This reminds me of a Far Side cartoon with two scientists, on the board in front of them was a scientific equation with "and then a miracle occurs" as one step.
Your "somehow" could be replaced with, "and then a miracle of ignition occurs."
You also have lack of space problem. You can't fit two .357 bullets, two charges, and two miracle igniters in a .357 case, unless you develop miracle size igniters and new miracle propellant.
Then you have a brass/bullet problem with your buried bullet. The bullet can't be loose enough inside the case to drop down into the case, which means you'll bulge cases loaded them, or blow the thing up firing them. Unless, of course, you have a second miracle up your sleeve.
Finally, it sounds as though you're adding an electrical system to your revolver, which needs some space inside an already crowded revolver frame.
The best answer to all of these problems is a P365 with a 12 round mag.
"Gunfighting is a thinking man's game. So we might want to bring thinking back into it."-MDFA
Beware of my temper, and the dog that I've found...
It’s an interesting thought experiment that has no real world applications. Even if you could make it work nobody would buy a 12 shot electronic revolver that requires speciality ammunition that costs at least twice as much to shoot as normal .357 ammo.
Remington discontinued their electronic primer hunting rifles a long time ago because nobody wanted them, and the last place I would want to look for early adopters of electronic guns is people who still want to carry revolvers.
im strong, i can run faster than train
When you fire the first round, what keeps the second round from being crushed/deformed and/or detonating on it's own because of the "kinetic crushing"?
You do realize that the front round wouldn't have the web of the case for support? Brass is thin up there and I see no way to protect the second round from the inevitable damage of the first round being fired.
''Politics is for the present, but an equation is for eternity.'' ―Albert Einstein
Full disclosure per the Pistol-Forum CoC: I am the author of Quantitative Ammunition Selection.
This pales in comparison to the Roy Rogers 56 shooters that I saw in movies as a kid.
Malo periculosam, libertatem quam quietam servitutem
I prefer the tumult of liberty to the quiet of servitude
-Thomas Jefferson
I prefer dangerous freedom over peaceful slavery.
You might want to check the percentage of the CBD gummies that you're chewing. Just saying.
"It's surprising how often you start wondering just how featureless a desert some people's inner landscapes must be."
-Maple Syrup Actual
Yes. It is ludicrous.
Typical P/F responses... Outright dismissing an idea via armchair hypothetical science without even considering the possibility of charms, enchantments, sorcery, wizardry, voodoo, or even the supernatural. [emoji849]