That reminds me of the time I wanted to test for pressure signs in my Sharps 45 x 3 1/4". With a full case of powder and a 500 full jacketed Hornady bullet, I knew I needed something to stop the bullet, but I thought the twenty-four inch diameter spruce stump on which my anvil sits would do the trick. After all, a round ball only goes in a couple of inches. So, when the house was empty, I put on my ear muffs, stepped back about ten feet from the stump, aimed at the middle and touched it off. The concussion cleared the rafters of twenty years worth of shop dust, but there was considerable more dust in the air than I thought reasonable. The bullet completely penetrated the stump, exploded a new ten pound bag of kitty litter, and stopped on the far side of an eight inch square timber in the corner of the shop that just happened to be in the path. Apart from the rifling marks on the bullet, there was no other damage. And, no signs of excessive pressure. Now I could see why I never recovered the bullet from a moose.