My 1st time introducing a non-family member to shooting

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Run&Shoot

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Had a great day at the range last week. My daughter and son-in-law had another couple over visiting. I heard the husband expressing interest in guns, and my daughter "innocently" asking if he had ever been shooting. NO?

It just so happened we were going to the range the next day and invited him along. Being a new husband he had the good sense to be interested in learning something about guns fro defense.

We took a Ruger Mk III .22 and a G19 and g23 with an Advantage Arms .22 conversion. Also had a S&W 642 and M67 4" .38, and of course the 1911 .45.

We went over the firearm safety rules thoroughly and then the gun club range rules and etiquette. We started with the Ruger and the the AA conversion. He did well with both and after about 80 rds we moved on to the K-frame .38. He kept shooting pretty good and after three hours we had all worked through all of the handguns. Shot a total of about 500 rds of .22, 150 rds of .38, and about 50 rds of 9mm, .40, and .45 each. We had a fantastic time, had a chance to get to know each other better and I think we have a enthusistic new shooter in our circle of friends.

Some thoughts about the whole thing:

* Take a chance to invite someone to the range. I knew the young man was responsible but didn't have much relationship with him other than he was a friend of my daughter and her husband. But when I heard his interest in guns and lack of experience it seemed the right thing to do.

* The .38 K-frame once again proves what a terrific learning platform it is. Easy to handle, fun to shoot and a big step up from the .22. Pulling on an empty chamber he learned right away that he was jerking the trigger and we were able to work on that immediately.

* The Advantage Arms conversion was OK but a bit disappointing. It failed to extract repeatedly on Federal Eagle high velocity ammo. It seems to have some slope to the inner side of the rim that allows the apparently weak extractor to slip off. Winchester Super-X cartridges had a flatter rim and extracted OK but barely ejected. After about 50 rounds of Winchester and LOTS of lubing (extractor, barrel, slide rails, slider-ejector thingy that barrel engages in slide) then it would eject the Federals OK, too, just barely. Some CCI mini-mags were superb ejecting reliably and several feet further.

After about 250 rounds it started to FTExtract again, so I had to swab out the chamber, breech face, and scrub and lube the extractor again to get it back to reliable extraction and ejection.

* A few reminders amount muzzle direction took hold and he had excellent safety practices by the end of our session.

* Even a first time shooter can handle the .40 and .45! He said it was great. Even though he did not enjoy them as much, he said it made shooting the .22 and .38 much easier and more pleasant.
 
Well done!

Gotta love that Ruger for introducting newbies to shooting. The .38 revolver is a good choice as well and your right that it makes a logical next step.

Don't forget to set a definate second range date before they forget how much fun it was.

Soon you'll be helping them with their own gun shopping.
 
I was pretty darn close to just giving him the K-frame, but not quite. It isn't like I run into new shooters every day and I figure I could afford to part with one now and then if it meant strengthening the circle of family friends. I still might help him with something after the next couple of range visits.

I did work with my SIL afterwards on how to disassemble his G19, gave him my reference guide and a set of spare parts and some more mags. He should be pretty well set up.

You could really see a difference in the other young husband as he acquired the beginnings of a skill to protect his own family. Really makes a man out of a guy to be able to do that. Of course it is great to know my daughters like to shoot and are prepared mentally and in basic skills to defend themselves and their families, too. My wife has no interest in learning about guns ("that's your job, honey"), but my daughters are enthusiastic.

Any ideas you guys that have done this before with interested acquaintances/friends to keep range time interesting and progressing in learning are appreciated.
 
Great Job

It is always a great feeling to take someone new shooting and have them enjoy it. Keep up the good work.
 
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