Most barrel split from bore obstructions. Count your self lucky you are alive.
Yes and no. Remington Rand merged with Sperry Gyroscope, then split into Remington and Sperry Rand. The computer division Univac was transfered in the split from Remington Rand to Sperry Rand.
In the early part of the nineteenth century, Yes this is the Cotton Gin inventor. Whitney firearms lasted a long time- they used standardized parts, and survived into the Breech-loading era. there were Whitney single-shot rifles made well after the Civil War and surely used on the Frontier. They were something like the Remington rolling block with the (split breech) action, and two overlapping hammers. ( so called, only on e actually fired the gun, the other was the breech block, like Remington.
Depends on how far back the split goes. If it is only split 2"-3" from the muzzle, it can be cut and recrowned. If it is split back futher, the gun will have to be rebarrelled.
No. The church had a split, and while one of the organists left, she chose to stay. Some other people were fired though.
Popped: burst, split, broke open, fired, discharged
The case may split when the round is fired.
Ozzy, who was the first original member to leave, was fired in 1979.
no slugs should on be shot thru a improved cylinder shotgun. if you shoot thru any other choke it can cause the barrel to split
Yes, but fyi, the "barrel" lowers the longer guns accuracy I don't use it
Need to have the chamber throat inspected by a gunsmith. sales@countrygunsmith.net
You may hurt more than the barrel. The .22 magnum is a larger diameter CASE and BULLET than the .22 LR (22 is a name, not a measurement). When a LR cartridge is fired in a Magnum chamber, there is a high chance the casing will split, possibly blowing bits of metal and hot gasses out of the chamber. There ARE revolvers made that will shoot both- but they use different cylinders. Do not try this- it is dangerous.
A bullet will usually stay together when fired, at least until it hits something hard enough to shatter it. If you're asking about what happens to a round of ammunition when fired, it's a bit different. At the very least the bullet will separate from the shell casing. There may also be some filler, and maybe some unburnt powder that gets ejected.