where do you store your handguns and ammo

sounds like a funny question to ask.....but where do you store/keep your ammo. i've got a gun safe that also doubles as a safe area for my ammo. i've read that ammo and handguns should not be stored together. your thoughts and suggestions would be appreciated.:smile
 
I see no one has responded to your post. With that beiing said, I also keep Ammo in my safe with my Firearms. But Also, I keep A Few Loaded Handguns around house for Protection. I keep My RugerP345 Inside a wall Clock by the front door. I Custom made an holster for the side of my bed to hold my Smith & wesson .357 Mag And I, Have my Glock G20 Inside an Picture Frame in the Living Room Everything is +1 ready to go but most Important ,Safe. No-one Knows my Weapons are there But myself and, my wife.I 've always kept my Ammo with my Weapons Seems to me that if you need to get to the safe and, grab an weapon the last thing you want to do is go searching for Ammo. I Keep My Ammo in Order that my weapons are placed in safe that way I can Grab Right Ammo For Weapon even in the dark.
 
lawabiding_citizen -


No one's answering because you're new, no one knows you, and this is kind of like asking "do you store your cash under your mattress, or buried in the backyard. You can trust me! My user name says I can be trusted!" lol....

But I'll bite. I store my guns loaded, throughout the house, hidden, but in easy reach.

Hidden because on the off chance that someone breaks in, I'd rather they take the TV and leave then for me to arm them. We have insurance anyway.

Someone would have to be pretty stupid to rob us, I'm awake all night, sleep in the day, and am usually home. Both my wife and I are armed all the time, and sleep less than a foot away from several loaded guns with mounted flashlights. I'm a very light sleeper.
I open carry in the neighborhood, so anyone casing the place knows I'm armed. Also, our front doorbell is disconnected (I don't like salesmen, and no one ever comes by that I want to see unless they call first), so there is that.

I also have small cameras hidden all over the house, INSIDE. I don't really care who's outside as much as who, if anyone, has been inside. (Also, a local cop told me that the DEA is on the lookout for homes with cameras outside the house. I don't do drugs and don't break any laws, but I don't want any unneeded heat.)

The cameras record to an off-site location (unlinked, non-public, password-protected web folder on the server space I use). So even if someone breaks in, and finds and steal the cameras, there's no hard drive on site to steal, and no way for them to delete the evidence.

If any of this sounds a little, um, excessive, here's the short-form back story: I've lived in big cities most of my life, often in really crappy neighborhoods. I've been mugged twice, once with a knife to my throat. I've had my house broken into four times, twice while I was home. I've had to go to court to put a restraining order on someone who seriously wanted to kill me, and I still moved out of that city for added safety. (This was before I had guns. It was in San Francisco, a city where you cannot legally carry a gun.)

I've somehow made it to age 45 without being killed. I've finally gotten to a place in my life that I can afford to live someone decent, and a couple of years ago I discovered something called "guns."

I love life and I love my wife! I'm not taking any chances from here on out.

MWD
 
I keep gun in safe/loaded of course and the ammo in a military ammo can. Keeps it water tight and safe easy to grab to take with me for shooting. I'm not worried about having a battle at the OK corral in my house. For two reasons I live in a safe neighborhood in a very safe town and I'm a really good shot:laugh:
 
I have one pistol with me 24/7 . when it is not on my side i have it with in close reach at all times. My rifle is in the closet within easy reach and my 45 long colt leaves in a holster fully loaded beside the bed. and as for ammo it is in a ammo can so I can grab and go.
 
I keep the guns and the carry ammo in the same safe. Target ammo is in the lock box in the basement.

Top shelf: .45acp and .40S&W, carry ammo on the same shelf with loaded mags at the ready.

Bottom shelf: .357 Mag with 2 speed loaders. Box of 357B's in the back corner.

Peace...
 
I have no problem telling where I store my stuff. :biggrin: I have five full sized safes storing my firearms. All of my firearms are loaded and ready to go. If I open a safe all I have to do is pick up one and use it if I need it. So I do keep firearms and ammo together. I've posted before where I keep my bulk ammo. I have a section of wall that is full of ammo cans full of ammo. It keeps it dry and accessible.
 
I store my ammo in my firearms and my firearms on my person. It is amazing how many you can carry if you dress appropriately. :biggrin:
 
You might want to rethink keeping loaded firearms around the house in case of fire. Tests (that I saw in the American Rifleman a while back) have shown that once the gun reaches a critical temperature the one in the chamber can fire - and it may kill an emergency responder. From what I remember of the tests it's ok to keep the mags loaded and in the firearms because the propellant will not be contained and eject the projectile. It will probably destroy the gun but not injure anyone. Doesn't take much time to rack a slide. Of course, if they're inside a safe then it's probably ok either way.
 
I live in a brick house and all the rugs and curtains are fire resistant.

MWD
A brick house? Reminds me of a story I once read.


Link Removed


The wolf knocked on the door and said, "Little pig, little pig, let me come in."

"No, no," said the little pig. "By the hair of my chinny chin chin, I will not let you come in."
"Then I'll huff and I'll puff and I'll blow your house in," said the wolf.

So he huffed and he puffed and he huffed and he puffed. But the house of bricks did not fall down.
 
... i've read that ammo and handguns should not be stored together. your thoughts and suggestions would be appreciated.

Together in the same safe would be fine, as long as there are no chambered rounds, as AvidshooterTX noted. Together outside a safe would not be recommended because an unauthorized person might do something unpleasant.

I always have one on my person; all others are unloaded and locked up.
 
My AR, Glock 20 and .22 rifle are always loaded although only the Glock has a round chambered as that's what I've been carrying lately. These are the "bug-out" weapons of choice. Everything else is unloaded, locked away and all my ammo is in ammo cans near by. Some cans have loaded magazines and others just have loose ammo.
 
As for the fire safety thing....I think the 10,000 rds of boxed ammo would be a bigger danger in a fire than the rounds in the guns. I also keep fire extinguishers in every room, have smoke alarms, and keep guns pointed in a safe direction.

MWD
 
As for the fire safety thing....I think the 10,000 rds of boxed ammo would be a bigger danger in a fire than the rounds in the guns. I also keep fire extinguishers in every room, have smoke alarms, and keep guns pointed in a safe direction.

MWD
I trust you do not store your firearms with rounds in the chambers?

When I was a boy scout, i put a couple of .22's in the firepit. The scout masters were not very pleased with me. I didn't have a long carrer with the BSA.

Here is what I found on "cook off"

In his book "Gunshot Wounds" Vincent Di Maio describes various experiments where ammunition was heated in ovens. He says that .22 long rifle cartridges detonate at an average of 275F, .38 Special at 290F and 12 gauge shotgun shells at 387F. The interesting thing about these furnace experiments was that in all instances the cartridge cases ruptured, but the primers did not detonate. In fact the primers were removed from some of the ruptured cases, reloaded into other brass and fired.

When cartridges are placed in a fire he confirms that the most dangerous component of a cartridge is the brass, or fragments thereof that may cause eye injury or penetrate skin, but certainly there is no evidence that a cartridge that is not in a firearm can cause a mortal wound, either by action of the bullet or the brass/primer fragments. It is important to remember however that a chambered cartridge that detonates in a fire is just as dangerous as a cartridge that is fired under normal circumstances in a firearm.

To get a better understanding of the behaviour of free-standing ammunition in a fire, he conducted experiments with a propane torch. A total of 202 cartridges (handgun, centerfire rifle and shotgun cartridges) were used. If the heat was applied directly to the base of a shotgun shell the primer would detonate, the powder would ignite and the shell would rupture. Any pellets that emerged were traveling too slowly to be recorded on a chronograph.

In rifle and handgun cartridges where the flame was applied to the base of the cartridge the primers always detonated but the powder only ignited in half the cases and in those instances the cases did not rupture but the gas was instead vented through the primer hole.

When he heated these same handgun and rifle cartridges at the front, the powder would burn and the cases would usually rupture but with few exceptions the primers did not detonate. The velocity of expelled projectiles ranged from 58 ft/s to 123 ft/s. The only exception was the .270 cartridge where the bullet velocity was 230 ft/s. Primer velocities ranged from 180 ft/s to 830 ft/s.

As a side note he says that a revolver in a fire is especially dangerous because all the cartridges can cook off and be discharged such that there is a danger from projectiles. Only the bullet that came out of the barrel will have rifling marks and the ones that came from non-aligned chambers will have shear marks on them. Obviously if there is a question about the firing of a weapon and whether it was cooked off or fired intentionally they will look for a firing-pin impression on the primer of the suspect cartridge case.

References:

Sciuchetti G.D. Ammunition and fire. American Rifleman 144(3): 36-38, 59-60, March 1996.

Cooking-Off Cartridges. NRA Illustrated Reloading Handbook. Washington, D.C.: The National Rifle Association of America.

Despite what the facts are, if those 10,000 start cooking off, I wonder if your local fire department is going to back off at a safe distance, get a couple of overhead streams going, sit back and watch your place burn.
 
Did anyone see the episode of "Mythbusters" where they cooked-off ammo in an oven?? Their results were disappointing in the fact that the discharged rounds were not much of a threat. Only the .50 cal round did much of anything.

Anyway, in my home I keep my weapons in a gun safe (fire resistant, bolted to the floor) and my ammo is stacked in my closet. In my truck I have a lockbox bolted inside my center console. It also has a steel cable that comes out of the bottom of the console and is wrapped around the seat support. There will be no smash-and-grab when it somes to my truck.
 

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