The only time the indoor range I occasionally shoot at had a kitten was when I shot 416 Rigby monolithic solids.I think my indoor range might have palpitations if I brought one there.
A diminutive cartridge compared to the tcm.416 Rigby monolithic solids
I have seen them. I have the FN Five Seven and the Ruger 57, so I probably won't buy one. I saw the TV episode where it was tested head to head against the Five seven. If I remember correctly, the RIA won the comparison test.I just learned of the existence of this critter, it would seem a thrill seeker or two would have got one.
I suspect it's an urban legend. Other rounds also spit fire, especially from shorter barrels. That includes everything from .22 Magnum up through .44 Magnum, with several stops in between.Rojack said:I heard .22 TCM is banned from a lot of indoor ranges. Since it tends to spit fire, the concern is that a fireball could ignite powder residue on the floor and set the place on fire. Or is that just an urban legend?
Ukranians are apparently having great success taking out T80 tanks with the mighty TCM.