Monty,
I gather that Doug is saying that because the lever action is inherently dangerous because of step that takes your rifle from full #### to half #### after you chamber a round.
Letting the hammer down while having the trigger engaged creates a further safety issue. If the hammer were to slip out from under a thumb then it would strike the firing pin because the half #### position which is created after you let off the trigger is bypassed as long as you have your trigger held tight.
On a BLR there is not a cross bolt safety as on the new .30.30's so you are looking for trouble when trying that with a BLR.
I'm a lifetime memeber of the Lever Action Acholics support group and the click doesn't mean a hill of beans.
I gather that Doug is saying that because the lever action is inherently dangerous because of step that takes your rifle from full #### to half #### after you chamber a round.
Letting the hammer down while having the trigger engaged creates a further safety issue. If the hammer were to slip out from under a thumb then it would strike the firing pin because the half #### position which is created after you let off the trigger is bypassed as long as you have your trigger held tight.
On a BLR there is not a cross bolt safety as on the new .30.30's so you are looking for trouble when trying that with a BLR.
I'm a lifetime memeber of the Lever Action Acholics support group and the click doesn't mean a hill of beans.