first day as the new range officer,,,
280PLUS
December 30, 2003, 09:54 AM
This guy comes from the range, into the office with his ruger MKII
action open,,,
round stuck in the chamber and 2 strike marks on the round,,,
"can you help me get this out?"
me,,,"is that a live round in there?"
"yes"
me,,,"could you do me a favor and bring that back into the range and point the muzzle downrange,,,i'll be right with you."
:rolleyes:
am i calm or what?
:D
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Amish_Bill
December 30, 2003, 01:29 PM
Hey... at least he had the action open.
Wait another day or two... you'll probably start thinking of him as well-behaved!
Greybeard
December 30, 2003, 01:56 PM
What Bill said. :D
And be prepared for the next guy to inform you that a Glock 23 WILL shoot 9mms. After wondering why the gun did not cycle correctly ... :uhoh:
BrownBear
December 30, 2003, 06:43 PM
Congratulations on being a R.O. I over see a rifle and pistol range with almost 100 shooting stations. It's unbelievable what my range officers encounter daily. What you encountered was just the tip of the iceberg. Good luck in your new position.
Shaughn Leayme
December 30, 2003, 07:03 PM
Wait until they walk in to your office squeezing the trigger and manipulating the decocker and saying my gun isn't working and then it discharges and shoots a file cabinet:what:
Once you quit blinking and your ears stop ringing, you will observe the deer in the headlight look from the guy with the now smoking gun in hand, with his finger still on the trigger:scrutiny: and another round under the hammer.
My friend (it was his office) told me afterwards,that I was visiting on a GOOD day, OH BOY!!!!
4v50 Gary
December 30, 2003, 07:13 PM
Well done. Be prepared as more mishaps happen at the hands of novices. Be patient and always teach when you can.
Standing Wolf
December 30, 2003, 07:38 PM
Adventures in shooting safety.
winstonsmith
December 30, 2003, 08:29 PM
Or lack there-of.
Treylis
December 31, 2003, 01:35 AM
Sounds like a job where you don't need coffee to stay awake. ;-)
280PLUS
December 31, 2003, 07:58 AM
thanx for the support
it's nice to know i have so much more to look forward too,,,:what:
i'm only doing a couple of hours once a week right now and theres only 10 ports so hopefully the unsafe mishaps will be somewhat limited
i AM amazed at who can have a pistol permit though
or at least how little experience one needs to aquire one,,,in CT anyways
of course,,,i'm amazed at who can have a driver's license too,,,
however,,,as a consolation i will probably have some good stories to post here on occasion
:D
AK103K
December 31, 2003, 08:17 AM
You do wear a vest, right? :uhoh:
EBay has a bunch for decent prices if your short the money.
Bainx
December 31, 2003, 08:26 AM
Sounds like you handled the situation well.
On a totally unrelated note:
Hey... at least he had the action open.
This brought back the memory of Janet [Thug] Reno telling the reporters in reference to the JBT pointing the H&K submachine gun at Ellian Gonzales:
"Notice that his finger is off the trigger".
I laughed and laughed and laughed:p
280PLUS
December 31, 2003, 08:34 AM
seeing how's our little town is increasing it's share of no goodniks lately, i have begun to wonder about the range being a target for those who seek weapons and $ (the register is pretty full)
i am carrying there but i see where a vest would be a good investment
be it for criminal or accidental mishaps
anybody want to give me some info on which are good or bad?
good, better, best??
m
Amish_Bill
December 31, 2003, 09:19 AM
Heck... because of your job at the range, you can probbaly write the vest off your taxes as a required but not supplied work uniform item. ;-)
AK103K
December 31, 2003, 11:23 AM
I picked up a pretty much new Safariland level IIIA w/ two carriers made in 1999 for $160 and a brand new Second Chance Featherlite level II made in 2001 for $170 of EBay. Level IIIA stops pretty much everything short of rifle calibers. Level IIA is the lowest rating. EBay does have some deals if you watch. I got mine for work as I work outside in the woods during hunting season. We work in the "shotgun zone" so those vests will do. I plan on wearing them to the range from now on also.
Willard
December 31, 2003, 12:17 PM
Not working at SMoss, are you?
M58
December 31, 2003, 09:49 PM
Why I never accepted a position at the academy as a range officer/trainer.
ChickenHawk
January 1, 2004, 03:13 PM
Yikes. Does an RO get hazardous duty pay when actually monitoring the firing line? :uhoh:
ChickenHawk
280PLUS
January 1, 2004, 05:30 PM
whats with the apron looking part at the bottom?
is this tucked in when worn?
i want it to be very inconspicous,,,
any opinions?
m
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayisapi.dll?view&item=2975895168&category=3204 (http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?viewitem&item=2975895168&category=3204)
Omnicron
January 1, 2004, 05:43 PM
Is that a pocket for a trama plate that you would fold up behind the vest?
AK103K
January 1, 2004, 05:50 PM
They are "tails" that tuck into your pants to help keep the vest from riding up. You can tuck them up under the vest if you want. Some carriers have them, some dont. The insert pocket is on the outside in the front, just above the straps.
280PLUS
January 2, 2004, 08:24 AM
story at 11
or actually when it arrives,,,
i just went for the buy it now,,,no sense in letting some sniper (ebay type) snatch it away from me
and between my new job and my new found ability to win $ shooting
(albeit not a lot)
uncle sam WILL foot some of the bill,,,
somehow, these days, i feel it's right for him to subsidize my shooting related euipment
:D
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