Dsmithy70 wrote on Apr 29
th, 2013 at 11:13pm:
Well thanks
The actual 1st small parargraph of my post is my question.
Well, question answered. Different firearms have different uses, hence why one might need more that one firearm. As to why you might need more that a single shot, lots of reasons, most of them involving the first shot either missing or not cleanly killing.
Quote: I freely admit to a total lack of knowledge of guns and the urge to go and kill something for fun.
Im not some hippy vegan and killing for food is a totally different matter, if your going to kill something at least have a practicle reason.
I hunt mostly because I enjoy the meat and my local butcher doesn't keep stuff like deer or elk in stock usually. The vegans will tell you meat is murder... sweet, delicious murder.
Quote:Although after everything else you didn't seem to address the ease, swiftness and range of killing via this type of weapon.
That would be pointing out the obvious. Though I would caution against the "ease" part simply because it takes a goodbit of training along with constant and consistant practile to be a good marksman. Time for a range anecdote...
One time I was taking a friend of mine to the range for the first time. Closest this dude's been to a gun before was playing Call of Duty. After giving him the Gun Safety Lecture I set hip up at the 5m line with a pistol, an old Baretta 92F in 9x19mm. I tell him to line up the front sight post on the target and sqeeze the trigger, gentle pressure, don't jerk it. BANG! Missed. I tell him to try again, bang miss. Bang miss, bang miss, goes on like that ror eight rounds.
He gets frustrated, after all he just missed eight for eight at 5m. That's when I noticed the group of divits in the groung half a meter in front of the target. What was happening was buddy was anticipating the recoil and pulling the barrel rownwards right before the trigger would break, sending $4 worth of 9mm into the dirt. I showed hom what he was doing wrong and sure enough rounds nine through fourteen hit the target, and from there it was training him around issues like eye dominance vs handedness, trigger technique, and such.
After that initial problem he learmed quick and had a lot of fun until I made him clean the weapons he shot when wr got back to my house. Anways, point is there's a lot more to shooting than point and click.
Quote:With a knife your up close you must mean it, with a gun you can be 30 meters away and the thing down range is a target not someone struggling in your grasp.
See the above story. I've seen guys with as much or more experience as me miss completely at well under 30m under stressful firing conditions. A gun is just a tool and like all tools they're only as effective as the person using it.