Those who frequent THR might recall I've posted on this subject in the past but with the resurrection of TFL, I thought I'd get the message out again.
Semi autos have a lot going for them when it comes to clay shooting. Light on recoil, lower in cost than o/us of comparable quality and reliable if kept clean and used with the right ammunition. I've owned two semis in the past and would own another.
The problem is barrel control. I frequently see barrels pointed at people as shooters carry semi-autos around the shooting club. They are usually carrying the gun by the receiver with the barrel parallel to the ground and because their hand covers the ejection port it is very hard to see whether the action is open. I know the gun is probably empty and safe but I can't see it unlike with a breaking gun where you can see from a distance that it is open. Even with a pump gun you can see that the foreend is pulled back, not so with a semi.
The inability of one shooter to get this message cost me a friendship. He was forever crossing people with his semi and after the third time he did it to me despite repeated warnings I refused to shoot with him again. He compounded his error by offering BS excuses in response to the warnings.
This is not to say that gas guns are unsafe or that unsafe practices don't happen with breaking guns. I've seen o/u owners lift their closed gun from the rack, sweep an entire squad and then open the gun. (Breaking guns should be opened with the barrels pointed in a safe direction immediately upon being picked up.) The most conscientous shooter I know uses a gas gun but that is the point. You need to be more attentive to barrel control with a semi because it's harder to see that the gun is safe.
So if you are shooting a semi, please give some consideration to your fellow shooters and keep the barrels in a safe direction. You might know it's safe but it's hard for the rest of us to see the action is open.
Paul
Semi autos have a lot going for them when it comes to clay shooting. Light on recoil, lower in cost than o/us of comparable quality and reliable if kept clean and used with the right ammunition. I've owned two semis in the past and would own another.
The problem is barrel control. I frequently see barrels pointed at people as shooters carry semi-autos around the shooting club. They are usually carrying the gun by the receiver with the barrel parallel to the ground and because their hand covers the ejection port it is very hard to see whether the action is open. I know the gun is probably empty and safe but I can't see it unlike with a breaking gun where you can see from a distance that it is open. Even with a pump gun you can see that the foreend is pulled back, not so with a semi.
The inability of one shooter to get this message cost me a friendship. He was forever crossing people with his semi and after the third time he did it to me despite repeated warnings I refused to shoot with him again. He compounded his error by offering BS excuses in response to the warnings.
This is not to say that gas guns are unsafe or that unsafe practices don't happen with breaking guns. I've seen o/u owners lift their closed gun from the rack, sweep an entire squad and then open the gun. (Breaking guns should be opened with the barrels pointed in a safe direction immediately upon being picked up.) The most conscientous shooter I know uses a gas gun but that is the point. You need to be more attentive to barrel control with a semi because it's harder to see that the gun is safe.
So if you are shooting a semi, please give some consideration to your fellow shooters and keep the barrels in a safe direction. You might know it's safe but it's hard for the rest of us to see the action is open.
Paul