Discovered a toilet leak in the master bath last Sunday morning. Turned off the water supply, mopped up the floor, and plumber out the next day to fix er up. It didn't look like the slow drip had done any damage beyond getting the molding wet in the little room where the toilet is.
Fast forward to Thursday. The only ammo I have (besides .22 and shot shells, and none of that is on the floor) not in ammo cans was an unopened cardboard box holding 20 boxes of S&B .40 S&W range ammo that I bought a couple of years ago. It was sitting against a wall in the master closet about three feet away from the bathroom. Decided to move the box to make more room for shoes. And you guessed it...the box was damp.
Sure enough, a case of FMJ with probably 200-300 rounds showing visible water condensation. So it had been sitting in that environment for at least four days. No visible discoloration or corrosion on the cartridges or around the primers. I pulled everything out and dumped it on a towel to get the visible water off, then put the rounds back in their plastic trays (trashed the cardboard boxes) and shut them up in a small room with a dehumidifier running. All the rounds I checked looked bone dry after a few hours of the dehumidifier working, but I let it run overnight Thursday and most of the day Friday. Then transferred the cartridges to ammo cans with the usual silica tray in there.
Since this is not defensive ammo and is intended for plinking & practice only, is there any danger in trying to shoot it? An occasional squib or misfire with it doesn't really bother me: good practice. I just don't want it to be unsafe...and I really don't want to go to the trouble of getting rid of it other than on the range.
Thanks for the advice!
(And note to self: I have the ammo cans for a reason, darnit. Never store ammo on the floor again unless it's in an airtight can.
