The problem with any tool, (yes, a Rifle is a tool,) is that any idiot can misuse it. The Ross Rifle, (and the accompanying Urban Legend about the Ross) is just one example.
If you use something correctly, it does the job quite well. In the case of the Ross, that job is putting a bullet downrange into a target, with a very great probability of hitting almost exactly where you want to hit if you do your part. If you use that tool, (the Ross) incorrectly, or assemble it wrong, then you have a chance to plunk one into Farmer Johns prize Cow, or ending up in a state of disrepair yourself. One of the biggest trends today is that nobody seems to take responsibility for their OWN actions, and it is the rifle, hammer, screwdriver, or someone else who is to blame for their own stupidity.
Like SMELLIE, I have been shooting the Ross since the late 1950s, and since I first showed up on a range with one, I have been hearing the same old story about the unsafe Ross rifles. One of the best "retorts" is when the people telling you about the dangerous Ross is standing there with a Lee Enfield. Ask to see the rifle, take the bolt out, unscrew the head, and put the bolt body back in. Then hand the guy back the rifle, and invite him to fire it that way. You usually get some irate comment, but then you can politely hand him the bolt head back, and point out that HIS rifle was disassembled and put back together improperly much like a Ross can be. A properly assembled rifle using normal ammunition will be safe, but a rifle that is not assembled right is NOT SAFE. It is the Human Factor that makes it unsafe.
As to the Dauphin Gun Show, it was a pleasure touching bases with some of the CGN Members who were there. Yes, I did pick up three rounds of W.R.A. 30 Govt.
1903 ammunition, of which I gave SMELLIE one because I had 300 km. to drive back and I could not contemplate the pitiful wailing noise he would have made if I kept them all to myself.
