Statistically, most unintentional discharges occur during loading/unloading, so personally, I’m always a bit sceptical of performing these actions at every single fence or gate I come to.
Treating a weapon as if it could just go off at any point doesn't make people more confident in firearms handling, or generally being around firearms. It does the opposite. A firearm is either "unloaded", "loaded", "made ready" or "loaded and made ready". "Underloaded" is not a thing. And a negligent discharge would require the operator to show negligence. Hence why it is correctly referred to as an unintended discharge. Not a great video.
Absolutely brilliant - BASC were a great intro to stalking for me. Highly recommend their scheme as a professional intro
Statistically, most unintentional discharges occur during loading/unloading, so personally, I’m always a bit sceptical of performing these actions at every single fence or gate I come to.
Great video, well done BASC.
How would I change the process of underloading if I have an internal mag?
You can't remove the bolt on my anschutz due to the stock.
Ding, dong. Mod off. Mod on ding dong.😂😂😂
Treating a weapon as if it could just go off at any point doesn't make people more confident in firearms handling, or generally being around firearms. It does the opposite.
A firearm is either "unloaded", "loaded", "made ready" or "loaded and made ready". "Underloaded" is not a thing.
And a negligent discharge would require the operator to show negligence. Hence why it is correctly referred to as an unintended discharge.
Not a great video.
It’s safety lad , cry about it