Dan McNally
New member
:agree:That is fine to start your practice. But don't forget, you actually have to shoot on the range with the loads you carry in combat. Otherwise, in a combat situation your "appreciation" of the gun's "attitude" won't be right, and it could cost you dearly.
:agree: I forgot to mention that I don't shoot factory loaded fodder in anything...
Cost didn't enter into my equation...pps:
A reloader since the late-seventies! :thumbup:
If you're shooting a "shorter" round out of a rev9olver...
(44 specail in a 44 mag, 38 spl in a 357 mag... etc...)
You have to be extra careful about cleaning that cylinder out... The residue left in the chamber from those rounds, can cause the longer rounds to "stick", and make ejection dificult! :shocked:
IfI go to the range, and then don't immediately clean my guns when I get home, Grandpa's and Dad's ghosts will haunt me all night, :yikes: and at 3 AM, I'll be sitting in the basement, cleaning them! nojoke