Correct. And even when a cartridge 'cooks off' it is the brass (typically lighter than the bullet weight) that is propelled a small distance. No real danger there, though most fire depts DO want to know if there is ammo in a building that is on fire.I was an ammunition R&D engineer for Remington for a couple of years, and we used to dispose of "bad" ammunition in a furnace at the plant in Lonoke, AR. Ammunition in a fire doesn't react the way that it does in the movies. Without a chamber to constrain the soft brass case and allow pressure to build rapidly, not much happens when you cook ammunition.