Another Gun Range Explosion (Blows Out in Face)
Catastrophic failure of a S&W M&P15 due to a squib load. Shooter was fine, but the gun not so much.
Squib load
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This article is about malfunctioning cartridges. For small explosive charges, see squib (explosive). For cartridges without bullets, see blank (cartridge).
British-made three-inch coastal gun damaged by a squib.
A squib load, also known as a squib round, pop and no kick, or just a squib, is a firearms malfunction in which a fired projectile does not have enough force behind it to exit the barrel, and thus becomes stuck. This type of malfunction can be extremely dangerous, as failing to notice that the projectile has become stuck in the barrel may result in another round being fired directly into the obstructed barrel, resulting in a catastrophic failure of the weapon's structural integrity.
Contents
[hide]
1 Causes
2 Diagnosis
3 See also
4 References
[edit] Causes
Squib rounds are possible in all black powder and smokeless powder based projectile weapons. They are most often caused by negligence in the powder loading process (insufficient powder load), or a failure of the primer to ignite the powder at all. While this occurs most often because of handloading by inexperienced reloaders, squib loads are known to occur even in reputable factory brands. Other causes include deformed bullets and attempting to fire a bullet which is slightly too large for the barrel, although both of these scenarios would more likely result in some variety of catastrophic failure instead of a squib.
[edit] Diagnosis
Signs that a squib round has occurred include: a much quieter or otherwise unusual-sounding discharge noise, lighter or nonexistent felt recoil force, discharge of smoke from the ejection port instead of the barrel, and a failure of the action to cycle (in semi-automatic firearms). That is why it is also referred to as "pop and no kick".
British-made three-inch coastal gun damaged by a squib.
Catastrophic failure of a S&W M&P15 due to a squib load. Shooter was fine, but the gun not so much.
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Spend the extra money on quality ammo.Stop using the russian made crap.They realy ought to ban Wolf/Bear Ammo in the U.S.![]()
ive fired thousands of rounds of tull ammo, which is essentially the same ammo from the same factory and never had a problem.
Intresting to know if this was Wolf ammo because the UK is flooded with it at the moment and people are buying it because its much cheaper than Privi etc.
more like reloaders not knowing what they are doing.
I've made some squibs myself when reloading. Only two, as far as I recall, among many thousands of rounds. Fortunately I knew what had happened both times and never made the mistake of firing into a blocked barrel. It's disturbing to consider the possible outcomes. One of my rifles has a bolt that could conceivably be propelled straight backwards...
Squib load
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
This article is about malfunctioning cartridges. For small explosive charges, see squib (explosive). For cartridges without bullets, see blank (cartridge).
British-made three-inch coastal gun damaged by a squib.
A squib load, also known as a squib round, pop and no kick, or just a squib, is a firearms malfunction in which a fired projectile does not have enough force behind it to exit the barrel, and thus becomes stuck. This type of malfunction can be extremely dangerous, as failing to notice that the projectile has become stuck in the barrel may result in another round being fired directly into the obstructed barrel, resulting in a catastrophic failure of the weapon's structural integrity.
Contents
[hide]
1 Causes
2 Diagnosis
3 See also
4 References
[edit] Causes
Squib rounds are possible in all black powder and smokeless powder based projectile weapons. They are most often caused by negligence in the powder loading process (insufficient powder load), or a failure of the primer to ignite the powder at all. While this occurs most often because of handloading by inexperienced reloaders, squib loads are known to occur even in reputable factory brands. Other causes include deformed bullets and attempting to fire a bullet which is slightly too large for the barrel, although both of these scenarios would more likely result in some variety of catastrophic failure instead of a squib.
[edit] Diagnosis
Signs that a squib round has occurred include: a much quieter or otherwise unusual-sounding discharge noise, lighter or nonexistent felt recoil force, discharge of smoke from the ejection port instead of the barrel, and a failure of the action to cycle (in semi-automatic firearms). That is why it is also referred to as "pop and no kick".

British-made three-inch coastal gun damaged by a squib.