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ammo shelf life

Exo

Sergeant
Full Member
Minuteman
Jan 20, 2011
347
1
El Mirage, Arizona
This hit my BS meter pretty hard but a friend of myne called last night, apparently he heard that all ammo made after 2011 has a one year shelf life. I told him that it was BS and to not worry too much. I informed him that really old ammo can start to breakdown (powder becoming inconsistent) after a long wait but his ammo should be fine. I told him ive shot 40+ year old ammo out of my mauser before.

Some or any clarification would be appreciated.
 
Your friend heard wrong. Not even sure how you would manufacture planned obsolescence into ammo. I have ammo from the 80's that I would not hesitate to shoot. I have shot stray 22lr rounds I find in drawers that must be over 30 years old. The smart thing to do is always inspect your ammo for damage or some other issue that doesn't look right. I also keep all my ammo secured in dry ammo cans inside the house.
 
Never heard of ammo expiring. As long as there is no visible damage or major discoloration I'll shoot it. I've fire ammo that is over forty years old without any problems.
 
Ive shot about 200 rounds of WWII 45 acp. Every one went bang. Be sure to offer to buy all of his "old" ammo, you know, as a favor to him......
 
Internet rumor, NRA may be partially responsible for its existence, I think at one point they made mention of some politician(s) or organization calling for it. Who doesn't love a good conspiracy story though.
Consider though, first you have to make it decay predictably in a manner that makes it inert, not unstable, or in anyway more dangerous, which requires it to be compete and sudden, a gradual decay could/would lead to bore obstructions, I have faith this could be done, at a price. Then you have to make absolutely certain it never somehow finds its way into the military or law enforcement supply chain, military probably not so difficult, LE potentially very difficult. Then you have to brace yourself for potential lawsuits from users, or the kin of, who found themselves dead or serverely injured after the ammo failed to work in defensive events. You would also have to get it from the assembly line to the dc, out to the stores, and on to the individual users within a year, outside the current hysteria ammo does not normally move that fast in a lot of markets, dcs and retailers won't eat the cost of hundreds to thousands of lots of ammunition gone bad. I believe the industry would fight this tooth and nail, and you would hear about it, keeping it secret would be a very bad idea, in fact I suspect each cartridge would likely bear a expiration date and the boxes would be plastered in so many warnings you'd have to search for pertinent brand and type info.
 
Yeah I've heard a couple guys say this over the last year or so. All basically "they'll come after ammo next, it'll have a capsule in it to make it not work after a year" I just kind of look at them and say 'really" and try to go on about my day.
 
He's right... I'll be glad to take any ammo off you hands :)

I shot ammo made in the 70's, 80's, 90's... from .308, .45 acp, and of course Russian ammo 5.45x39
 
There are people shooting 7.62x54R dug up out of a field in the Ukraine that was manufactured 70 years ago. I wouldn't be concerned about much of anything when it comes to age.
 
It also might have something to due with LE ammo. Every year we are required to switch out our duty ammo regardless and load up with fresh ammo in all three mags. We put our old rounds in the range bucket to be used as practice ammo.
 
The LE ammo thing must somehow lead back to the lawyers. I know the in the military we trust our lives to biblical manufacture dates on some ammo and weapons, at least until we cleared out the old stocks on the new wars. The only problem ammo I have ever had was some .303 brit that was made in the early 60s. It lit off like a flintlock in an Enfield.
 
I have shoot German 8 mm brass cased ammo made in 1938, 1939 and 1940 without and fte or hang fires.
 
I've shot some ammo that was my Grandfather's with no issues, but I must admit I was a bit nervous as it looked suspect
 
Your friend heard wrong. Not even sure how you would manufacture planned obsolescence into ammo. I have ammo from the 80's that I would not hesitate to shoot. I have shot stray 22lr rounds I find in drawers that must be over 30 years old. The smart thing to do is always inspect your ammo for damage or some other issue that doesn't look right. I also keep all my ammo secured in dry ammo cans inside the house.


I love it when I find those strays in random drawers! I feel like homer simpson with candy but I say "ooh peice of ammo"
 
I would think there would have to be liability warnings included with ammo produced with a limited shelf life. Otherwise I would bet the liability attornies would have a field day filing on behalf of the first victim of a crime whose "expired" ammo failed to fire.
 
I'll be putting an add in the paper today that says I'll be willing to take any "expired" .22, .45. .308, .223, or 9mm!

Firearms more than 5 years old are also expired!
 
Tell your friend he is totally right but not to worry you will take the ammo off his hands and ensure it is disposed of properly.
 
The only problem I have ever had was shooting .50 cal made in 1949 out of an M2. It still fired but couldn't get the timing adjusted and would only fire one shot at a time when I hit the butterfly
 
It's a marketing gimmick. They tell you that so you have to shoot them and buy more. Hell I ate MREs that was expired back in 2004 and I diidn't get the runs, but they have to put expiration date to cover their ass and for the consumers to get rid of it and buy new ones...