yugowego
Member
This is why i love living out in the sticks with my own range!
Agree. However shooting in the country does not mean we are wild & don't follow safety rules... we just use common sense. Also, we are all friends and think likewise about gun safety. However, knowing people as I do, if I were shooting on a public range with goodness knows who next to me, I think I'd want every gun triple cleared & locked away before I ventured out front. I'm not a trusting soul.This is why i love living out in the sticks with my own range!
One shot per second max; no rapid fire.
Bill
However, knowing people as I do, if I were shooting on a public range with goodness knows who next to me, I think I'd want every gun triple cleared & locked away before I ventured out front. I'm not a trusting soul.
And in my neck of the woods that would constitute theft.
Just because my brass has fallen on the floor does not make it your brass.
KBK
Agree. However shooting in the country does not mean we are wild & don't follow safety rules... we just use common sense. Also, we are all friends and think likewise about gun safety.
Doc Robin;137322673 One shot per second max; no rapid fire. Bill[/QUOTE said:The Lake City range in Missouri (just down the road from the famous ammo plant) is a state-operated range and has a THREE-SECOND between shot rule! This works well for the fellows practicing for Bullseye competition or the traditionalist with a S&W Model 4 Russian, Colt SAA or Remington Rolling Block but such a deliberate pace nullifies the practical advantages of a (relatively) modern semi-automatic firearm. Even a one-second pause is more than a light-recoiling gun like a 15-22 should need to reacquire the target. No, I don't believe "mag-dumps" should be considered proper range behavior (after participating in a few "mad-minute" events back in another time and place I know how potentially dangerous these can be), but making it impossible to work "double-tap" drills is a frustration that I can do without. I shoot my 15-22 for fun (and nostalgia) but when I work with my carry-guns it's to prepare for serious business that won't be done at the same pace as the Burr/Hamilton duel! I'm just asking for some common sense (though perhaps that is asking too much anymore),
Of course, brass pickup ONLY happens when the line is clear, and someone is still downrange at the target stand. When the last shooter starts walking back to his station, my butt is back on the right side of the firing line.
They can also pick up brass that is downrange from the benches.
That said, we don't allow non-shooters on the line or down range.