it's fired.
And on top of all of that, the hammer is far more powerful than you think. If you put a pencil down a barrel large enough to fit it, pointed it up at the ceiling and pulled the trigger, it would hit the ceiling and likely break. The firing pin has more than enough power to push something out of the barrel, so even if it isn't at a lethal speed, it's going to hurt like hell.
I can tell, however, that you don't actually know the anatomy of ammunition. You see, there are 4 key components that make up a "bullet" as you would call it. The powder, primer, cartridge and the bullet/slug. The bullet or shot is the projectile(s) that comes out of the barrel, not the whole thing. So, contrary to what you think, an ice bullet would actually work. Since you are incapable of researching it, here is a link that shows ice slugs being uses in a shotgun. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vn7np7I9haA Fast forward to about 1 minute in.
Furthermore, a hot glue bullet would also work, even without the powder. The primer is an explosive just like those little firework snap pops. In fact, they are very much the same in that sufficient force sets them off.
As you can see, the one who actually knows is the person who has been around firearms for nearly 20 years and been working on them for 14 years. Considering your VERY lacking knowledge on them, you obviously don't know much.
- Ice arrow with iron on the end. Deathly and without fringer prints.
- Kill him with any method and bury him 2 meters under a (also buried) dog. The police will think the trained dogs smelled that and leave the place.
-Force him to listen to Justin Bieber. He will commit suicide by himself.
Have a nice day, and don't try this at home.
A modern gun uses no explosives in themselfs, it's all in the ammuniton. So, when you trigger the shot, you are hammering the bullet to make a controled explosion that makes part of it "fly" and the other fall to the ground. If you use only hot glue bullets you are only giving them the hammer power, not an explosion as the bullet.
Therefore, you can damage with them, but not near as kill. Neither with glue or ice bullets. Plus the before said, that the ice would break as you hammer it.
Quit trying to be a known-everything and treat people with respect, because as you can see, the one who doesn't have a clue about guns, neither about physics (because of the ice blast resistance and the force you give to your ammunition) is you.
PS: If you are firing with air-compressed guns, of course your hot glue ammo will work, but that is not the thing here.
When you discharge the firearm, you're hitting the firing pin which "punches" the primer in the cartridge. The primer is an explosive. The primer reacts to the force from the firing pin to produce a heat and a small blast that ignites the propellant, which happens to be the gun powder. The gun powder, which comes in slow, normal and fast burning variants depending on what you've got (shotgun, handgun, rifle, etc.) which creates pressure inside of the chamber and cartridge to push the bullet forward. This is what causes the rearwards recoil, the pressure that pushes it out. horizontal and vertical recoil is produced by the gas escaping from the muzzle. Depending on the action, gas can also be used to cycle the firearm and eject the round. Most modern semi-automatics either use the recoil to cycle the action or gas trying to make its way out of the barrel goes through
"You don't need the bullet out of the barrel." I'm not sure why I put that, I believe it was a typo and I meant that you don't need the bullet out of the cartridge, or in other words, that you don't need the powder to fire it.
Also, a hot glue bullet inside of a cartridge with a new primer is completely OK. Not once did I mention air pressure as being the way it's fired.
And on top of all of that, the hammer is far more powerful than you think. If you put a pencil down a barrel large enough to fit it, pointed it up at the ceiling and pulled the trigger, it would hit the ceiling and likely break. The firing pin has more than enough power to push something out of the barrel, so even if it isn't at a lethal speed, it's going to hurt like hell.
Furthermore, a hot glue bullet would also work, even without the powder. The primer is an explosive just like those little firework snap pops. In fact, they are very much the same in that sufficient force sets them off.
As you can see, the one who actually knows is the person who has been around firearms for nearly 20 years and been working on them for 14 years. Considering your VERY lacking knowledge on them, you obviously don't know much.
Kill them and make it look like a suicide.