The English don't believe in firearms. I can only conclude this is why don't know anything about safe handling. They are so worried about the sun actually coming out for once, warming their bottles and going over 12 lbs they forgot that you shouldn't put gauges in front of the barrel.
Anyway I'm trying to find that company that makes the cylinders gauge cap that has a mirror on it.
Can someone help me find that brand or product?
I'm trying to teach my kid the sport on my older pellet guns first. The lack of safety in the design of these older items is rediculous.
There is so much more we'd NEVER put up with on a real gun here in USA but it's totally fine on pellet guns that can do similar damage. Go feel how wiggly a Delta Wolf trigger is. Not safe at all.
It used to be very popular to teach squeezing vs pulling the trigger as "you should be surprised when the gun goes off". Yeah, no. I've never let that happen in my life. 2 or 3 times on air rifles though, through unacceptable levels of inconsistency.
You know how many times I have put my hand in front of a muzzle to thread on a surpressor on a real gun? Zero. How many center fire guns do I have that aren't at least designed to be drop safe? Zero. (Except shotguns, I suppose it is true those are not considered drop safe, either, but you'd hardly call that center fire like rifle or pistol.)
If you are aware of any other items that fix poor European safety designs I would love to know.
Anyway I'm trying to find that company that makes the cylinders gauge cap that has a mirror on it.
Can someone help me find that brand or product?
I'm trying to teach my kid the sport on my older pellet guns first. The lack of safety in the design of these older items is rediculous.
There is so much more we'd NEVER put up with on a real gun here in USA but it's totally fine on pellet guns that can do similar damage. Go feel how wiggly a Delta Wolf trigger is. Not safe at all.
It used to be very popular to teach squeezing vs pulling the trigger as "you should be surprised when the gun goes off". Yeah, no. I've never let that happen in my life. 2 or 3 times on air rifles though, through unacceptable levels of inconsistency.
You know how many times I have put my hand in front of a muzzle to thread on a surpressor on a real gun? Zero. How many center fire guns do I have that aren't at least designed to be drop safe? Zero. (Except shotguns, I suppose it is true those are not considered drop safe, either, but you'd hardly call that center fire like rifle or pistol.)
If you are aware of any other items that fix poor European safety designs I would love to know.