Insulting, really and your post has what in it?
I have got no issues with hot ranges. None what so ever. I have run hot ranges, participated in hot ranges etc. I actually carried hot all day long for work.
It still makes no sense to put live ammunition into a firearm that you are proving is unloaded and safe. For all of you out there, I fully understand the mechanics of semi auto's and semi auto's with mag disconnects. I have actually owned both. And for those of you that think I have only shot a couple of weeks think again.
This is not a mechanical issue. It is an issue about mentality. Do not put live ammunition into a gun to attempt to prove it is unloaded! It is simple.
Watching over someone as an SO, there are many distractions. The shooter is finished and trying to get back to his/her friends as soon as possible it seems with many times no intention of listening and obeying your commands, he/she is cursing themselves for not shooting the stage as they thought they should. They are questioning you. The scorekeeper is questioning you, your trying to make sure that everyone around you is safe, your getting ready for scoring of the stage. A multitude of things are transpiring and you might not have your head exactly in the game when you should. How hard is it to put a empty magazine in the firearm to make sure it is safe and everyone around you is safe. I bet it was as easy and it was to type your insulting assumptions of me were.
It is never going to happen to me. Just keep repeating it until it happens. You know last match, I told everyone to slow down and follow the commands the SO gives but do you think that happened? But hey it is okay because no one had an accident because everyone is an expert and knows more than I do.
As for visiting you with my attitude, you haven't been waiting by the gate to open if for me all this time have you?
Greg
Here are some others comments.
Why I hate magazine safeties
Posted on March 16, 2009 by Caleb
I was talking yesterday in The Conspiracy with some of the guys about magazine safeties, and why they suck so much. In my opinion, the magazine disconnect safety is a “safety device” which actually makes the gun less safe for the user and for anyone else around them. Not to pick on Ruger, but I’ll use their SR9 as my example, because it features a magazine safety and were it not for the mag disconnect safety I’d recommend the gun without hesitation.
To illustrate why mag disconnects make your gun unsafe, allow me to draw and example from competition shooting. In USPSA/IDPA shooting, at the end of each course of fire, you (the shooter) are required to “unload and show clear” – meaning that you have to demonstrate to the RO that you have an empty (cold) gun before you can holster. The range commands go roughly as follows:
1.“If you are finished, unload (drop the mag) and show clear (rack the slide to eject the round).
2.If clear (the RO looks in the slide to verify an empty chamber) slide forward and hammer down. (lower the slide and dry fire the gun)
The problem with a magazine disconnect safety rears its ugly head when you have to dry fire the gun – because you can’t dry fire a gun with a mag disconnect safety unless you stick a magazine in it, the “slide forward/hammer down” step requires additional manipulation of the gun beyond what you’d see with a Glock or 1911. To complete this step, after lowering the slide, you have to insert an empty magazine into the gun to dry fire it – and as an RO/SO myself, nothing cranks up the pucker factor like someone putting a magazine into a gun that’s supposed to be cold.
Now, you’re probably thinking “Caleb, what could go wrong? It’s just an empty mag, surely someone wouldn’t put a loaded mag into the gun while the slide was back and then cook a round off.” You know, I’d like to think that, but the problem is that 1) I’ve seen exactly that happen at .22 matches with a Walther P22, and I firmly believe that the most effective way to ensure that your gun is safe is to make the manual of arms as simple and straightforward as possible.
I was at a .22 only steel match once, and I saw exactly what I describe above. At the command of “slide forward and hammer down”, the shooter put a loaded .22 magazine into his P22, dropped the slide (chambering a round) and proceeded to cook a round off into the berm, scaring the beejesus out of his RO. Now, the RO should have seen the loaded mag and stopped him, but the point remains – magazine disconnect safeties add an unnecessary and potentially dangerous step to the manual of arms for both competition shooters and defensive shooters.
For people who don’t shoot competition, the mag disconnect safety is just as dangerous – because it requires you to put an ammo feeding device (magazine) into the gun when you’re dry firing. That adds an additional element of danger, because it removes the first safety step of dry fire practice, which is remove the source of ammo from the gun.
I probably could have written a much shorter post about this – however the long and short of it is that I utterly despise mag disconnect safeties. I think they’re unnecessary legal masturbation, and add an actual element of danger to the safe handling and operation of your firearm.
Holy Frak, a like minded thinker with a bad attitude. What a freaking amateur that brings nothing to the group! God, it takes me a lot of self control not to get another infraction.