People should be buying their ammo online in bulk anyways, it's much cheaper.
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Then it turns the mail van into the IED.
(But yes, I do the same)
borderlands real
That's not really what bullets do without a chamber or barrel. Also that is pretty clearly a fireproof safe.
Ammo pack for the shooters
I thought ammo vending machines were just a video game trope.
This is just one step away from a literal Budget Arms Slaught-O-Matic dispenser. Mike Pondsmith wrote Cyberpunk as satire, not as a rough guide to the future.
For what it's worth, the ID check means this makes it harder to buy ammo than it would be from a store with a person in it.
"At long last, we have created the Torment Nexus from classic sci-fi novel Don’t Create The Torment Nexus."
That vending machine anime is about to get a lot less lighthearted.
Thankfully without confinement in a barrel cooked off ammo is a lot less dangerous than you might think.
Though you'd still not want to stand near it.
This is so unrealistic. No American would say 40 meters.
67.3 burger radius
But when I ask for a vending machine that serves hot chicken meals, I just get blank faces
Ew gross, a vending machine that dispenses faces!?
I mean, as long as they're properly cooked. Raw face is just gross.
You have to show ID to buy ammo? The terrorists have won...
Is this real or parody ?
Apparently a real thing:
Though it looks like none of them are in Target (I had a hard time believing that anyway, they had a 'no firearms' policy for a long time).
It looks like there are 7 of them throughout the US; a few in Kansas, 1 in Texas, one in Colorado, and 1 in Alabama.
So I was looking at their little bit on security and I think its a riot that they do not even seem to hint at the issue of a cook off. In fact they seem to think security of live ammunition is just about theft and ID checking.
"Every transaction is powered by advanced card scanning and facial recognition technology to verify ID and age, ensuring every sale is secure, compliant, and backed by the highest standards of responsibility."
That is it, nothing else. Even looking at drink vending machines they have info on the mechanics of their machine (how it keeps things cold, how it stores and vends etc.).
For comparison every place I have seen ammo sold its ether just on a shelf, locked behind glass (not able to hold much pressure), or in a locked metal cage.
There is so much about this vending machine thats odd, definitely.
Not the least of which being, you know, fucking ammo in a vending machine.
Eh, everything vends in the end. That is not the weird part to me, its the blatant disregard of explosive storage safety that has me fascinated. Like this is from a company that makes ammo as well, and this makes me wonder if there is any design for a blow out or if they are also storing ammo like this in their facilities.
its the blatant disregard of explosive storage safety that has me fascinated
I mean, thats kind of ubiquitous though.
This sort of vending option can easily bypass most restrictions because its not a person. Yes, people can help bypass too, still though.
?
There are not really as much restrictions about ammo storage and less so with a vending machine. But what do you mean by bypass? What does it not being a person matter (any storage is not a person unless they are hooping rounds and yet people are still responsible for storage)?
I mean in terms of buying it. A vending machine has zero critical thinking skills and can potentially recognize someone behaving oddly, or blatantly using someone else's ID or other similar funny business.
I'm not talking about storage, the ubiquitous comment was about that. Like you said its almost always stored poorly, a vending machine doesnt change that.
Sorry I said it poorly and made that unclear
What? I did not say that. I was talking about storing explosives in a closed metal box (vending machine) is basically a bomb and the company was incorrectly thinking security of live ammo only had to do with theft and access. Did you just do the same exact thing as the people who make this vending machine?
Also to note, at least outside of america ammo is mostly stored securely (as in not a bomb and not trivially accessible out side of a store). You could argue that it could be better, but honestly the theft part is not the big issue in most places outside of america due to needing a firearm (or rough equivalent) to use the ammo.
No, I agree that its weird, I'm just saying its weirdly common to the way many locations store ammo. As you mentioned, piling it up under a thin piece of glass or inside a cabinet isn't really better. Its all pretty weird.
I also think the vending machine aspect is weird because it introduces other problems.
Many things can be weird about this.
No piling it up under a thin piece of glass or in a cage is better, like by a explosive amount. I was literally arguing the very opposite of what you have taken from my text, I really must do better it seems.
wondered if this sort of thing happens more often in the states? I mean kinda wild that this happens as I am looking at stupid american ammo storage.
It's America
Don't Americans dare say, that Japan has weird vending machines.
Japanese bending machines you say?
edit: they fixed it. nvm, TIL that bending machines are a thing. In Japan.
There are multiple types, but that looks like a press brake. If you haven't seen one in action, you might enjoy searching up a video of someone using one to make something.
Bender?
Nah, he was manufactured in Mexico.
Has family all over the place though.
Please insert girder.
FYI, you put in "bending machines."
otoh, Japan does have some bizarre adult devices so maybe you were correct?
Well, I guess we'll never need to ask "why's there ammo everywhere in video games?" Because we put it there. Have you not seen the vending machines?!
America really is the perfect setting for a survival shooter
I get mad at the lack of ammo in places when playing games, even here in Canada do you have any idea how many rounds are in say a Canadian Tire?
I hate to put the joke into the cruel light of reality but ammunition does not shoot when burned, the whole first name for brass cased ammo was "safety rounds" due to the design of the round being crimped means the brass will break open and nothing will shoot out when set off outside of a chamber. A round needs a to be chambered to "shoot" the projectile. When you hear about ammunition "cooking off" what is actually happening is the container the ammo in is acts like a pressure vessel and becoming a bomb. When people are hit with things in an ammo cook off its actually shrapnel (the container) doing most of the damage.
So in this case it would be the vending machine parts flying into people not the .50 cal rounds "blasting people". And the funny (and very american) thing is that the big old freedom box would be deadly but the racks and racks of unsecured ammo on shelves in cardboard boxes would not be. In fact the more heavy duty and secure you built the vending machine the worst it would be. But who knows maybe they have blast panels on this thing, making it the most over engineered solution to a problem no one should have.
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