BBob
WKR
Some triggers/rifles won't allow the safety to be set "on" when it is de-cocked.my safety is always on, even if the chamber was empty.
Some triggers/rifles won't allow the safety to be set "on" when it is de-cocked.my safety is always on, even if the chamber was empty.
I have been thinking far back to where I first started doing this and my first memory of it was prairie dog hunting with some young teenage friends and a few older adults. The adults were adamant that we have an empty chamber - and at a glance they could tell if the cocking piece was down on all our rifles. That makes sense to me.
Unless you have a spent casing in the chamber, wouldn’t your rifle be cocked? All mine cock when I cycle out a spent round and then close the bolt.I get that, but I can't put the safety on my bolt gun unless I have the rifle cocked. I don't put one in the chamber until the very last second, so I'd be cocking the rifle on an empty chamber for the sole purpose of engaging the safety on an empty chamber?
I haven't ever used a bolt gun that allows for this. This restriction allows the user to check the condition of the rifle by hand without looking at it. Same with an AR. If I can manipulate the safety I know it's cocked.Some triggers/rifles won't allow the safety to be set "on" when it is de-cocked.
Nope. I let the firing pin down onto an empty chamber by holding the trigger when closing the bolt.Unless you have a spent casing in the chamber, wouldn’t your rifle be cocked? All mine cock when I cycle out a spent round and then close the bolt.
No, that's a different scenario. Same as hunting with an AR, or hunting ducks in a blind, which is why I asked about bolt guns specifically.Do the empty chamber guys also hunt with an empty chamber when using a shotgun for upland birds?
Not true. I can see a rifle across the room that has the hammer dropped and know for a FACT that rifle is unloaded and safe (not a substitute for safe handling techniques) but a fact.One rifle yes, one rifle no.
There is no need nor benefit to dropping a hammer after you unload.
It seems like much of the safety-on crowd aren't aware of the possibility of decocking a bolt gun.No, hardly ever for the same reasons you stated.
To add: FWIW I also de-cock when I closing the bolt.
Unless you have a spent casing in the chamber, wouldn’t your rifle be cocked? All mine cock when I cycle out a spent round and then close the bolt.
If an over under shotgun is loaded, but broke open, is that safe? The safety isn’t on.Do the empty chamber guys also hunt with an empty chamber when using a shotgun for upland birds?
I like it! It would be safer for us as well.There should be a special hunting unit/season for the hunters who don't use their safeties. Just let all you guys go hunt together.
This is what I do, to. If I'm walking around with the rifle cocked all the time on an empty chamber, the cocking indicator doesn't mean anything to me. Only cocking the rifle when there's a round in the chamber functions nearly like a loaded chamber indicator on a pistol. Uncocked doesn't 100% mean it's an unloaded chamber, but a cocked bolt means you're hot.
I always do this with rifles, especially when storing the gun. just to take pressure off the spring. So my safety isn't "on" until one is chambered. Usually I'll chamber one when I'm getting close to where I think animals are going to be. Don't want to take the time and make noise chambering one if I have to be quick or quiet about the shot.Nope. I let the firing pin down onto an empty chamber by holding the trigger when closing the bolt.
With a carry/protection pistol, you're at a huge disadvantage without a round in the chamber. A quality holster will not allow a pistol to be fired from inside and seated in the holster.Just a year ago a friend had a pistol discharge while in the holster and he took a bullet - an empty chamber would have prevented that.