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Lockdown Activities inside 5K

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  • 27-01-2021 4:17pm
    #1
    Registered Users Posts: 757 ✭✭✭


    Just a thread on outdoor ideas / shooting things that can be done within 5K of home
    Personally im lucky enough to have a duck lake about 500m from my front foor so that kept me busy during this lockdown, Ive also been out lamping around the local fields without much luck :pac:
    This is a handy website to determine your borders ive also noticed theres one pier within my 5km so i might go and do a bit of fishing

    https://2kmfromhome.com/

    Im also thinking of doing some mink trapping as i have a decent sized river that is near home


Comments

  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 1,423 Mod ✭✭✭✭otmmyboy2


    Dry fire practice ;)

    Also pest control services for farmers ignores the 5km, since farming is deemed an essential activity and pest control supports that.

    Never forget, the end goal is zero firearms of any type.

    S.I. No. 187/1972 - Firearms (Temporary Custody) Order - Firearms seized

    S.I. No. 21/2008 - Firearms (Restricted Firearms and Ammunition) Order 2008 - Firearm types restricted

    Criminal Justice (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2009 - Firearms banned & grandfathered

    S.I. No. 420/2019 - Magazine ban, ammo storage & transport restricted

    Criminal Justice (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2023 - 2023 Firearm Ban (retroactive to 8 years prior)



  • Registered Users Posts: 247 ✭✭alan0387


    Great website, I've got private farmers fields, the local town and a motorway :o

    Dry fire will be mine, what do you use to protect or limit any firing pin damage? Dummy rounds?

    I might mount the scope on a tripod and use it out the window to learn how to estimate ranges using the reticle like some of the YouTube videos show? Use easy stuff like car wheels, reg plates, doorways, stuff that is standard in sizing.

    Plus my scope is an off brand cheap job at the moment and I've no idea if it's moa/mil or even accurate so I can back track by knowing an object's distance I can figure out what my reticle is set to and what magnification it needs.

    https://youtu.be/hVOXreCL73g
    https://youtu.be/l-WNofGasFo

    Nothing to lose at this stage :D


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,597 ✭✭✭Feisar


    I'll stand corrected however I don't think a modern firearm would be effected by dry firing.

    First they came for the socialists...



  • Registered Users Posts: 757 ✭✭✭Uinseann_16


    Feisar wrote: »
    I'll stand corrected however I don't think a modern firearm would be effected by dry firing.

    Rimfires will sustain a certain amount of peening from dry firing and i have broken a shotgun firing pin by dry firing
    I didnt think it was possible to break a pin by dry firing until the front part of the pin fell out on the ground :pac:
    Though most guns should be fine though tbh


  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 1,423 Mod ✭✭✭✭otmmyboy2


    alan0387 wrote: »
    Great website, I've got private farmers fields, the local town and a motorway :o

    No chance any of those farmers would need some pest control done eh? ;)
    alan0387 wrote: »
    Dry fire will be mine, what do you use to protect or limit any firing pin damage? Dummy rounds?

    For the 22s I use a fired casing until it is well and truly flattened and then swap it out for a fresh one.
    Not a live fresh one, a fresh fired one mind ;)

    For centrefire I don't really bother with any methods unless the firearm explicitly shouldn't be dry fired, as in noted in the manual etc.
    If so then I often take the pin out and do it that way, or alternatively use a fired case or a few with some appropriately carved heads so they will cycle through magazines.
    Another way would be to take a fired case, pop the primer off and replace it with some rubber glued in place in the primer pocket.

    For shotguns I use snap caps most often, and sometimes a laser snap cap where if you dry fire a laser will fire and you can spot where(approximately) you would have hit.

    Finally, and this is a bit OTT for most, for pistol I use a SIRT laser pistol on occasion.
    Helps with followup shots since it resets every trigger pull, only thing it is missing is recoil.

    That can be accomplished with airsoft, but that requires more cleanup afterwards, and can breed some bad habits if not done properly.

    Edit: tad longer than I thought it'd be, but I think that covered it pretty completely lol ;)

    Never forget, the end goal is zero firearms of any type.

    S.I. No. 187/1972 - Firearms (Temporary Custody) Order - Firearms seized

    S.I. No. 21/2008 - Firearms (Restricted Firearms and Ammunition) Order 2008 - Firearm types restricted

    Criminal Justice (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2009 - Firearms banned & grandfathered

    S.I. No. 420/2019 - Magazine ban, ammo storage & transport restricted

    Criminal Justice (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2023 - 2023 Firearm Ban (retroactive to 8 years prior)



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  • Registered Users Posts: 3,057 ✭✭✭civdef


    I make snap caps by replacing the primer with hot glue, seems to work well, and easy to repair when it gets worn eventually.


  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 1,423 Mod ✭✭✭✭otmmyboy2


    civdef wrote: »
    I make snap caps by replacing the primer with hot glue, seems to work well, and easy to repair when it gets worn eventually.

    Interesting, and you never found the glue residue getting into the firing pin channel?

    Never forget, the end goal is zero firearms of any type.

    S.I. No. 187/1972 - Firearms (Temporary Custody) Order - Firearms seized

    S.I. No. 21/2008 - Firearms (Restricted Firearms and Ammunition) Order 2008 - Firearm types restricted

    Criminal Justice (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2009 - Firearms banned & grandfathered

    S.I. No. 420/2019 - Magazine ban, ammo storage & transport restricted

    Criminal Justice (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2023 - 2023 Firearm Ban (retroactive to 8 years prior)



  • Registered Users Posts: 166 ✭✭GooseB


    For the 22s I use a fired casing until it is well and truly flattened and then swap it out for a fresh one.
    Not a live fresh one, a fresh fired one mind

    I was told at the club range one day to be sure and clean out a .22 casing before using it for dry fire practice. The used brass still has plenty of charred primer and/or propellant remnants in it that get flicked into the chamber/bore when the rim gets struck with the firing pin. He then took out his Leatherman and used a small screwdriver or such like to scrape out a spent casing and sure enough, black "soot" could be scraped out and cleaning it out beforehand saves this from entering your barrel.


  • Registered Users Posts: 538 ✭✭✭Hunter456


    snaring, bird watching, lucky myself most of the land i shoot is all within 2km.


  • Registered Users Posts: 247 ✭✭alan0387


    otmmyboy2 wrote: »
    No chance any of those farmers would need some pest control done eh? ;)



    For the 22s I use a fired casing until it is well and truly flattened and then swap it out for a fresh one.
    Not a live fresh one, a fresh fired one mind ;)

    I must introduce myself to some of those farmers.....had a handful of pheseants over my back fence into one of the farmers fields... :p

    Spent casing is a great idea, cheaper than buying a pack of dummy rounds from Brownells or YoDave!


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  • Registered Users Posts: 247 ✭✭alan0387


    GooseB wrote: »
    I was told at the club range one day to be sure and clean out a .22 casing before using it for dry fire practice. The used brass still has plenty of charred primer and/or propellant remnants in it that get flicked into the chamber/bore when the rim gets struck with the firing pin. He then took out his Leatherman and used a small screwdriver or such like to scrape out a spent casing and sure enough, black "soot" could be scraped out and cleaning it out beforehand saves this from entering your barrel.

    I'll keep that in mind, being a mechanic I have access to plenty of carb and brake cleaner, and a parts bath to soak manifolds and egr's that are caked in carbon....


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,057 ✭✭✭civdef


    otmmyboy2 wrote: »
    Interesting, and you never found the glue residue getting into the firing pin channel?

    I haven't noticed any, the hot glue primer seems to hold together pretty well, just eventually gets too dented and needs to be heated back up.


  • Registered Users Posts: 552 ✭✭✭JP22


    Feisar wrote: »
    I'll stand corrected however I don't think a modern firearm would be effected by dry firing.

    Some firearms can be safely dry-fired, Other cannot - please check the manual.

    It is not recommended to dry-fire a rimfire as the firing pin is off-set and can be easily damaged.


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