This is my hearing protection combo. I had custom plugs at one point, but my range bag was stolen.
http://www.amazon.com/Surefire-Sonic.../dp/B004DH65RI
http://www.amazon.com/Howard-Leight-.../dp/B001T7QJ9O
This is my hearing protection combo. I had custom plugs at one point, but my range bag was stolen.
http://www.amazon.com/Surefire-Sonic.../dp/B004DH65RI
http://www.amazon.com/Howard-Leight-.../dp/B001T7QJ9O
So how dangerous is recoil, exactly? When the gun recoils, is it at the instant of the ejection of the bullet (dangerous), or after the bullet leaves (not seemingly dangerous)?
You know I bought those surefire plugs and I really didn't like them. For one, they claim they filter out loud noises without the caps shut which seems to be pure BS. Second, the tri-flange tips aren't made of soft enough material. Any movement of my jaw and I break the seal... compared to my headphones which I just use any soft rubber medium sized tips and they'll stay sealed all day.
Looks like they have different models though and I'm not sure which ones I got. I'm hesitant to try any of the other ones though because I feel like I got suckered into the first pair. Can't even use them with the caps open so may as well just use cheap foamies anyway.
They come in different sizes, so you might just need a different size. I much prefer these over the foamies for convenience factor. So much easier to just pop them in rather than having to squeeze the foamies to get them in correctly. Too many people leave them shallow.
W
How do you guys feel about revovers?
1)
For revolver, I would say get a .357 but shoot .38 special out of it. .38 special is waaaay less recoil and will be cheaper than .357. But you also have the option to move up to .357 if you want to. .357 is brutal imo.
Both will feel significantly different from a 9mm, and anything in .50 caliber is going to kick a hell of a lot harder than 9 or .40. A .45, in a full-frame 1911 is going to feel somewhat between a 9mm and a .40. The 1911's solid metal construction will really help to dampen the .45's recoil.
I'll second this one, can't go wrong with an M&P.
This is also a really good suggestion. A .357 frame can handle any cheap .38 round you want to fire. Be warned though, while a .38 can chamber and fire .357, .357 rounds will damage or destroy the .38 frame.
It's only dangerous when people aren't expecting it, and manage to hit themselves in the face with their own gun. The bullet is long gone by the time the gun moves much.
There isn't a polymer framed "Desert Eagle" There is the polymer framed Baby Eagles, which are way different looking. The all steel Baby Eagle is about as close as you can get to the look of the Desert Eagle. The Desert Eagle is a novelty gun. The current generation that you will be able to buy new SUCK. The safety's are either way to slopy or way to tight. The finish on them is terrible. The top rail looks like crap.If you're just want something that LOOKS badass then you're asking the wrong questions. You should talk to HAL about acquiring deactivated guns to hang on your wall if you just want appearence.
If you want to get real use out of them then there should be less focus on what just looks neat and start thinking about what actually, you know... shoots bullets properly. A Desert Eagle is incredibly expensive and 50 cal rounds are also incredibly expensive. They make "Baby Eagles" which look like smaller Desert Eagles, and they shoot 9mm. IEI also makes polymer frame Desert Eagles in 9mm.
Recoil isn't dangerous unless you're shooting a Jennings/Bryco/Jemminez based gun as the slide can come flying back at you if the retaining pin breaks, which happens. Lorcin hand guns are known to shoot the firing pin back at the shooter. Several people have found out why eye protection is required because of this.So how dangerous is recoil, exactly? When the gun recoils, is it at the instant of the ejection of the bullet (dangerous), or after the bullet leaves (not seemingly dangerous)?
The only guns I've seen that have dangerous recoil are the .460 S&W and .500 S&W. The recoil is enough that some people can barely hang on to them and end up shooting the gun another time trying to hang on. There's several youtube videos of that.
With rifles, don't put your eye too close to the scope.
Ha! Thanks for that, makes me feel a lot more comfortable.
It's only dangerous when people aren't expecting it, and manage to hit themselves in the face with their own gun. The bullet is long gone by the time the gun moves much.
Keep in mind that dropping a loaded gun is always dangerous; although modern guns are designed not to go off when dropped, you should never lose control of your weapon or point it in an unsafe direction. Dropping the gun violates both of those.
The only guns I've seen that have dangerous recoil are the .460 S&W and .500 S&W. The recoil is enough that some people can barely hang on to them and end up shooting the gun another time trying to hang on. There's several youtube videos of that.
With rifles, don't put your eye too close to the scope.
i wouldn't go solely by caliber. some people can handle recoil differently just because you can handle a .45 just fine doesn't mean that a 100 lb girl can.
Buddy and I once took my friend and his 100 lb girlfriend shooting. Started her off on a .22, then a .38 special, then a 9mm, and then my .45. I let her know to expect about 3x the recoil (probably an overkill estimation considering we're talking a 1911, but I figured better she be over-prepared than under), and let her at it. She definitely felt the increase in recoil, and it showed in her shooting, but I never saw anything even remotely dangerous.
Yeah out of a 1911 I don't think there's any adults that couldn't handle the recoil of a .45. It seems like it has less muzzle flip than any of the polymer 9mm pistols do at the expensive of a bit more "shove" that you feel in your hand.
Thanks
So how much could I expect to pay for (for the range):
500 rounds of .22
500 rounds of 9mm
500 rounds of .40
500 rounds of .45
I keep forgetting about all of the associated costs. When someone mentioned .50 rounds costing as much as $1 I kinda got nervous lol.
Also...do different rounds make a big diff in how the gun feels/shoots?