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I see someone has posted the black powder explosion test again. While one person ran one test and it's repeated often on the Internet powder and suspended material fires are real and very dangerous. It's NOT a myth. I know the range mentioned below and have shot in it before. The bay that exploded holds 6 shooters, suspended material could only have come from those 6 shooters with pistols in an area 25 yards long by about 30 feet wide. & 10 feet high. The bays have forced air ventilation that may or may not have been operating at the time. While the place is not well run the problem is one that could happen in other places through ignorance of potential danger. Point is a lot of cubic feet and very little suspended material caused a serious situation. While not in the news article local officials have speculated unburned powder in the air put the danger level over the top. Loading a single case full of black powder to my knowledge has not been proven to be dangerous. Somewhere between that single case full of black and 6 shooters on an indoor range using smokeless there is a danger line. Watch the guy who tried to ignite black powder with a spark on the internet, be real carefull when handling powder yourself. He did not duplicate the potentialy dangerious conditon. A pile of sold materal is not the same as suspended dust. Boats The Virginian-Pilot © May 13, 2008 VIRGINIA BEACH The fire that ripped through an indoor shooting range Sunday, injuring seven people, is the latest in a string of problems at the facility. In the past year, A&P Arms' Lynnhaven Shooting Range has been cited for worker safety violations; had a former manager sent to prison for stealing, selling and giving away guns; and has its license under investigation by the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. Sunday's fire, which is under investigation, was the third at the business in the past 15 years, fire officials said. Four of the injured are hospitalized but are doing better, Battalion Chief Leon Dextradeur said. "They are all upright and talking and have different levels of burn injuries, but none appears to be critical at this time," he said. A&P Arms is owned by Shooting Sports Distributors Inc. The president of the company is Norman Gladden Jr., according to state records. He did not respond to voice messages Monday on his cell phone and at the store. A message on the store's answering machine said, "We are temporarily closed and will reopen as soon as possible." The fire started in one of the store's three shooting lanes and ignited a wood divider that separates them, Dextradeur said. "With the backing they use to catch the bullets, you'll get lead and other debris that will back up there," said Mike Campbell, spokesman for the ATF. "Depending on their cleaning method, you may get a spark that will start a fire. "I don't know if there was material that hadn't been cleared out or what. That appears to be what happened at Woodbridge and maybe happened here," Campbell said. In March 2007, a fire engulfed Shooter's Paradise, a gun store and firing range in Woodbridge in Northern Virginia. No one was injured. In 1994, an explosion sparked a fire at the A&P shooting range. No one was hurt. An accumulation of chemicals may have caused that fire, officials said at the time. In June, A&P Arms was fined $1,740 after being cited for five violations by the U.S. Department of Labor's Occupational Safety and Health Administration. The violations were for "lead, inorganic fumes and dusts" and employee exposure to sodium hydroxide. Last month, a former store manager was sentenced to 15 months for stealing firearms, including a submachine gun. ATF agents identified 51 guns that Marcus A. McCall sold, gave away or kept in his Virginia Beach home, according to court records. McCall worked at the A&P Arms store in Hampton, but often transported guns to the Virginia Beach store, court records showed. The store's ATF license is under review, confirmed Campbell. He said the investigation is not related to Sunday's fire but declined to give details. Aaron Applegate, (757) 222-5122, aaron.applegate@pilotonline.com
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