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A Day at the Range
As some of you may know, I like to entertain myself with a bit of shooting every now and then. Last Sunday was no different, so I set forth to my local club range with a couple of favorite rifles in tow.
When I arrived, there was no shortage of shooters in attendance. I thought for a moment I had stumbled into a benchrest match... everyone had adjustable rifle rests, plastic stocks, and scopes rivaling the Hubble itself. So I set up with my Ruger #1 in .375 H&H, looking to zero a newly mounted Skinner peep sight. Waiting in the rack for its turn was my trusty '74 Sharps in .45-2.6, awaiting its trial with a couple of new bullets. At the next ceasefire, while walking to the target stands to staple up our targets, one of the younger benchresters started making the usual small talk: "Watcha shootin'?" "Ruger #1 in .375 H&H." "Whazzat?" "The rifle or the caliber?" "Both - I never heard of either. Some kind of antique get-up?" "Well, uh, no - it's a modern single shot, and the .375 is the father of all belted mags, and still one of the very best if you are at all concerned about the reaction of what you're shooting at." "What's a 'belted mag'? How come it doesn't have a scope?" Anyway, you get the gist - he had no idea what I had, had never heard of any of it. It got even better when I showed him the Sharps and tried to explain black powder and cast bullets. He quite honestly had no idea what I was talking about. He was shooting an off-the-shelf Remington 700 heavy barreled .308 varmint rifle with some Miopta 30+ power scope. He was shooting well under .25 MOA groups - 10 shot groups, not these pansy 3 or 5 shot groups. Good shooter, really nice guy, who knew what was going on in his game, but had absolutely no idea about anything I had. I guess I found that a bit remarkable. I had never run into that before. |
It's our job Jeff to educate these young shooters. Thank you for being patient and sharing with him you treasured rifles and experience.
I get the same occasionally when I sight in my old Winchesters with peep sights. I take the time with them for self serving reasons. I want them to grow up collecting our old guns and keeping their values up. I'd like to avoid a world where every range is filled with Glock 23s and misc ARs. |
Sounds like you had a fun day!
As you know, every person is a novice about every thing at least once. Except tabs. |
I went out this past Wednesday and it was the same with all the youngsters and their Christmas presents. I am working at 300 yards now with my 45 caliber home made muzzle loading slug gun and finally figured out it wants pure lead for bullets. I also wanted to try my home made "Shoot n See" type targets and when the 90 grains of Goex FFG lit off the grandmother shooting next to me with her grandson's new AR nearly jumped out of her skin! There was no wind so the cloud of smoke hung around for a minute or two and then I spent the next 15 minutes explaining what I was doing.
The home made targets work great and 8.5 x 11 is a good size bulls eye for sighting at longer ranges and they are about 7 cents each to make. I used bright yellow paper, wide clear shipping tape and flat black spray paint (2 coats) with a white center. Lowes had some no name brand of spray paint for 99 cents a can so I bought all they had, 16 cans of black which should give me a year or two of targets. Here is a video of how I did mine: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gg-l2KWG1Yw |
It is funny sometimes to talk to young-uns. They are so cute.
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I have no idea what you're talking about. < smile >
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You're seriously surprised the average younger shooter doesn't know about some obscure 100-years-too-late falling block? I hate to break it to you but the group interested in that sort of thing is growing older and dwindling in number.
You should take a Cessna Bobcat down to a flight school and see how many people know what it is. Don't forget to explain it was one of the most prolific and best light twins from about 1940 to 1955, at which point the few examples that hadn't rotted away were greatly outclassed by those goddamn all-metal planes from Cessna, Piper and Beechcraft. |
To be fair, those are definitely more towards the obscure end of the spectrum. I would have also not known much about the specific rifle or round in question, but would have been happy to learn.
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52 and been a fisherman all my life...only experience with firearms was plinking cans at my grandparents farm w/ a .22 when I was little, never had any interest in hunting. In '08 I thought it might be a good idea to start climbing that learning curve. I'm (relatively) competent with my hardware but woefully ignorant about anything else. I can see that it could be an addictive hobby :). |
A Day at the Range
I'm ignorant in the other direction. Modern calibers, firearms, optics, etc. my eyes glaze over. I can't afford it anyways. My good friends start talking "uppers" "lowers". 6.5 creed mores.
Chit, I have some catching up to do. Someday. Either way. Life would be crappy boring if we all liked the same thing. I want to build a forward scope mounted scout rifle. :). Prob .308. Boring Sent via Jedi mind trick. |
I was at the range next to some kids shooting black rifles of some sort. I switched from my to .30-06 to my TC .50 Hawken. I loaded it up pretty hot for the first shot and set it off. It was quite a display when it went off. One of the kids said, "Holy schiat, what was that?! That was loud." They came over and had a look. They asked a few questions. Who knows, maybe some day they'll branch out. It seems like there are more and more shooters who have no connection to hunting, so their reference points are quite different.
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I see more and more AR platforms out in the hunting fields.
Sent via Jedi mind trick. |
Sheesh. I suspect those youngsters could teach the old folks a few things too. Then post about their knowledge and superiority on some gaming bbs.
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I think a few of you might have missed the point. This was no novice shooter - like I said he knew his game and knew it well. He was certainly shooting competitive groups for the production rifle benchrest class. Had no trouble discussing the finer points of hand loading, either - one simply cannot compete in that game with factory ammo. He was really "into it", as we say.
If he were in fact a novice or very inexperienced shooter it would not have struck me as being so odd. We all start somewhere at everything we do... but he was well past that. I wonder if this has anything to do with this modern "tactical" craze. More and more gun magazines cover the "tactical" scene to the exclusion of everything else. The only calibers ever mentioned are the 5.56 and 7.62 NATO, the 7.62x39, the .338 Lapua, and the .50 BMG. Seems until recently that the gun mags were much more broadly based. They included big game rifles, small game rifles, water fowling guns, upland guns, target rifles and handguns, hunting handguns, etc. You couldn't help but pick up on what the "other guys" were up to, even if you weren't interested yourself. Oh, and he was certainly happy to learn, even if he was just being polite to some crazy old fart with weird guns. I stopped his lesson short of letting him shoot the .375, though - that would have been mean. Maybe next time, if he's still interested... |
I must be outside the norm, then--I happily shoot everything from a suppressed AR-15 SBR in .300 BLK to a custom-built single shot in .45-70.
Or maybe I just have ADD. |
I've been going to the gun shows for years, Great Western at the fairgrounds and others in So Cal. Have been to the last 2 Ventura shows and they will probably be my last. Nothing but black rifles, uppers, scopes and other crap. Maybe 3 vendors out of a hundred had any vintage/ collector stuff. Too bad. Bakersfield still has a few guys who sell the older stuff.
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The Ruger model 1 are nice rifles. My Uncle has one in every caliber they make, lots of rifles. I was hunting with him when he was using a .458 win mag for deer and got one. That was a huge hole.
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Now that I think about it, the younger shooters (mid 30s and younger) I know who actually go out and shoot a lot really aren't all that into equipment. This one guy who's about 20 y/o on my team is a top notch trap and skeet shooter. He describes his shotgun as "an old benelli" that his grandpa gave him. Several other guys have acquired new (and very unappealing) Beretta A300s because they needed something and they sure as hell don't care about a walnut stock or a reciever that isn't painted. And yeah, I felt a little anxious standing around in the rain the other day with my polished bluing and oiled walnut getting soaked while these guys had no reason to worry.
Another thing, a lot of younger shooters have little to no interest in hunting. If guns were mostly about hunting and traditional target shooting how would the industry look today? How many ranges/gun shops would have closed or never opened? How many of these magazines would have folded if they couldn't talk about modern guns/calibers, defense, new types of competition and new accessories? You must have really hated it when .30 WCF came out |
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Did you drive your air cooled rear engine car to the range?
Bet the kids would get a hoot out of that! I envy you guys who have outdoor ranges nearby :( |
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How many young guys on a new Ducati know what a Black Shadow was?. How many young guys on modern shaped skis know anything about wood skis and bear trap bindings, or recognize the name Jean-Claude Killy? How many young guys driving new performance cars are familiar with the MG-TD? In my own hobby, how many young guys riding all carbon bikes with electronic shifting would know anything about a 1950 Bianchi, other than recognizing it as some sort of old bicycle? TL-DR version - you're an old man, and he wasn't. Plus, of course, many people who are very good at a sport are not gear heads. Perfectly possible to be a very skilled competitive shooter in one particular discipline, while having little interest in other kinds of guns that are irrelevant to your event. I'm imagining that if you talked to the top ten scoring shooters at an Olympic target pistol event, and showed them some old obscure pistol (a Borchardt, Webley, etc), most or all would have no idea what it was and several wouldn't care either. |
^^^this. I'm sure there are kids that could shoot circles around the old farts. Eyesight, depth perception, reaction time, etc. I'm not a shooter but am frequently exposed to young people at work that impress the heck out of me in so many ways. Yet not a one would have a clue about rejetting a carburetor. But that's pretty irrelevant in their world...and in the modern world
Case in point..."rejecting'" is the word my spell checker insists on using. Sorry, no such word as rejetting...apparently. |
Now that I think about it, my club's monthly gun show has become dominated by the "tactical" crowd as well. Not that our bench rest competitor really fits into that niche, but I guess he is a lot closer to that segment of the shooting sports than he is to mine. His rifle sported a stainless barrel and action, and the stock was grey plastic. Eminently practical, of course, but completely lacking any soul. And yes, I did drive my '72 911 hot rod to the range... I assume he arrived in one of the nondescript SUVs adorning the parking lot. Certainly "different strokes", but we both had a great day.
I guess I'll never fully appreciate the "utilitarian" approach to life, or at least to our hobbies. To me, while it may be less practical, a rifle of blued steel and oiled walnut will always find favor over the "tupperware" rifles. I've used them my entire life, often under extremely harsh conditions in the field (like a non-stop, two week long driving rain on the coast in Southeast Alaska while hunting out of a wall tent) with no ill affect - if properly looked after. I guess I also a find a bit odd the guys who are really into shooting, but have no interest in hunting. The shooting becomes and end unto itself, with no purpose. I see all manner of insanely impractical rifles at the range that would be utterly useless anywhere else; they appear to have followed the same evolutionary path as Top Fuel dragsters or something. And, finally, I find the "tactical" crowd the most bewildering. Their rifles are very practical, very useful, and certainly quite effective at getting lead in the air (it seems actually hitting things might be secondary, though). That's all well and good but, unlike the hunter or competitive shooter, they really don't have any kind of goal, or purpose, other than having fun. Which is good enough, I guess. I do, however, worry about the ones who appear to be living out some sort of fantasies... |
Guns are sorta like women - I can appreciate each and every one of 'em for what they are. Some (quite a few?) just aren't "my style". Most others, I simply can't afford (used to drive 30 miles to sit and stare at Harry Beckwith's collection of Purdy and Parker shotguns) or are too limited in purpose for what I like to do/have a place to do. But guns are a tool. So there is always the practicality part, which makes me laugh at the tacticool crowd with decent rifles that have had all sorts of tacticrap added to them.
Best of both worlds - nice walnut, emminently utilitarian, sleek and good looking. Don't need no stinkin' rails. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v3...Criflemang.jpg |
So an interest in any firearms other than old timey Jeff Higgins stuff and for any reason other than hacking a moose apart in the rain is illegitimate?
I mean you could not possibly protect your family with something that isn't exquisitely color case hardened. No one could have genuine appreciation for the elegant simplicity of modern innovations like a glock. Right? |
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My first foray into the world of high-capacity autoloaders has enough walnut and steel to help ease my way in, although the steel is parkerized: http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1452135079.jpg I've since removed the forward "Scout" rail and replaced the hand guard with a solid one. Had no use for the forward rail, but I did like the shorter barrel. This is a tough rifle to use at my club range. Rules are that all rifles are single loaded, no matter what they are. This one is easier to do that with than most modern "assault" style rifles, in that the whole top of the action is open. Pretty easy to just leave the magazine in and thumb a round down in from the top. As a matter of fact, it even has a guide for stripper clips, so it is meant to be loaded that way. |
Anyone ever hear of a "rail gun"? These are current state-of-the-art in the unlimited benchrest class. The shooter stands next to it and releases the sear with a remote camera shutter thing on a cable. They never touch the rifle once the shot is aligned - they stand there and watch their wind flags. We see these at my club's range, being somewhat of an epicenter for benchrest enthusiasts. Many of our members have held world records in various classes at various distances.
Anyway, pretty cool stuff, but one might question its practicality: http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1452135998.jpg |
I have learned more about guns and ammunition from Mr. Higgins than from any other source. My wording, "guns and ammunition", probably sent him to the fridge for another beer, however.
I have learned to shoot more deliberately, with more accountability, from his posts. I wouldn't believe it either, but there it is: old dog, new tricks. |
I appreciate firearms, but am very limited in my hunting experience. It's not a moral objection, I just didn't grow up doing it. Short of dove I've never hunted live game in my life. But I still enjoy shooting as a hobby, challenge, and a mutual experience with my sons.
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As for the wind, they could install anemometers every 25 yd and program an Arduino plus stepper motors to automatically calculate windage, aim the "rifle", then either automatically fire it, or prompt the shooter to push the remote release. Images of Maverick shouting "I got tone" then "Fox One". Heck, why not use liquid cooling, thermocouples, and another Arduino to control barrel temperature. |
why not use a crossbow?
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FWIW I own a handgun and a shot gun but just for home defense...
Back in the day I had some mail order catalogs (dating myself) for old black powder firearms. Maybe some day I will retire out to the country and have an assortment of rifles to play with. IMHO black powder is like listening to vinyl... a lot of people appreciate the simple elegance of preserving the older things. As an example most of us here love old cars when a new Hyundai can probably do everything better. :cool: |
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I think like most of us and our favorite pastimes, I thoroughly enjoy sharing what I have learned, and sharing my often very opinionated observations about this wonderful sport. It's all just good clean fun. Quote:
We actually owe an a great deal to this somewhat deranged (and I mean that in a good way) lot. Their pursuit is the ultimate in mechanical accuracy, removing the human element as much as possible. Their matches are won in the machine shop, not on the range. As such, the things they have discovered, then taught the rest of us about accuracy have improved the breed immeasurably. We now expect the most pedestrian off-the-shelf rifles to hold minute of angle accuracy with factory ammo; a generation ago, such accuracy in a dedicated match rifle shooting carefully tailored hand loads would have been winning benchrest matches. Anyone remember Roy Weatherby's guarantee of 1 1/2" three shot groups at 100 yards? This was for his premium Mark V, a very spendy rifle then and now. Seems almost laughable today - most of us would return a rifle that shot that "poorly". We've come a long ways since then, with these crazy benchrest rifles leading the way. |
Ed weatherby no?
I forget. It was a game changer when the target stuff trickled into hunting. Not my thing at all. Never will be. But the gear is there. Sent via Jedi mind trick. |
Ed is Roy's son. He brought Weatherby back to California, where it all began. Weatherby rifles are now entirely American made. That said, I still wouldn't own one, for a number of reasons.
One rather weak reason is the nine locking lug arrangement. Any competent machinist will tell you how hard it is to get equal contact between two opposing bolt lugs, despite lapping them in until your arm gets tired - and the rest of your family and friends as well. Nine have to be well neigh impossible. That doesn't seem to hurt performance, though, but it does lead to the next point... Weatherby rifles seem to attract the kind of shooter who think nine lugs just have to be better than two, and who pronounce Porsche as "poorsh". They want, and can well afford "the best", but they cannot elaborate why it is "the best", and resort to telling you how much it costs. They seem to believe money spent equals a fast track to skill and success. Normally not such a big deal, but when real blood is shed, we owe it to our prey to know what the hell we are doing. No puffed up chests or "do you know who I am's?" make up for some poor critter that slinks off to die a suffering death. Yeah, I know that is unfair, but that stereotype was cast before I was born. I guess the real reason, though, is they have nothing that interests me. I do not believe in their "magnum" philosophy. To Weatherby, "magnum" = velocity. To me, "magnum" = bullet weight at "standard" velocities. I don't care how "flat" it shoots, unless it's a dedicated varmint rifle. To me, 200 yards is a "long" shot, bordering on too far to call "hunting". In a lifetime of big game hunting, my average shot still hovers under 50 yards... even factoring in some embarrassingly long shots on pronghorns and one or two mulies... |
Probably shouldn't mention I shoot a 257 weatherby mag then? :)
Sent via Jedi mind trick. |
Are the unlimited bench rest guys developing new shapes and surface treatments for the bullets?
I'm imagining golf ball type divots, weird stuff like that. |
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