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-   -   more gun talk. the sound of a shotgun "racking". (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/940621-more-gun-talk-sound-shotgun-racking.html)

vash 12-28-2016 12:33 PM

more gun talk. the sound of a shotgun "racking".
 
i hear it all the time. shotgun = home defense superiority.."the sound of a shotgun "racking" in a shell is unmistakeable" and should send any would be intruder scurrying back into the shadows..

seriously? i think someone in every shotgun/defense discussion brings this up. i've never had a home intruder while i was home (thanks goodness)..if it happens, i dont think the acoustics of my shotgun going into business mode is even a blip on my brain-radar. arent most home shotguns already "racked". you all have the tube stuffed full and the chamber is left empty? so you have an extra shell ready?

is this a real thing? what about other sounds :D..big dog barking, distant sirens, that movie scene in HOME ALONE?
thanks..i'm bored.

scottmandue 12-28-2016 12:45 PM

I always believed this... and it prompted me to buy a Remington 870 tactical.
First: even though I don't live with children I don't have "one in the chamber", just seems too dangerous to me and if I need more than 6 rounds of 12 gauge then I'm in some serious doo-doo.
Second: after hearing much talk about home defense (about how difficult it is to go through a house with a shotgun) I actually tried walking though my (empty) house with a shouldered shotguns and yes it is super awkward.
Thus if I ever wanted to 'clear my house' I would use the 9mm (I know that clearing your house not recommended in the event of a break in)
Third: I also don't keep my 9mm loaded but I would think the sound of it being racked would be a sign to any bad guys I'm ready to defend myself.
Forth: I am keeping the 870 for the zombie apocalypse. ;)

masraum 12-28-2016 12:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by vash (Post 9411547)
i hear it all the time. shotgun = home defense superiority.."the sound of a shotgun "racking" in a shell is unmistakeable" and should send any would be intruder scurrying back into the shadows..

seriously? i think someone in every shotgun/defense discussion brings this up. i've never had a home intruder while i was home (thanks goodness)..if it happens, i dont think the acoustics of my shotgun going into business mode is even a blip on my brain-radar. arent most home shotguns already "racked". you all have the tube stuffed full and the chamber is left empty? so you have an extra shell ready?

is this a real thing? what about other sounds :D..big dog barking, distant sirens, that movie scene in HOME ALONE?
thanks..i'm bored.

I think there are folks that don't keep one in the chamber whether you're talking about a shotgun or semi-auto hand-spoon. I don't necessarily think it's a great idea, but then I don't have kids an idiot wife (she's smart and gun-experienced enough so that's not a problem) or strangers wandering around in my stuff. If I did, and I was going to have a shotgun around, I'd have it locked away or in a place that the above mentioned folks couldn't get at it, and then it would have one in the chamber.

Here's an interesting video on a related subject.

<iframe width="853" height="480" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/rVPiic-ELoM" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

targa911S 12-28-2016 12:55 PM

Personally I think it's an urban myth or at the very least wishful thinking. Kinda like people saying that if they have a laser sight and point it at a perp he will just raise his hands and surrender. On another note, I do think that a short shotgun is the best home defense gun. The fist shot in mine is rubber buckshot. Leaves a nasty bruise and will knock them down. After that it's 00 buck. You don't have much time in a home invasion situation to say " Hey listen to my gun ....I'm racking the slide now"

HardDrive 12-28-2016 12:56 PM

My home defense weapon is a Sig 226 .40 with Hornaday JHPs. Shotguns are too unwieldy for my taste.

I think the shotgun 'racking' is a bit of a tall tale. I'm sure it's happened, but I don't think that's a realistic strategy for scaring someone off.

rusnak 12-28-2016 01:03 PM

Like all things, it depends on setting and presentation.

Of course empty chamber. Think on that for a sec.

As far as the laser sight, I had to pull the Taser on a lady this past fall. I think that and my presentation convinced her to leave. Saved me $20 or whatever the cartridges cost.

Jeff Higgins 12-28-2016 01:07 PM

I once heard some famous expert on home defense suggest we just step out onto the back porch and fire off a round.

Eric Coffey 12-28-2016 01:07 PM

People still use pump-action shotguns these days? :D

I believe I have commented/joked about this method/phenomenon previously, but IMO it really isn't something one should rely on as a viable means of deterring bad guys. If a criminal is already crazy/stupid enough to be braking into your house with ill-intent, chances are that racking a round isn't going to have much effect (at least for some of them). In situations like that, time is life. The only thing that having to rack a round does is take away some of that precious time (when adrenaline has already impaired your fine motor skills). It potentially gives away your position as well.

Eric Coffey 12-28-2016 02:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by scottmandue (Post 9411563)
First: even though I don't live with children I don't have "one in the chamber", just seems too dangerous to me and if I need more than 6 rounds of 12 gauge then I'm in some serious doo-doo.

This is another misconception that, IMO, is potentially just as dangerous as relying on the sound of a round chambering as a deterrent. As mentioned above, your fine motor skills take a dump when your adrenaline spikes.
Numerous shoot-outs have taken place where waaaay more than 6 shots were fired and nobody got hit. There have also been instances where the person that ran out of ammo first, lost. This includes officer-involved shootings.
Granted, a scatter gun increases hit-probability at close range, but with only 6 shots you are handicapping yourself a bit IMO.
Quote:

Originally Posted by scottmandue (Post 9411563)
Third: I also don't keep my 9mm loaded but I would think the sound of it being racked would be a sign to any bad guys I'm ready to defend myself.

Not a chance I would want to take. If they are also armed, you are just giving up any tactical advantage you might have had (giving away your position, and allowing them to put a weapon at the ready). Just my $.02...

masraum 12-28-2016 02:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by scottmandue (Post 9411563)
I also don't keep my 9mm loaded but I would think the sound of it being racked would be a sign to any bad guys I'm ready to defend myself.

Watch the video below. Lots of other folks didn't keep one chambered either.
Quote:

Originally Posted by masraum (Post 9411567)

<iframe width="853" height="480" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/rVPiic-ELoM" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>


Por_sha911 12-28-2016 02:41 PM

Naive people think that if I pull a gun and waive it around the bad guy will back off. Heck no. He'll rush in, take it away from you and shoot you.
Never pull a gun until you are ready to use deadly force.

I saw a wonderful sign the other day:
"Due to the high cost of ammo, please do not expect a warning shot"

red-beard 12-28-2016 03:13 PM

12 ga Shotgun using OO buck the pattern is smaller than most people think. At 5 yards, typical pattern is about 2.5-3 inches (60-75mm). This requires more than pointing in the "general direction".

Also, Movies and TV are the source of those racking moves and sounds. Let us not forget, we often see in the movies someone thumb back the hammer on a single action auto. That would mean it is NOT loaded.

Finally, I saw on a TV program someone rack the slide then load a magazine. And then have an accidental discharge...

Jim Bremner 12-28-2016 03:32 PM

Yup, scatter guns are too slow to reload. Too few of rounds they need to be part of the plan but not the first tool that I would grab.

The joys of living in California is the mag ban so 10 rounds or less. Multiple guns to fall back onto might be a great option.

Taz's Master 12-29-2016 05:01 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by red-beard (Post 9411711)
12 ga Shotgun using OO buck the pattern is smaller than most people think. At 5 yards, typical pattern is about 2.5-3 inches (60-75mm). This requires more than pointing in the "general direction".

Also, Movies and TV are the source of those racking moves and sounds. Let us not forget, we often see in the movies someone thumb back the hammer on a single action auto. That would mean it is NOT loaded.

Finally, I saw on a TV program someone rack the slide then load a magazine. And then have an accidental discharge...

Just because they require more precision than pointing in the general direction does not mean that they aren't easier to get hits at home defense ranges than other firearms. Likewise a 12 ga. with buckshot produces a catastrophic wound which you will not get with other firearms, and you are unlikely to carry significant energy outside of your residence. A shotgun is not the best weapon for all jobs, but it as a capable and formidable home defense weapon. And if your knowledge of and experience with firearms has you believing you only need to point a shotgun in the general direction, how likely is it that a different type of firearm would be better employed in home defense?

legion 12-29-2016 05:30 AM

I think there are two different use cases here:

1) House Clearing

IMO, a light mounted on a handspoon is best for this job. Small, maneuverable, and if you can see the bad guy, you very nearly have sights on him. Here you have the ability to fire multiple shots rapidly. Sure, the sound of racking a shotgun will cause some criminals to flee, but not all. Some won't recognize what is going on. Some might be high. Some won't care.

2) Shelter in place

In this case, you know someone is in your house and you think they are coming for you or your family. Someone is on the phone with the police. Having a shotgun pointed at the door in case they breach is not a bad defensive posture. I'd want to be something like 45º off from the door in case they decide to fire through it.

red-beard 12-29-2016 05:57 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Taz's Master (Post 9412204)
Just because they require more precision than pointing in the general direction does not mean that they aren't easier to get hits at home defense ranges than other firearms. Likewise a 12 ga. with buckshot produces a catastrophic wound which you will not get with other firearms, and you are unlikely to carry significant energy outside of your residence. A shotgun is not the best weapon for all jobs, but it as a capable and formidable home defense weapon. And if your knowledge of and experience with firearms has you believing you only need to point a shotgun in the general direction, how likely is it that a different type of firearm would be better employed in home defense?

Actually, the penetration tests on 00 buck show it penetrates drywall better than .223/5.56

sc_rufctr 12-29-2016 06:06 AM

The local Cops swear by their pump action shot guns. That should tell you something.

djmcmath 12-29-2016 06:12 AM

Legion, I'd generally agree with your logic, though I might disagree on the tools: a short AR-15 would probably be my preferred tool for house clearing. In the drills I've practiced with, I find I can acquire targets faster and more precisely with a proper rifle than I can with a hand-spoon. YMMV.

That said, clearing a house is, for most of us, a pretty foolish proposition. As I understand it from chats with professionals, clearing a building is a team job, not something a lone guy without serious training should be doing on his own in the middle of the night.

So my home invasion plan is to shelter in place, literally hiding behind the bed with a 45 and my phone. I'm off-center from the door, and I'm upstairs, in a long hallway full of doors. Woe be the poor sod who comes hunting down that hallway ill-prepared to meet an entrenched defender. The current defense weapon is a beautiful Remington 1911, but I'll be picking up an FNX-45 tomorrow. Once I get comfortable with the new spoon, I'll shift over. Maybe this is cavalier, but if I can't stop a bad guy with 15 rounds of 45 JHP from 3 yards kneeling, even in a high stress situation, I probably don't deserve to live long enough to breed anyway.

As to the shotgun myth: I had a cop buddy who one time, anecdotally, was able to successfully intimidate a couple of hoodlums into ceasing and desisting with an extremely confident approach that included racking the shotgun. Other than that, I think it's mostly just a myth. In my case, I keep the spoon loaded and chambered, so the only things a bad guy would hear are the safe popping open and the safety coming off.

masraum 12-29-2016 06:19 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by red-beard (Post 9411711)
12 ga Shotgun using OO buck the pattern is smaller than most people think. At 5 yards, typical pattern is about 2.5-3 inches (60-75mm). This requires more than pointing in the "general direction".

Also, Movies and TV are the source of those racking moves and sounds. Let us not forget, we often see in the movies someone thumb back the hammer on a single action auto. That would mean it is NOT loaded.

Finally, I saw on a TV program someone rack the slide then load a magazine. And then have an accidental discharge...

My favorite are the cop movies where the cops are chasing the perp, fire a couple of rounds, then the perp heads into a warehouse or apartment building or something. At that point, it's almost guaranteed that the cops will stop at the door, talk about their plan for when they enter the building, and then, just before they enter the building, they rack the slide. I guess they want a fresh round in the chamber instead of the one that's 60 seconds old from the last time they fired the gun.

GH85Carrera 12-29-2016 06:19 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jim Bremner (Post 9411732)
Yup, scatter guns are too slow to reload. Too few of rounds they need to be part of the plan but not the first tool that I would grab.

The joys of living in California is the mag ban so 10 rounds or less. Multiple guns to fall back onto might be a great option.

Can you really think of ANY likely situation where in your own home you would need more than a couple or three rounds? It is highly unlikely you will be in a gun battle like on TV unless you are a drug dealer or a criminal and the invaders are looking for your stash and willing to kill everyone inside. That is pretty much a TV plot.

With that said, I do like having a double stack magazine just because I want one. My home defense spoon is a revolver. In a total panic adrenaline rush heart pounding situation like a bad guy in the house I want a easy to use 100% reliable point and click works without thinking interface. I can pull the trigger 6 times if necessary. I really hope it is never necessary to defend my house but any and all intruders will be shot.

masraum 12-29-2016 06:32 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by djmcmath (Post 9412281)
As to the shotgun myth: I had a cop buddy who one time, anecdotally, was able to successfully intimidate a couple of hoodlums into ceasing and desisting with an extremely confident approach that included racking the shotgun. Other than that, I think it's mostly just a myth. In my case, I keep the spoon loaded and chambered, so the only things a bad guy would hear are the safe popping open and the safety coming off.

I've watched a bunch of of videos online of various shootings. In some cases, the bad guy is happy to get into a shootout. In some cases, the bad guy can't get out of the way of the bullets fast enough. I have no doubt that there are a great many burglars that don't want to get shot and would run the other way if a defender had a visible gun. I also have no doubt that your best bet is to plan to stop the threat if you get into that situation, because you have no way of knowing which kind of bad guy you're dealing with.

legion 12-29-2016 06:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by djmcmath (Post 9412281)
That said, clearing a house is, for most of us, a pretty foolish proposition. As I understand it from chats with professionals, clearing a building is a team job, not something a lone guy without serious training should be doing on his own in the middle of the night.

I've done it a few times. Mostly its so that I can verify that the house is empty and go back to sleep. Otherwise I would be up all night. I'm not really expecting to find anyone. If I knew someone was in the house, I'd gather everyone in my bedroom and shelter in place.

For example, a few weeks ago I heard a huge crash somewhere downstairs. I cleared the house. I later found out that my wood pile had fallen against the house as the logs had been gently moved by a recent series of freeze/thaw cycles.

craigster59 12-29-2016 07:16 AM

On a related note, I was talking with an armor on a show who's friend owned a gun shop. His carry piece in store was a pink 9mm. He was a big biker guy and he felt if he ever had to draw in a situation, he might get a half second drop on the perp due to the fact the perp would focus on "Why in the Hell is this big dude carrying a pink gun".

Don't know if it's true in an actual situation but thought it was funny.

legion 12-29-2016 07:19 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by craigster59 (Post 9412357)
On a related note, I was talking with an armor on a show who's friend owned a gun shop. His carry piece in store was a pink 9mm. He was a big biker guy and he felt if he ever had to draw in a situation, he might get a half second drop on the perp due to the fact the perp would focus on "Why in the Hell is this big dude carrying a pink gun".

Don't know if it's true in an actual situation but thought it was funny.

I'd certainly be confused by and ponder it.

scottmandue 12-29-2016 07:29 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by legion (Post 9412226)
I think there are two different use cases here:

1) House Clearing

IMO, a light mounted on a handspoon is best for this job. Small, maneuverable, and if you can see the bad guy, you very nearly have sights on him. Here you have the ability to fire multiple shots rapidly. Sure, the sound of racking a shotgun will cause some criminals to flee, but not all. Some won't recognize what is going on. Some might be high. Some won't care.

2) Shelter in place

In this case, you know someone is in your house and you think they are coming for you or your family. Someone is on the phone with the police. Having a shotgun pointed at the door in case they breach is not a bad defensive posture. I'd want to be something like 45º off from the door in case they decide to fire through it.

I totally agree with this, in general most police will recommend the shelter in place scenario.
Ultimately it is your personal choice if you chose to go after the bad guy or wait it out.
I live in Los Angeles and my spoons are pretty only SHTF defense.
If really bad things start going down I will have time chamber rounds.
If I worked in liquor store yes, of course I would have a loaded spoon on my hip.
The only time I have pulled a spoon is when I heard strange noises at the neighbors house and I knew they were on vacation so I tucked the 9 in my belt and grabbed a flashlight (I figures if the popo rolled up and I was holding a shotgun that would not go well).

Taz's Master 12-29-2016 07:58 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by red-beard (Post 9412264)
Actually, the penetration tests on 00 buck show it penetrates drywall better than .223/5.56

I do not disagree with that. However drywall is not the only consideration. For instance, how far would that 5.56 go with lethal force through a window? How about a 00 pellet?

An AR may well be a better option for you in every scenario. A shotgun has shortcomings. But I know people for whom the shotgun would be a better option than an AR, or any handgun.

djmcmath 12-29-2016 08:19 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by legion (Post 9412305)
I've done it a few times. Mostly its so that I can verify that the house is empty and go back to sleep. Otherwise I would be up all night. I'm not really expecting to find anyone. If I knew someone was in the house, I'd gather everyone in my bedroom and shelter in place.

For example, a few weeks ago I heard a huge crash somewhere downstairs. I cleared the house. I later found out that my wood pile had fallen against the house as the logs had been gently moved by a recent series of freeze/thaw cycles.

Fair point: house clearing happens if you think something fishy is afoot, but are pretty sure there's nobody actually in the house.

I once cleared my house after the UPS guy showed up on my front porch at 11pm. My bedroom was right next to the porch, so I hear "stomp stomp stomp" up the stairs, then "THUMP!" at the front door. That's an adrenaline hit, for sure, haha.

wdfifteen 12-29-2016 08:29 AM

The terror of hearing a shotgun rack is the result of too much exposure to hyperbole in movies. Just last night I watched a TV show (Longmire season 2 episode 3 I think). Branch shot a rabbit with what was obviously a 22 rifle. It sounded like a cannon going off. I've fired lots of 22s. The roar doesn't exactly echo through the canyons. :D

red-beard 12-29-2016 10:25 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Taz's Master (Post 9412405)
I do not disagree with that. However drywall is not the only consideration. For instance, how far would that 5.56 go with lethal force through a window? How about a 00 pellet?

An AR may well be a better option for you in every scenario. A shotgun has shortcomings. But I know people for whom the shotgun would be a better option than an AR, or any handgun.

The issue is that it is easier to teach "incompetent" people how to use a shotgun or a carbine than to teach them to use a pistol properly. This was the reason for developing the M1-Carbine in WW2. More firepower, less training for people not needing a main battle rifle. Much better than a Colt .45...

Of course, my "goto" is a .45....

Taz's Master 12-29-2016 12:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by red-beard (Post 9412618)
The issue is that it is easier to teach "incompetent" people how to use a shotgun or a carbine than to teach them to use a pistol properly. This was the reason for developing the M1-Carbine in WW2. More firepower, less training for people not needing a main battle rifle. Much better than a Colt .45...

Of course, my "goto" is a .45....

There an awful lot of people who would like to be able to defend themselves, but are not willing or able to devote the time and money to become proficient with a handgun. (For that matter, there an awful lot of people who hunt, and aren't willing to work to become proficient with a rifle, but this is a different topic.) For them a shotgun can be an effective option. But probably not because of the noise the slide makes.

red-beard 12-29-2016 01:15 PM

There is a lot more to "defending yourself" than owning a firearm. You have to have a self-defense mindset. You have to think ahead and understand and accept, that when the time comes, it is you or them, and the correct answer is "YOU".

My wife says she will not be able to shoot someone. She is not allowed to carry a firearm. I think this would be different if she had kids, and they were threatened.

Eric Coffey 12-29-2016 01:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by djmcmath (Post 9412281)
Legion, I'd generally agree with your logic, though I might disagree on the tools: a short AR-15 would probably be my preferred tool for house clearing. In the drills I've practiced with, I find I can acquire targets faster and more precisely with a proper rifle than I can with a hand-spoon. YMMV.

+1.

A pistol is great. It gives you something to shoot back with until you can get to your rifle. :D
Quote:

Originally Posted by djmcmath (Post 9412281)
Maybe this is cavalier, but if I can't stop a bad guy with 15 rounds of 45 JHP from 3 yards kneeling, even in a high stress situation, I probably don't deserve to live long enough to breed anyway.

Hmmm... Is it more "Darwinian" to miss 15 times, or to not have an extra loaded mag nearby? :p

Eric Coffey 12-29-2016 02:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GH85Carrera (Post 9412289)
Can you really think of ANY likely situation where in your own home you would need more than a couple or three rounds?

I'd say pretty much any situation where you are confronted with an armed intruder. If you have a home-defense gun, you are preparing yourself for a worst-case scenario.
Is it likely that you will ever need to use it? No. But in the unlikely event that you do, I wouldn't want to rely on probabilities/likelihoods from that point forward.

With 3 rounds, if you shoot first and likely miss, you now have only 2 left to get an incapacitating hit on target, which will likely be much harder to achieve than your first attempt.
At which point, said armed intruder is likely going to be firing back, and possibly advancing on your position quickly. If he has something like a typical/modern 9mm, he has 15-18 chances to get lucky. You now have 2.

IMO, additional ammo follows the same logic as having a gun in the first place: Better to have it and not need it, than to need it and not have it. YMMV...

SmileWavy

rusnak 12-29-2016 03:00 PM

I'm going to guess that most confrontations involving guns dont escalate to a shooting of a person. And if you watch videos of people shooting or getting shot, it looks like they just empty the clip. And if you've ever had a gun pointed in your face, it is literally the only thing that you're seeing. I can't imagine the fear of having a shotgun pointed at me and hearing either a round being chambered, or worse "click".

arbita1 12-29-2016 04:28 PM

I have family members in law enforcement. One tells me that when he pulls up on guys with a shot gun they usually surrender more quickly than with the assault rifle. Having said that I think my 9mm would be my go to for a home invasion. Although maybe unless I had the time to grab the mossberg 500. Who knows how you would really react in that situation.


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk

Por_sha911 12-29-2016 05:35 PM

A rifle or shotgun is harder to maneuver inside a home. A pistol has a lot more mobility to get around furniture, lamps, door jams...

Don Ro 12-29-2016 05:42 PM

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1483065574.jpg
~~~~~~~~~
Mossberg Mod.500 12 gauge Pump Persuader, 18" barrel, loaded, one in chamber, safety off, under a towel on the floor next to my bed. Easy to carry & stroll through the house.

One must practice with this puppy, however, the barrel jumps right much.
Keep in mind...depending on what an intruder is under the influence of, a round or two may not stop him...a big hole that bleeds profusely may be a quicker stop.
.
Edit: Childless bachelor.

KFC911 12-30-2016 02:10 AM

Many years ago when we were quite rowdy, a few of us were meeting at a couple of friends' apt mid-day to go somewhere...and one buddy hadn't crawled out of bed yet....bedroom door closed. "Let's get Kenny up (dog pile) :)..."

The sound of his shotgun racking (unloaded though) ended that nonsense ....unmistakable "reality check" sound imo :)

Whether my .45 semi, or .357 lever is available for easy access....no round in chamber for me...no one is gonna breach my house without me having ample warning, and I don't like the idea of one chambered in them. My carry....Ruger LC9S won't fire if clip is removed...round stays chambered in it...

Brando 12-30-2016 08:15 AM

I think the "sound of the shotgun racking" is a nice wives' tale. It sounds like a great parable to tell your friends at the range. I don't see it as practical, though. And as Don Ro says: if they're under the influence who knows.

For home protection I've got the Ruger SR-9 and Hi-Point 9mm. In the Ruger I have some fancy all-copper hollow point rounds. They're supposed to stop in flesh and drywall. The last thing I would want to do is have a round go through a wall into my neighbor's room. Buckshot or 5.56/.223 would cause too much damage IMHO.

Do some searches on YouTube for ballistics tests. Some really interesting stuff there.

scottmandue 12-30-2016 09:58 AM

Shotgun shmotgun... I keep my living-room stocked with rattlesnakes. No matter how stoned the bad guy is everyone recognizes that sound!


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