New handgun owner...question about handling at home

^^^^^this is correct.

Gents...I'm just trying to do the right thing.

as far as ammo goes, I didn't even bring any home yet. I will purchase some snap caps.
I do my range safety course on the 20th of December.

It does say newbie.

Cheers all for responses.

Do not take anything personal on here. Some get a little over excited with their replies. Many on here think the course they took is the way every course is taught. It is simply not true, and take everything you were taught with a grain of salt. There are allot of myths and untruths taught at PAL and range safety courses.

For example I was taught that;

- It is illegal to load live ammo at home - not true (at least not always true, depending on where you live and what class of firearm)
- It is illegal to open your restricted firearms case anywhere but home or a designated destination noted on your ATT, even under the direction of Police - not true
- It is illegal to stop for gas, or coffee on route to, or home from the range - not true
- CFO can do an impromptu firearms inspection at their leisure, without your consent, and anything they see while in your home is open for prosecution - not true
- Trigger locks are the only acceptable lock for transport or storage of restricted - not true

Not at my course, but I recently purchased a gun from a store. While there a customer was asking about pistol storage, and the store owner said "in a safe or trigger locked". I offered that his Stack-on was a safe. The store owner freaked "I am a CFO instructor, stop telling lies". I showed him the court ruling on Harry Barnes, and he blew it off "well obviously the court got it wrong, and the judge is stupid. If I were the Prosecutor, Mr. Barnes would be in jail!". Some people just know everything and are not willing to learn, unless it is from an "official source".

Come here try and search out your questions first to avoid the "What you don't know how to use the search function???? This question is asked once a week, ARGH!!!!" I am so tired of newbies coming here and asking the same questions, wasting my time" lol, just smile and move to the next reply.

Most of the people on here will do their best to help you out, but some have other priorities.
 
Last edited:
Do not take anything personal on here. Some get a little over excited with their replies. Many on here think the course they took is the way every course is taught. It is simply not true, and take everything you were taught with a grain of salt. There are allot of myths and untruths taught at PAL and range safety courses.

It is only a standardized course!!! :rolleyes:
If an instructor fails to mention certain important parts then that's on him. Everyone's experience will depend on how knowledgeable and experienced the instructor is.
 
Which part of that is correct???

Which ever part you choose to read, not every course/instructor is the same or will say the same stuff. 2 friends both just took their restricteds with 2 diffeee t instructors and both came away from it with different information, yes the core of the course is the same however not information given is equal and can be entirely dependant on the instructor.
And yeah nobody heres cares who his/her instructor was moot point the important thing is that there is 1 more person with a rpal in the country.
 
is empty brass case or shell, which were already shot in the range, allowed to use a dummy around?

It is probably not a good idea to use a "fired" case or shell as a dummy round. Reason been that it will look the same as a live round when you have it chamber in the firearm, and then some fine day you will mix up the live round / fired round and have a live round loaded for dry firing.
Dummy round are not too expensive, you can get it on Amazon or Bass Pro and other places, and they come in all sort of colour too.
 
is empty brass case or shell, which were already shot in the range, allowed to use a dummy around?

What wai762 said definitely the most important thing, as well though, a spent case won't do much to protect your firearm as the primer has already been indented and punctured. From my understanding a snap cap is designed to take some of that impact via a spring.
 
Do not take anything personal on here. Some get a little over excited with their replies. Many on here think the course they took is the way every course is taught. It is simply not true, and take everything you were taught with a grain of salt. There are allot of myths and untruths taught at PAL and range safety courses.

For example I was taught that;

- It is illegal to load live ammo at home - not true (at least not always true, depending on where you live and what class of firearm)
- It is illegal to open your restricted firearms case anywhere but home or a designated destination noted on your ATT, even under the direction of Police - not true
- It is illegal to stop for gas, or coffee on route to, or home from the range - not true
- CFO can do an impromptu firearms inspection at their leisure, without your consent, and anything they see while in your home is open for prosecution - not true
- Trigger locks are the only acceptable lock for transport or storage of restricted - not true

Not at my course, but I recently purchased a gun from a store. While there a customer was asking about pistol storage, and the store owner said "in a safe or trigger locked". I offered that his Stack-on was a safe. The store owner freaked "I am a CFO instructor, stop telling lies". I showed him the court ruling on Harry Barnes, and he blew it off "well obviously the court got it wrong, and the judge is stupid. If I were the Prosecutor, Mr. Barnes would be in jail!". Some people just know everything and are not willing to learn, unless it is from an "official source".

Come here try and search out your questions first to avoid the "What you don't know how to use the search function???? This question is asked once a week, ARGH!!!!" I am so tired of newbies coming here and asking the same questions, wasting my time" lol, just smile and move to the next reply.

Most of the people on here will do their best to help you out, but some have other priorities.

Well said! :agree:

I would love to see a giant sticky on Canada's common misconception. I find that rules here change so frequently depending on who you talk to that a reputable and single source of truth is imperative.
 
use common sense. please clean, oil, admire, practice responsibly
don't make the rest of us look bad right now
NO john wick moves in front of your bay window lol
snap caps only
NO AMMO or even blanks anywhere near it
have your fun and simply lock it up when your done
its that easy
you are going to enjoy your new passion
maybe even see you at a range some day
i shoot at silverdale and range burlington
the Cannon Man
 
That would go without saying!

It doesn't stop actors playing the hero (in movies) from doing it. :mad:

(I'm thinking of Bradley Cooper playing Chris Kyle in American Sniper.)

Oh, sure, because everybody knows that gun guys like to point handguns at their wives...it happens all the time (in the movies)...VERY funny, ha ha (not). :mad:
 
make screen do anything you want as long as you're not using live ammunition if you want to run drills in your home you can pull your drapes so no one sees you if you want to feel the weight of it load the empty cases into the magazine you can use snap caps or the fire casings
 
It is probably not a good idea to use a "fired" case or shell as a dummy round. Reason been that it will look the same as a live round when you have it chamber in the firearm, and then some fine day you will mix up the live round / fired round and have a live round loaded for dry firing.
Dummy round are not too expensive, you can get it on Amazon or Bass Pro and other places, and they come in all sort of colour too.

I use spent cases loaded with the bullets that I use in my rifle to test function and smoothness of the bolt and chamber cleanliness. I use a black sharpie to mark the casings with longitudinal lines to clearly identify them, I then pack and glue the primer pockets with pieces of inner tube to cushion the firing pin. Works a treat (easily identifiable) and much better then snap caps as they are formed to my rifle chambers.
 
I'll have to look into where I can buy some .22 dummy rounds. Wondered about that 'cause I've never seen for sale.

The best dummy rounds that I've found are made by ST Action Pro.

<http://www.stactionpro.com/>

In Canada, you can find them on Amazon.

<https://www.amazon.ca/>
 
There are lot of good people here who will willingly give you their opinion and ,or where to find an official answer.
There are also a couple trolls that will cry that you forced them to open your thread and answer a question that was ask some where else.
Don't sweat it , ask away.

If it saves but one firearm from the RCMP furnace ,it was worth it :)

^^^^^this is correct.

Gents...I'm just trying to do the right thing.

as far as ammo goes, I didn't even bring any home yet. I will purchase some snap caps.
I do my range safety course on the 20th of December.

It does say newbie.

Cheers all for responses.
 
Back
Top Bottom