Have you ever brought too many guns to the range?

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Riomouse911

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That was me the other day. I had epic visions of starting off with the SIG Mosquito (I know, I know.. but this gun has been reliable with high velocity ammo.) then shooting the Wrangler .22, then the new-to-me S&W 36-1 3” that I just regripped with Pachmayr Grippers and a newly acquired S&W Model 18-3, then giving the S&W 66-2 a go with .38 and .357 loads, topped off with the Blackhawk flat top .44 Special.

I went through several magazines with the Mosquito, and true to form it ate up Blazer 40 gr loads just fine but wouldn’t fully cycle most shots using some off-brand standard velocity .22’s (Sterling Cross). I love the way that gun feels but hate it’s ammo sensitivity.

The Model 18-3 ate everything, shooting 70 of the Sterling Cross bullets into a decent sized DA group at 10 yds. I did have to brush the chambers once extraction became sticky, but I’ve found thats par for the course with all my S&W .22 revolvers (except my Model 17-3). The Blazer and Armscor .22’s went into similar sized groups in lesser numbers.

16B9C111-1EEA-4871-8825-C293BF6B4334.jpeg

The Model 36-1 is the gun I rescued from Bubbas polishing job. I dumped the wooden stocks for some grips that are more hand filling. Kinda defeats the belly gun purpose but the 3” barrel called for a bigger handle IMHO.

The first 15 on # 1,were a bit high then low as I tried to find POI with 148 gr DEWC over 2.8 gr Bullseye. Once I figured it out, it kept 15 on the target DA at 10 yds. with the WC load (2) and a pair of loads using 4.1 gr HP-38; a Berrys 125 gr LRNFP (4) and a 150 gr coated long-nose SWC from Brazos (3). I was pleasantly surprised at the consistency of the factory sight regulation, none of these three loads required any Kentucky Windage to hit in the black... all the flops are on me.

50BD0109-4532-467F-943B-4CB55F0A6ED8.jpeg


As you can imagine the Bullseye load was soft on the hands, the ears and the gun. Compared to the guys thumping away with the AR-15s at the other end of the 10-bay range, this gun must’ve felt like a .22 to the others shooting between us.

033112D6-D424-4FFD-8F1F-A347AD849199.png

After about 100 through the 36-1 with zero issues, I went to the .357. The Model 66-1 has the 6” barrel target trigger/target hammer options, so I went out to 15 yds. DA firing the DEWC load and a 158 gr coated Eggleston SWC over 6.2 gr Unique. This gun liked the soft-magnum loads a bit better than the classic target standbys, but I was happy to keep them close to the black. (Shoots a tad high with both loads, the next time it’s going to be more of a 6 o’clock hold for me rather than putting center dot on top of the front sight.)

33EFD2C9-028C-4C8D-AD37-E96C9205CA76.jpeg

By the time I got to this point I was just done. I never brought out the Rugers, I think the effects of the rifles rattling my fillings was enough to pack it in.

16327167-CDEF-4A18-89DE-EC42EDDE6D50.jpeg

The only solace was there were two fewer guns to clean. I guess I’ll have to make them the first ups next time so they don’t get an inferiority complex :).

Stay safe.
 
I took to many one day and forgot to pack one up and just left it in the stall and then went home. When I got home my wife said the range called and said I left a gun in the stall. Well the razzing started right away at home then picked up when I went to the range to pick it up. Took about 3 months before everyone let up. Now I take a maximum of 3 guns. Man getting old sucks.
 
Yup, I took a friend of mine who was expecting his first baby, he wanted to get out to the range before his spare time evaporated. He didn't have a wide range of shooting experience, but had the basics of firearms safety. Long story short...I brought the whole arsenal. That was a very long, very fun day at the range. And a very long, not so fun evening of cleaning everything. Did get some good slow mo shots though
 
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Yes, in fact I usually take extra firearms to the range intentionally. In that way, I won't run out of things to shoot or worse, have a firearm out of commission and have to pack it up early. I think the largest number of firearms I had to clean at one time is five.

I too have to put a Pachmayer on my M63 no dash to fit my meaty clubs. Same on my son's M36-1. Those J-frames are hard for me to shoot otherwise.
The Model 36-1 is the gun I rescued from Bubbas polishing job. I dumped the wooden stocks for some grips that are more hand filling.
 
I've been known to bring enough guns to the range that I ended up not shooting some of them just because I ran out of time. These days I rarely bring more than a couple.
 
That was me the other day. I had epic visions of starting off with the SIG Mosquito (I know, I know.. but this gun has been reliable with high velocity ammo.) then shooting the Wrangler .22, then the new-to-me S&W 36-1 3” that I just regripped with Pachmayr Grippers and a newly acquired S&W Model 18-3, then giving the S&W 66-2 a go with .38 and .357 loads, topped off with the Blackhawk flat top .44 Special.

I went through several magazines with the Mosquito, and true to form it ate up Blazer 40 gr loads just fine but wouldn’t fully cycle most shots using some off-brand standard velocity .22’s (Sterling Cross). I love the way that gun feels but hate it’s ammo sensitivity.

The Model 18-3 ate everything, shooting 70 of the Sterling Cross bullets into a decent sized DA group at 10 yds. I did have to brush the chambers once extraction became sticky, but I’ve found thats par for the course with all my S&W .22 revolvers (except my Model 17-3). The Blazer and Armscor .22’s went into similar sized groups in lesser numbers.

View attachment 996362

The Model 36-1 is the gun I rescued from Bubbas polishing job. I dumped the wooden stocks for some grips that are more hand filling. Kinda defeats the belly gun purpose but the 3” barrel called for a bigger handle IMHO.

The first 15 on # 1,were a bit high then low as I tried to find POI with 148 gr DEWC over 2.8 gr Bullseye. Once I figured it out, it kept 15 on the target DA at 10 yds. with the WC load (2) and a pair of loads using 4.1 gr HP-38; a Berrys 125 gr LRNFP (4) and a 150 gr coated long-nose SWC from Brazos (3). I was pleasantly surprised at the consistency of the factory sight regulation, none of these three loads required any Kentucky Windage to hit in the black... all the flops are on me.

View attachment 996367


As you can imagine the Bullseye load was soft on the hands, the ears and the gun. Compared to the guys thumping away with the AR-15s at the other end of the 10-bay range, this gun must’ve felt like a .22 to the others shooting between us.

View attachment 996366

After about 100 through the 36-1 with zero issues, I went to the .357. The Model 66-1 has the 6” barrel target trigger/target hammer options, so I went out to 15 yds. DA firing the DEWC load and a 158 gr coated Eggleston SWC over 6.2 gr Unique. This gun liked the soft-magnum loads a bit better than the classic target standbys, but I was happy to keep them close to the black. (Shoots a tad high with both loads, the next time it’s going to be more of a 6 o’clock hold for me rather than putting center dot on top of the front sight.)

View attachment 996365

By the time I got to this point I was just done. I never brought out the Rugers, I think the effects of the rifles rattling my fillings was enough to pack it in.

View attachment 996364

The only solace was there were two fewer guns to clean. I guess I’ll have to make them the first ups next time so they don’t get an inferiority complex :).

Stay safe.
All the time. I usually bring 5x2 handguns (ie pairs) in a plastic bucket and shoot only two or three. I noticed that the rest of the range brings just one or two, in nice bags or cases
 
That was me the other day. I had epic visions of starting off with the SIG Mosquito (I know, I know.. but this gun has been reliable with high velocity ammo.) then shooting the Wrangler .22, then the new-to-me S&W 36-1 3” that I just regripped with Pachmayr Grippers and a newly acquired S&W Model 18-3, then giving the S&W 66-2 a go with .38 and .357 loads, topped off with the Blackhawk flat top .44 Special.

I went through several magazines with the Mosquito, and true to form it ate up Blazer 40 gr loads just fine but wouldn’t fully cycle most shots using some off-brand standard velocity .22’s (Sterling Cross). I love the way that gun feels but hate it’s ammo sensitivity.

The Model 18-3 ate everything, shooting 70 of the Sterling Cross bullets into a decent sized DA group at 10 yds. I did have to brush the chambers once extraction became sticky, but I’ve found thats par for the course with all my S&W .22 revolvers (except my Model 17-3). The Blazer and Armscor .22’s went into similar sized groups in lesser numbers.

View attachment 996362

The Model 36-1 is the gun I rescued from Bubbas polishing job. I dumped the wooden stocks for some grips that are more hand filling. Kinda defeats the belly gun purpose but the 3” barrel called for a bigger handle IMHO.

The first 15 on # 1,were a bit high then low as I tried to find POI with 148 gr DEWC over 2.8 gr Bullseye. Once I figured it out, it kept 15 on the target DA at 10 yds. with the WC load (2) and a pair of loads using 4.1 gr HP-38; a Berrys 125 gr LRNFP (4) and a 150 gr coated long-nose SWC from Brazos (3). I was pleasantly surprised at the consistency of the factory sight regulation, none of these three loads required any Kentucky Windage to hit in the black... all the flops are on me.

View attachment 996367


As you can imagine the Bullseye load was soft on the hands, the ears and the gun. Compared to the guys thumping away with the AR-15s at the other end of the 10-bay range, this gun must’ve felt like a .22 to the others shooting between us.

View attachment 996366

After about 100 through the 36-1 with zero issues, I went to the .357. The Model 66-1 has the 6” barrel target trigger/target hammer options, so I went out to 15 yds. DA firing the DEWC load and a 158 gr coated Eggleston SWC over 6.2 gr Unique. This gun liked the soft-magnum loads a bit better than the classic target standbys, but I was happy to keep them close to the black. (Shoots a tad high with both loads, the next time it’s going to be more of a 6 o’clock hold for me rather than putting center dot on top of the front sight.)

View attachment 996365

By the time I got to this point I was just done. I never brought out the Rugers, I think the effects of the rifles rattling my fillings was enough to pack it in.

View attachment 996364

The only solace was there were two fewer guns to clean. I guess I’ll have to make them the first ups next time so they don’t get an inferiority complex :).

Stay safe.

》》
Have you ever brought too many guns to the range?《《

In a way, Yes,,, but No, not really.

This was out by Barstow so not really at a range.

Similar to you, I had a few that were either new and others that I had changed grips or recoil pad etc that I wanted to test out.

We also had 1 new shooter and a few practically new shooters which required extra time and attention from me and my BIL who's a LEO.

I did shoot all that I brought but not as much as "I" wanted to.

However, the new shooters picked up the slack and I REALLY enjoyed that aspect.
 
“out by Barstow so not really at a range.”

Right on, my brother.

I get so tired of everyone on these forums bashing Cali.

If the dune-billies (I’m in North Central FL now) around me knew how much better the shootin’ is in California than in their goshforsaken armpit with zero federal land ...

... they would cry and say, “I’ve been lied to”
 
》》
Have you ever brought too many guns to the range?《《

In a way, Yes,,, but No, not really.

This was out by Barstow so not really at a range.

Similar to you, I had a few that were either new and others that I had changed grips or recoil pad etc that I wanted to test out.

We also had 1 new shooter and a few practically new shooters which required extra time and attention from me and my BIL who's a LEO.

I did shoot all that I brought but not as much as "I" wanted to.

However, the new shooters picked up the slack and I REALLY enjoyed that aspect.
At the range, I want to shoot everyone else’s guns and have them shoot all of mine.

Let’s face it, we never want to “go live” with our hobby (unless we’re hunters or match competitors), so showing off and comparing guns at the range is the most gun fun we’re going to be able to have.

But I noticed that the rest of the guys and gals at the range are not there for a “gun smorgasbord.” They just want to shoot their 50 9mm rounds, date their target, and leave.

It’s just me and my fellow gun noobs who walk up and down the line saying, “Anyone want to try shooting a Tok? I have extra...”
 
I normally bring 5 or 6, with a specific round count and specific goals to accomplish with each one. Goals my be training, testing, just zeroing (hunting rifles) or patterns (shotguns). I also bring a list of everything that goes with me, and check it off before I leave. I have found other people's stuff on the range before.
 
Yes, I have. Many times. Been trying to stop doing that because it's annoying to pack something out there only to bring it home unfired. Have never left anything out there though!
 
I normally bring 5 or 6, with a specific round count and specific goals to accomplish with each one. Goals my be training, testing, just zeroing (hunting rifles) or patterns (shotguns). I also bring a list of everything that goes with me, and check it off before I leave. I have found other people's stuff on the range before.

“I also bring a list of everything that goes with me, and check it off before I leave“

Lesson now learned. Thank you
 
》》
Have you ever brought too many guns to the range?《《

In a way, Yes,,, but No, not really.

This was out by Barstow so not really at a range.

Similar to you, I had a few that were either new and others that I had changed grips or recoil pad etc that I wanted to test out.

We also had 1 new shooter and a few practically new shooters which required extra time and attention from me and my BIL who's a LEO.

I did shoot all that I brought but not as much as "I" wanted to.

However, the new shooters picked up the slack and I REALLY enjoyed that aspect.
I like our-out-in-the-desert shooting because I can bring my plates and set them up any way I want to (safely!). Indoor ranges like the one I frequent every two weeks or so limit you to punching paper in a straight line (naturally) so people aren’t bouncing rounds all over the place.

Any shooting is fun... but I find ringing steel is much more so :thumbup:.

Stay safe.
 
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