The wife and I were in a laundromat late in the evening this weekend when two guys at the other end got into some sort of a heated dispute. We simply stayed on the opposite end and got ready to call 911 if push came to shove.
Eventually one of the guys stormed out the door but before he left he said that someday he was going to "bust cap" into the other guy if the "disrespect" didn't stop.
Now we were pretty much done so we packed everything out to the car and left the laundromat (though we did call the police non-emergency to report the threat/situation). However the whole thing got me to thinking about how much cover there actually is in your typical laundromat.
-We had at least three double-rows of washers between us and the other folks.
-Some of the washers were operating, thus full of water and wet clothes.
-Commercial laundry machines have quite a bit of thick gauge metal in them.
-The machines all sit on concrete pads so we could have hit the ground and been behind them.
Seems to me that the inside of a laundromat actually does provide a decent amount of both concealment AND some cover. What do you think?
Eventually one of the guys stormed out the door but before he left he said that someday he was going to "bust cap" into the other guy if the "disrespect" didn't stop.
Now we were pretty much done so we packed everything out to the car and left the laundromat (though we did call the police non-emergency to report the threat/situation). However the whole thing got me to thinking about how much cover there actually is in your typical laundromat.
-We had at least three double-rows of washers between us and the other folks.
-Some of the washers were operating, thus full of water and wet clothes.
-Commercial laundry machines have quite a bit of thick gauge metal in them.
-The machines all sit on concrete pads so we could have hit the ground and been behind them.
Seems to me that the inside of a laundromat actually does provide a decent amount of both concealment AND some cover. What do you think?