Sccritterkiller
WKR
- Joined
- Apr 8, 2019
- Messages
- 1,971
Glad you ok!
You going full shoulder mount on that airbag or just gonna keep it simple with Euro?
You going full shoulder mount on that airbag or just gonna keep it simple with Euro?
I carry a lever action as a backup but in certain conditions it becomes my primary. When hunting all week in a cloud with < 100 ft if visibility or a coastal jungle it’s simply the right tool and is much better than my scoped .270 Weatherby.
I just cycle until empty and dig around in the dark until I’ve retrieved all the cartridges. A headlamp helps!
Coming from a dirtbike background... the bad ones are three "OH SHIT!" 's. Like if you launch off something wrong and those watching you have time to say "Oh shit, Oh Shit, OH SHIT!!!" three times?... yepp... it's gonna be a bad one.Humor doesn’t trivialize danger or a brush with death. I was an EMT for six years and got very very familiar with death. When death rears his head you can quake in your boots while it’s happening. But later if you live, it’s best for your sanity if you can laugh.
Yikes dude! Glad only your pride, and truck, are injured.
Sure, but to his credit, I didn't see any White claw in the cup holders.I'm sure pride isn't an issue, he's driving a Ridgeline..
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My dad uses an old 30-30. I think he just likes to keep it old school and use his original gun. I think one of the main takeaways here too is that folks should upgrade to a different gun like any bolt action style. It's more safe, more powerful, more accurate, literally all around better.
Thanks for sharing and like others have said, glad you weren't hurt. It helps when we can all learn from others mistakes.
Now for a question or two. I see you were nervous about just cycling the action over and over until all rounds were ejected because of clothing or something else snagging the light trigger. Maybe your lever is somehow different from mine, but when you close the action with a chambered round, the hammer is back and it's ready to rock. You pull the trigger and it goes boom. So...rather than immediately operating the lever to open the action (which your hand is already on), which would immediately prevent it from firing, you take your hand off the lever, put your thumb on hammer, finger on trigger, and lower trigger on a hot round? Once hammer is down, you put your hand back on the lever to open the action, eject the shell, etc... Is that correct? If so, I suppose I just don't see the benefit to the extra steps of fiddling with the hammer/trigger, particularly in the dark? Your hand is already on the lever you just closed, just open it back up right?
Also, on my Marlin 1895 45-70, I can push in on the loading gate and pop rounds out. I don't have to cycle the action for each round to unload. I know you said that didn't work for you, but for anyone else out there with a lever thinking you have to chamber each round to unload on a lever, maybe give that a try. I'll see if I can figure out how to post a video.