JaPes
Member
This is a prime example of why you should stop shooting when you experience a malfunction on the range.
[ame]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xhgyJMhQFbA[/ame]
I can hear the light ignition. The shooter experiences multiple failure to fires most likely because the round won't chamber and go into full battery because of the squib stuck in the barrel. The dude doesn't stop, keeps on pushing his luck until his rifle blows up. Even after it blows up, the guy tries to insert a mag and chamber another round.
Unobservant. Oblivious. Ignorant.
There are many new AR-15 enthusiasts in the sub-forum. It's that time of the year: tax refund season. I want to stress to every new AR-15 enthusiast the importance of properly diagnosing a malfunction. Tap, rack, bang is a prudent combat remedy when in combat under live fire. Hopefully for us civilians, we're not on a two-way range where the targets shoot back at us. We have the luxury of shooting on a one-way range. If you experience a malfunction or your sixth sense tells you something is wrong, stop shooting. Take the time to fully inspect your rifle before shooting that next round.
[ame]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xhgyJMhQFbA[/ame]
I can hear the light ignition. The shooter experiences multiple failure to fires most likely because the round won't chamber and go into full battery because of the squib stuck in the barrel. The dude doesn't stop, keeps on pushing his luck until his rifle blows up. Even after it blows up, the guy tries to insert a mag and chamber another round.
Unobservant. Oblivious. Ignorant.
There are many new AR-15 enthusiasts in the sub-forum. It's that time of the year: tax refund season. I want to stress to every new AR-15 enthusiast the importance of properly diagnosing a malfunction. Tap, rack, bang is a prudent combat remedy when in combat under live fire. Hopefully for us civilians, we're not on a two-way range where the targets shoot back at us. We have the luxury of shooting on a one-way range. If you experience a malfunction or your sixth sense tells you something is wrong, stop shooting. Take the time to fully inspect your rifle before shooting that next round.
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