
And while we're on the subject of shotgun sounds, nothing creates more primordial fear in a man than the mechanical thud of a double barrel shotgun being closed in the dark.
Moderator: carlson1
Bingo! Great movie.STI Shooter wrote:Shaw Shank, right.
A very wise man once told me to shout "Drop the weapon" as loud as you could and as soon as the last word is being shouted the finger should be squeezing the bang switch.wheelgun1958 wrote:Stop or I'll shoot again works best.
Possibly, but not definitelymr.72 wrote:Now I think the BG who breaks into your house is not likely to be scared off by any noise, because they probably are high on drugs
Really? You think that? No, I don't think that at all. Burglary is a non-violent crime. Burglary is much more prevalent than robbery. The number of folks sneaking around stealing things is much higher than the number of folks packin' heat and robbing a store at gunpoint. Burglary is a coward's crime. There's a reason that they target empty houses. I don't believe that at all. If more burglars had guns pointed at them (more would get shot) and there would be fewer burglars. The reason that burglary is common is that it's not resisted.or totally accustomed to having guns pointed at them all the time.
This is the other problem that I have with keeping all of the long guns chambered; all told, I have six different types of safeties on my long guns. (Assuming we count no manual safety as a type.) It's much easier to determine the action type in the dark than try to remember whether the safety is a cross bolt, lever on the side, lever on top, slide switch on top, etc.Keith wrote:I would think most robbers would carry handguns not shotguns. They don't want to bring attention to themselves and need both arms to carry the stolen property.On my Winchester Defender it's much more easy for me to just pump then find that darn little safety button on the side in the dark.
KD5NRH wrote:Storing a non-drop-safe gun (most long guns have none of the various drop safeties common in handguns) with a round chambered is asking for trouble. I rack the shotgun because that's what it takes to make it go boom. If it happens to scare a home invader away before I have a clean shot, so much the better.
+1 to both of these.Keith wrote:On my Winchester Defender it's much more easy for me to just pump then find that darn little safety button on the side in the dark.
Easy, I put it back in the safe when I leave my apartment. They'd need a torch to get it then... My rule of thumb is if it isn't within arm's reach, in hand, or in the holster on my person it should be locked in a secure container. Keeps 'em away from the three C's, Children, Criminals, and the Clueless (see Kathy Jackson's The Cornered Cat). But then again I don't have anyone else in my place that needs access to a gun, since I haven't trained my cat to shoot yet.03Lightningrocks wrote:For those that keep a loaded gun in the bedroom, anyone ever consider the what if of walking in on a burglar and getting blasted by your own gun?
Dude! You win this thread.03Lightningrocks wrote:PS..I don't know how scared a bad guy would get when they hear that sound but I can tell you my daughters Chihuahua runs like the wind when he hears it. We are thinking he might have been a BG in a past life. Maybe a Mexican drug smuggler or something. Knives scare him too.