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Safety |
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I. The Fundamentals of Firearm Safety
The three basic general rules of safe gun handling.
- Always point the muzzle in a safe direction; never point a
firearm at anyone or anything you don't want to shoot.
- Keep your finger off the trigger and outside the trigger guard
until you are ready to shoot.
- Keep the action open and the gun unloaded until you are ready
to use it.
II. Additional specific rules of safe gun handling
Safety Rules Related to the Shooter and His Behavior.
- Treat every firearm as if it were loaded.
- Never pass a firearm to another person, or accept a firearm
from another person, until the cylinder or action is open and
you've personally checked that the weapon is completely unloaded.
- Before handling any firearm, understand its operation.
- Never rely on any mechanical device for safety.
- Think before shooting: once you pull the trigger you can't
take back the shot you've just fired!
- Never joke around or engage in horseplay while handling or
using firearms.
- Be alert at all times; never shoot if you're tired, cold or
impaired in any way. Don't mix alcohol or drugs with shooting.
- Don't sleep with a loaded firearm in your bedroom if you
sleepwalk, have nightmares, sleep restlessly or have other sleep
problems.
- Safeguard your sight, hearing and health. Always wear eye and
ear protection. Endeavor to limit your exposure to heavy metal
particulates and gases, and minimize your contact with aromatic
organic solvents (such as those commonly used in gun cleaning
products).
- If you see unsafe behavior any time when firearms are being
handled or used, speak up and take action to correct the unsafe
behavior at once.
- Receive competent instruction from a qualified person before
beginning to shoot. If questions arise later, after you've been
shooting for a period of time, get answers to those questions from
a competent authority.
Safety Rules Related to Your Target.
- Positively identify your target and the threat it poses before
firing at it.
- What's behind your target? Always make sure that a stray shot,
or a bullet which penetrates its intended target through and
through, will be safely stopped.
- Never shoot at a hard surface, or at water -- your shot may
glance off, ricochet and injure someone.
- Never shoot at glass bottles, living trees, or inappropriate
targets which would create a hazard for other persons or damage
the environment.
- Never shoot a rifle or handgun directly upwards, or at a high
angle of elevation. Even a rimfire .22 bullet fired at an angle
into the air can have enough energy a mile and a half away to
accidentally kill someone!
- Never shoot across a highway or other roadway.
- Never vandalize a road sign (or other public or private
property) by using it as a target.
- Never poach a game animal out of season, or shoot any game
animal you don't intend to eat.
Safety Rules Related to Your Firearm.
- Make sure your firearm is in good mechanical condition before
firing it. Periodically have your firearm checked for signs of
erosion, cracking, or wear by the factory, by a qualified armorer,
or by a factory certified gunsmith.
- Never try to fire a gun which may have a plugged or partially
obstructed barrel.
- Insure that any modifications made to a firearm are made by a
qualified individual, and that those modifications don't interfere
with your firearm's safety features.
- Be sure all accessories, such as holsters and grips, are
compatible with the firearm and won't interfere with its safe
operation.
- Remember: a backup firearm carried about your person may be
highly valuable to you in the event your primary firearm is ever
rendered inoperable or is taken from you by an assailant.
- It is your responsibility to insure that your firearm is
always either about your person and under your personal control,
or positively secured from access by children or other
unauthorized parties. Prevent tragedy: lock down your firearms
when they aren't in use.
- When storing a firearm for a long period of time, consider
storing the slide, bolt, or other critical components of the
firearm separately under separate lock and key.
- Never carry a single action revolver with a round under the
hammer unless that revolver is a modern transfer-bar type,
equipped with an inertial firing pin.
- Never carry a pistol with a round in the chamber unless the
pistol has an automatic firing-pin block and/or an inertial firing
pin.
- Generally avoid carrying or storing an external hammer-type
firearm with its hammer cocked. Exercise extreme care in decocking
any external hammer firearm: it is very easy to experience an
accidental discharge while doing so if your thumb slips off the
hammer.
- Generally avoid unloading a firearm by working the cartridges
through the action one-at-a-time; drop the magazine and then eject
the round which may be left in the chamber, instead, if possible.
- Never use a scope mounted on a firearm as a general purpose
spotting scope: while observing an area you may end up
accidentally aiming your firearm at fellow hunters, or other
non-targets.
- Avoid trying to catch a live round (while unloading a
semiautomatic pistol) by cupping your hand around the ejection
port while retracting the slide; doing so may result in an
accidental discharge.
Safety Rules Related to Ammunition.
- Be sure your gun and ammunition are compatible. Shooting
incorrect ammunition in a firearm may cause it to be damaged or
even make it blow up.
- Relying on ammunition which doesn't feed reliably in your
particular firearm may make your firearm malfunction at a critical
juncture: get experience with a particular lot of ammunition in
your firearm before relying on it for defensive purposes.
- Use only ammunition recommended for your firearm by its
manufacturer. Never fire ammunition which exceeds industry
standard pressure specifications. Over-pressure ammunition will
reduce the service life of your handgun, and puts you and those
around you at risk of a catastrophic firearm failure.
- Use reloaded ammunition judiciously. Be aware that many
firearms manufacturers specifically forbid the use of reloaded
ammunition in their products, and will void their product's
warranty if you elect to use reloaded ammunition in contravention
of their instructions.
Also remember that a cartridge which has: the wrong powder, no
powder charge, or too large a powder charge; an inverted primer,
mis-seated primer, the wrong type of primer or an inert primer; a
mis-seated, inverted, or mis-sized bullet; a collapsed, weakened,
improperly sized or mis-crimped case; incorrect overall length or
any of a host of other defects may seriously jeopardize your
safety, the safety of those around you, and/or the reliability of
your firearm in a defensive situation.
Many shooters prepare and safely use reloaded ammunition each
day, and it can be an economical way to stretch your ammunition
budget, but the safety of that reloaded ammunition directly
depends on the care, components, equipment, and practices used in
preparing it.
- Carry only one caliber of ammunition when shooting.
Accidentally grabbing the wrong ammunition while shooting can
result in a shooter or third party being injured, or damage or
destruction of a firearm.
- Insure you carry sufficient spare ammunition for your
defensive firearm, and make sure you carry it in a readily
employable fashion (such as in spare magazines or in speedloaders).
- Store ammunition that isn't being used under lock and key,
inaccessible to unauthorized parties and children.
- Dispose of unwanted ammunition safely.
Safety Rules Related to Your Firearm's Holster and Ammo Carrier.
- Always use a holster which is designed for, and which fits,
your handgun.
- Make sure your holster covers the trigger guard of your
handgun.
- Purchase a holster which allows you to obtain a secure grip on
your handgun while it is still holstered.
- Be sure the thumb break, safety strap, or other firearm
retention device on your holster is functional and consistently
employed. A good holster should retain your firearm during normal
carry and routine physical activity, but no holster can insure
that a firearm will be secure against determined attempts at
disarmament, or keep a firearm secure during all possible physical
activities.
- Avoid clip-on holsters and magazine pouches. These carriers
may fail to stay clipped to the belt and end up being drawn along
with the firearm or the magazine they still hold, thereby
interfering with use of the firearm or with timely reloading.
- Avoid paddle-style holsters, cross draw holsters, and similar
holsters which provide poor weapon retention.
- Avoid ankle holsters, shoulder holsters and other types of
holsters which can introduce unnecessary delays in accessing a
defensive firearm.
- Avoid carrying a defensive firearm in a purse, pocketbook,
daypack or briefcase. A firearm carried in that fashion is:
 | Typically hard to rapidly access due to the presence of
slow-to-open zippers, multiple latches, etc., |
 | Often hard to find and draw amidst all the other items
routinely carried, since few purses or briefcases include a
dedicated handgun-carrying compartment, |
 | Prone to being unavailable when needed, since briefcases,
purses and other carriers are routinely set down or put away in
a desk drawer where they may or may not be readily accessible
and under your physical control, |
 | Unusually vulnerable to being stolen, since purses,
pocketbooks, daypacks and briefcases are prime targets for purse
snatchers, pick pockets, muggers and thieves, |
 | Prone to misfunction in an emergency since materials carried
along with your handgun in a purse or brief case may gum up the
firearm's mechanism and potentially interfere with its proper
operation, and |
 | Likely to allow your handgun to accidentally become visible
to shop clerks, bank tellers or other parties while you are
searching for your checkbook or locating a credit card, and that
inadvertent exposure may potentially result in a tense situation
or even a tragic over-reaction on the part of an individual
noticing the firearm and/or summoning law enforcement officers
to the scene. |
Never carry a handgun tucked into your belt or waistband
without a holster (i.e., so-called ``mexican carry''). A handgun
carried in this fashion may be unintentionally dislodged, fall
onto a hard surface and accidentally discharge or be damaged.
Inside the waistband-type holsters will allow you to obtain the
concealment of this type of carry while simultaneously providing
vastly improved firearm retention.
Always employ a proper magazine holder or speed loader carrier
to carry your spare ammunition. Select a design that secures and
protects your speedloaders or magazines while still making them
readily available for use. Avoid ammunition loops and ammo dump
boxes.
Never put a partially empty magazine or speedloader back into
a magazine carrier or speedloader pouch: only full magazines or
full speedloaders belong in a carrier. Partially empty magazines
or speed loaders should go into your pocket; empty magazines or
speedloaders should be allowed to fall where they're used during
an emergency.
Miscellaneous Safety Rules.
- At a range, obey the commands of the range officers, or any
individual calling `cease fire,' at once. Read, know and follow
any rules peculiar to a particular range which you may be using.
- Be careful of hot gases and metal shavings ejected at the
forcing cone of a revolver.
- Keep your fingers and other parts of your body away from the
muzzle, the rear of the slide, and the ejection area of a
semiautomatic pistol.
- In the event of a misfire, keep the firearm pointed in a
safe direction, remove your finger from the trigger, wait ten
seconds, then eject the cartridge and dispose of it properly.
- If you hear an unusual sound upon squeezing the trigger or
feel an unusual recoil, stop shooting and investigate. You may
have experienced a ``squib'' load (or under-powered cartridge),
and it may have caused a bore obstruction. Keep the firearm
pointed in a safe direction, remove your finger from the
trigger, wait ten seconds, then unload the firearm and safely
examine the barrel, checking carefully for any possible
obstructions before reloading and resuming shooting.
- Never ---
 | Climb a tree with a loaded firearm, |
 | Cross a fence with a loaded firearm, |
 | Jump a ditch or ford a stream with a loaded firearm,
|
 | Scale or descend a steep incline or hill with a loaded
firearm, |
 | Climb a tree, or climb into a hunting stand with a loaded
firearm, |
 | Prop or lean a loaded firearm against a tree or other
surface which may allow it to slide, or |
 | Transport a cased loaded firearm. |
Always carry your firearms in a way which will allow you to
control where the muzzle is pointing, should you stumble or
fall.
A ballistic vest may substantially improve your chances of
surviving an armed encounter on the street.
Always wear a thousand square inches or more of blaze orange
while in the field during hunting season.
Blackpowder (and replica blackpowder) firearms require
additional safety precautions not discussed here. Obtain
qualified instruction in the safe operation of blackpowder
firearms before attempting to load or fire any such firearm.
Circumstances may require additional safety rules unique to
a particular situation.
III. Safe Gun Storage.
When you are not using your firearm, you should insure that it
is store safely. Affirmative measures designed to prevent
unauthorized access to a defensive firearm by minors, or firearm
theft, include:
- Use of a simplex-type locking box for securing firearms
which need to be kept loaded yet available for ready-access
defensive use, and
- Use of trigger locks or padlocks to secure firearms which
don't need to be kept immediately available for defensive use.
Also note that:
- Gun security devices which rely solely on physical strength
to secure firearms from unauthorized use are generally
undesirable since ingenious children can potentially employ
leverage or tools to overcome those devices.
- "Hiding" a firearm won't secure it from discovery and
possible misuse by curious children or intruders.
- Metal gun cabinets or gun safes can be used to safeguard
firearms from unauthorized access or theft in many circumstances
and metal gun cabinets or gun safes are generally preferable to
open racks or glass-front cabinets.
- Firearms should be stored unloaded and separate from
ammunition when the firearm isn't needed for ready-access
defensive use.
- You may want to store critical components of a firearm (such
as the gun's bolt or slide) separately from the rest of the
firearm when the gun won't be used in the immediate future.
- Consider engraving your firearms with your social security
number, driver's license number, or concealed firearms license
number to deter theft and facilitate return of stolen firearms
which may happen to be recovered.
- Explore "gun-proofing" your child by proper training, and by
controlled and closely supervised access to firearms to reduce
your child's natural unsatisfied curiosity about firearms.
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