Okay, I'm in tradeschool, learning to become a gunsmith. I'm an apprentice of John Christianson in Payson Arizona, and have studied firearms since I was a freshman in highschool. I like to think I know a thing or two about guns.
Mythbusters, as you all know, is a show where they take myths and put them to the test. I always liked this show until they started to do gun myths. They are usually wrong when it comes to determining if a gun myth is true or not, which makes me wonder just how many other myths are wrong? I'm going to pull a few examples.
1: Guns can NOT blow locks off of doors or render them un-lockable
Simply not true. Police and military forces use this technique all the time, and several soldiers in Iraq carry shotguns with slugs specifically for this purpose. Several ammunition manufacturers even sell slugs known as "Lock Busters". A 3 inch long 12 gauge slug can travel 1700 FPS. I'm pretty sure that can decimate a lock.
2: You are 100% safe from bullets when underwater.
Half true. If you recall, in this episode they tested this myth by taking guns of several calibers to a pool, and began firing them into a chamber in the water. The fundamental flaw in this myth is that the guns are fired only 2 feet or so from the water. If the gun is that close to the water, you are safe. However, if you were unfortunate enough to participate in the D-Day invasion, you will know this myth is not true. The MG42 that the Germans used during that day fires the oh so special 7.92x57 Mauser round at 2500 FPS. Since the weapons were fired at downward angles, several hundred yards away from the beach, the bullets were able to slow down just enough that the bullets were able to penetrate the water before shattering, and were able to kill American GIs.
3: You can NOT shoot through a scope of another rifle.
Myth should be PLAUSIBLE. Mythbusters did not take several things into account, such as temperature, scope manufacturer, scope temp, windage, height above sea level, calibers, strength of bullet recipient, and angle of the shot being fired. These are all conditions that needed to be met in order to test this myth properly. Instead, they put two rifles some distance between each other, and lined them up, and shot them. Gun lovers everywhere cringed. Shooting through a scope is not a terribly uncommon occurrence and has happened more than once.
Those are plain, out right wrong ones. Several other gun myths have inconsistencies within them, but it would take up quite a bit of space to write them. They have done one or two myths that I approve of.
Such as testing to see if bullets curve (Even if it was stupidly dangerous which it didn't need to be.) Or when they had proven the shooting an oil drum or gas drum won't make it explode. And I LOVE the myth where they prove that you cannot be knocked back by a bullet, and the one where they prove that you cannot make a car explode by shooting it. Those are very common misconceptions that I'm glad they addressed.
/end rant
Phew. Needed to get all of that off my chest
Mythbusters, as you all know, is a show where they take myths and put them to the test. I always liked this show until they started to do gun myths. They are usually wrong when it comes to determining if a gun myth is true or not, which makes me wonder just how many other myths are wrong? I'm going to pull a few examples.
1: Guns can NOT blow locks off of doors or render them un-lockable
Simply not true. Police and military forces use this technique all the time, and several soldiers in Iraq carry shotguns with slugs specifically for this purpose. Several ammunition manufacturers even sell slugs known as "Lock Busters". A 3 inch long 12 gauge slug can travel 1700 FPS. I'm pretty sure that can decimate a lock.
2: You are 100% safe from bullets when underwater.
Half true. If you recall, in this episode they tested this myth by taking guns of several calibers to a pool, and began firing them into a chamber in the water. The fundamental flaw in this myth is that the guns are fired only 2 feet or so from the water. If the gun is that close to the water, you are safe. However, if you were unfortunate enough to participate in the D-Day invasion, you will know this myth is not true. The MG42 that the Germans used during that day fires the oh so special 7.92x57 Mauser round at 2500 FPS. Since the weapons were fired at downward angles, several hundred yards away from the beach, the bullets were able to slow down just enough that the bullets were able to penetrate the water before shattering, and were able to kill American GIs.
3: You can NOT shoot through a scope of another rifle.
Myth should be PLAUSIBLE. Mythbusters did not take several things into account, such as temperature, scope manufacturer, scope temp, windage, height above sea level, calibers, strength of bullet recipient, and angle of the shot being fired. These are all conditions that needed to be met in order to test this myth properly. Instead, they put two rifles some distance between each other, and lined them up, and shot them. Gun lovers everywhere cringed. Shooting through a scope is not a terribly uncommon occurrence and has happened more than once.
Those are plain, out right wrong ones. Several other gun myths have inconsistencies within them, but it would take up quite a bit of space to write them. They have done one or two myths that I approve of.
Such as testing to see if bullets curve (Even if it was stupidly dangerous which it didn't need to be.) Or when they had proven the shooting an oil drum or gas drum won't make it explode. And I LOVE the myth where they prove that you cannot be knocked back by a bullet, and the one where they prove that you cannot make a car explode by shooting it. Those are very common misconceptions that I'm glad they addressed.
/end rant
Phew. Needed to get all of that off my chest

I AM the evil bastard!
)



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