User Panel
Posted: 12/3/2017 9:17:20 PM EDT
Yes, real silver for werewolves.
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Oregon Trail makes silver alloy bullets.
I have given this some thought. Silver can overcome the werewolf's magic and the molecules of silver that damage the animal's flesh make permanent wounds - even if that silver is pushed by other elements the parts damaged by the silver still matter. I don't think the weapon needs to be pure silver to get the job done. |
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I haven't seen any werewolves recently, but it would be cool just to have some just to have them.
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Silver is too hard and will not take rifling very well.
Several years ago there was some InnerWebZ dude making actual sterling silver bullets but they were outrageously priced. Something like $40 each! Better round would be a shotshell. Make shot by pouring a thin stream of molten silver into water high enough above so the stream separates. Load shot into shells. |
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Yes, real silver for werewolves. View Quote |
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I have seen pictures of a cased revolver from the 19th century which was said to contain silver bullets.
It would be very difficult to cast silver bullets with conventional lead bullet molds. You could electroplate bullets with silver. I bet that would work. |
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I asked this very question here awhile back. After a lot of research the answer is no. I was going to have a local jeweler make me some out of silver bars and then learned silver would be hard on the rifling.
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Silver is too hard and will not take rifling very well. View Quote Der Jägerchor (Carl Maria von Weber - Der Freischütz) Freikugel is free bullet, or magic bullet. Six goes where you want them to go but the seventh is guided by the devil himself. |
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Silver plating would be much more practical, I believe.
It's not hard to do at home, either. |
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I'm thinking that, once the werewolf charges, preserving the rifling is gonna quickly take a back seat to not having my throat torn out by a werewolf.
Anyway, you don't have silver bullets to shoot them. You have them as a deterrent. |
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Silver is too hard and will not take rifling very well. Several years ago there was some InnerWebZ dude making actual sterling silver bullets but they were outrageously priced. Something like $40 each! Better round would be a shotshell. Make shot by pouring a thin stream of molten silver into water high enough above so the stream separates. Load shot into shells. View Quote |
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I asked this very question here awhile back. After a lot of research the answer is no. I was going to have a local jeweler make me some out of silver bars and then learned silver would be hard on the rifling. View Quote I thought about making some myself. But due to the natural shrinkage of silver as it hardens, I didn't know the math to make a mold. |
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Lead core with a silver jacket. Cheaper and the werewolves won't know the difference. LOL werewolves.
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From the experts.
Silver bullets are too light and don't engage barrel rifling properly, resulting in poor penetration and accuracy. MHI uses a modified Corbon Pow'r Balldesign: a hollowpoint round with a silver ball inside the cavity. As it's expensive, it's only available in .45 ACP and .308 Winchester. The MCB uses a different design that relies on powdered silver in a polymer matrix, available in 9mm Parabellum, 5.56mm NATO and 7.62mm NATO, but is available exclusively to the government. View Quote |
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The answe to the rifling issue is a silver core instead of lead.
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Composite is better. Silver in the center, copper outside. Something like this image: http://www.thefirearmblog.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/tmp_dropzone_m_855a_102-tfb.jpg View Quote Make them at home once the werewolf plague strikes? No... ...I like my idea more. |
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Just get some big deep HPs and fill them with silver.
Be careful though. Werewolves change back to human once killed, and then you got a dead naked dude to explain. |
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To kill a werewolf, the silver must be a blessed cross from a priest.
The cross must be melted down and the bullets cast by the own will use them. Any other bullets will not harm the werewolf. |
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A silver sword makes much more sense.
"A Night to Remember" Launch Cinematic - The Witcher III: Wild Hunt |
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To kill a werewolf, the silver must be a blessed cross from a priest. The cross must be melted down and the bullets cast by the own will use them. Any other bullets will not harm the werewolf. View Quote |
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I would prefer silver buckshot or slugs in 12 gauge View Quote Expensive, but I bet very effective. They were swaged into that shape, making dies would be expensive, but the whole project is expensive anyway. |
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You would probably still need a copper jacket. So maybe a hollow point with a silver core instead of a lead core. Though that would make for a really light bullet.
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One of the gun mags MANY years ago got a couple of their guys to do a Lone Ranger article. They made the silver bullets and fired them to check accuracy and performance. The article was funny as the guys even tried dressing up as the ranger and Tonto, but in the end it turned out to be an exercise in futility. The bullets were expensive, the molds got jacked up, the bullets looked and sized like crap, the accuracy was lousy, and they couldn’t get a camp fire hot enough to even get the silver soft enough to pour.
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That's not true - in at least one instance a character beat off a werewolf with the silver head of his walking cane - might have been in the original Lon Cheney film. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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To kill a werewolf, the silver must be a blessed cross from a priest. The cross must be melted down and the bullets cast by the own will use them. Any other bullets will not harm the werewolf. |
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I'm thinking that, once the werewolf charges, preserving the rifling is gonna quickly take a back seat to not having my throat torn out by a werewolf. Anyway, you don't have silver bullets to shoot them. You have them as a deterrent. View Quote Failed To Load Title |
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That's not true - in at least one instance a character beat off a werewolf with the silver head of his walking cane - might have been in the original Lon Cheney film. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted:
To kill a werewolf, the silver must be a blessed cross from a priest. The cross must be melted down and the bullets cast by the own will use them. Any other bullets will not harm the werewolf. |
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I would think it would need to be copper jacketed, in a partition style bullet. Lead core in the base, and a silver up to the the tip with copper in between to limit penetration. With the dissimilar weight materials in the base and top, it should make it tumble, and if the copper peels back quickly should provide a fragmenting effect with the copper, the silver will do its thang, and the lead base will punch through to organs and whatnot.
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Coonan made a set with six silver .357 magnum rounds loaded with silver bullets and a wooden stake. I picked up a couple of them for shits and giggles. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes |
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Strangely enough, I have a good friend who wrote a novel with werewolves in it (among other things), and we researched this very shit for his writing.
It's more than what's been mentioned...too light, too hard, etc. Apparently they are also damn near impossible to actually cast RIGHT. As the silver cools, you get weird, inconsistent results. Gaps, hollows, etc. Essentially, you'd have to machine them to get any consistency in rounds. I agree with the composite theory...have a silver point sticking out of the front of a lead, copper-plated bullet. Win! ETA: We determined silver buckshot would be WAY easier and more effective. |
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Apmex sorta has them.
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