Ammo Storage Dos and Don’ts Everyone Must Learn and Remember

ammo

If you own a gun or two, chances are you've already acquired a nice amount of ammunition for hunting and survival. If you're planning ahead for a possible emergency situation, you may want to grow your stash a little more. Read on to find out how to do just that.

Unlike purchasing food, camping tools, or survival gear, purchasing guns and ammo is a little more difficult thanks to regulations. If you purchase more ammunition, you don't want to buy it all at one store. Shop for it at many stores instead.

Take care if you purchase ammo through websites as purchases will leave a paper trail that could possibly prompt an investigation.

Now let's move onto the next page to find out how to properly buy and store extra ammo.

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16 Comments

  1. Benito Luna said:

    So i shouldnt buy 1000 rounds of 60 year old 12ga off the internet from one site, have it shipped to my house, then bury it in front of my house in a cardboard box?

  2. Aaron Hoffman said:

    My thought exactly. I have seen ammo the Jordanian military had. .50 cal from the 50’s and 40mms from the 70’s. Best ammo ever shot minus the tracer compound didn’t work.

  3. Alex Nunes said:

    Its actually a myth that storing magazines full wears the spring do to the fact the spring is heat treated to hold that shape and any heat will force it back to the original rate of coil

  4. Alex Nunes said:

    Low humidity is ideal and touch the ammo bare handed as little as possible due too oils on your hands

  5. Viktor Kovalyov said:

    Pretty sure that’s why genuine Soviet ammo had the non-corrosive coating.$#%&!@*for the gun, but great for long shelf life.

  6. Alex Nunes said:

    Yeah you’d be surprised how corrosion inducing the oils from your hands can do to brass and even wood i.e. why relics made of metal and would are handled with gloves

  7. Brent Morgan said:

    I was taught it will warp the spring, even in the army they told us this.

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