There is an old thread on this topic but I am going to reopen the issue under separate cover. In August of this year, two PA congressman introduced a new bill to allow the use of semi-auto rifles for big game, with a 3-shot magazine restriction.
Although I would never take advantage of this privilege, I am not opposed. This would be in line with most of the rest of the country. There are some fine semi-auto hunting rifles available such as the Browning BAR, Benelli R1, old Remingtons and Winchesters that are real sporting rifles.
We have named the the AR Platform rifles as "Modern Sporting Rifles" which I see as a stretch with 10, 20, and 30 round magazines sticking out of the bottom. Similarly, rifles such as the AK don't much look like they "belong" in the woods. What I consider key to this rule change is the magazine capacity limit. That would possibly inhibit the spray and pray mentality. Five shot magazines are commonly available for the M1A which make this a very good hunting rifle. That would be an acceptable limit for me. That capacity is less than many of the lever action deer rifles and the Remington 760/7600.
I started deer hunting in the early 1960's when the opening of deer season in PA was treated as a holiday. We all went to deer camp Friday after Thanksgiving to enjoy our time in the woods. At that time, many camps had rosters posted with the 25 member limit. Those large camps generally put on deer drives where they were shooting at running deer. When the sun came up on opening Monday, it literally sounded like a war zone. I used to count a string of shots because I could identify rifles by capacity limit and general report. There was a distinct difference to the sound of a 30-30 vs a larger cased round like the 30-06. Having been caught on a mountainside in the middle of one of these drives, I wished that the hunters were limited to single shots, as I hid behind the nearest large oak or hemlock tree. Cycling rate on lever guns and pumps can closely approximate semi-autos. Eventually, I quit hunting the first three days of PA Buck season to avoid the lunacy.
So, my experience is that the operating system of a big game rifle has little to do with hunter safety. Hunter ethics and values are more at play. But, limiting the magazine capacity forces some behavioral modification on the hunter. I have been and always will be a bolt gun kind of guy but I don't begrudge others for their preferences.
PA is suffering a decline in the hunter population for many reasons and the result is a deer population that is at problem levels. I'm in favor of change that brings more hunters into the field.
Although I would never take advantage of this privilege, I am not opposed. This would be in line with most of the rest of the country. There are some fine semi-auto hunting rifles available such as the Browning BAR, Benelli R1, old Remingtons and Winchesters that are real sporting rifles.
We have named the the AR Platform rifles as "Modern Sporting Rifles" which I see as a stretch with 10, 20, and 30 round magazines sticking out of the bottom. Similarly, rifles such as the AK don't much look like they "belong" in the woods. What I consider key to this rule change is the magazine capacity limit. That would possibly inhibit the spray and pray mentality. Five shot magazines are commonly available for the M1A which make this a very good hunting rifle. That would be an acceptable limit for me. That capacity is less than many of the lever action deer rifles and the Remington 760/7600.
I started deer hunting in the early 1960's when the opening of deer season in PA was treated as a holiday. We all went to deer camp Friday after Thanksgiving to enjoy our time in the woods. At that time, many camps had rosters posted with the 25 member limit. Those large camps generally put on deer drives where they were shooting at running deer. When the sun came up on opening Monday, it literally sounded like a war zone. I used to count a string of shots because I could identify rifles by capacity limit and general report. There was a distinct difference to the sound of a 30-30 vs a larger cased round like the 30-06. Having been caught on a mountainside in the middle of one of these drives, I wished that the hunters were limited to single shots, as I hid behind the nearest large oak or hemlock tree. Cycling rate on lever guns and pumps can closely approximate semi-autos. Eventually, I quit hunting the first three days of PA Buck season to avoid the lunacy.
So, my experience is that the operating system of a big game rifle has little to do with hunter safety. Hunter ethics and values are more at play. But, limiting the magazine capacity forces some behavioral modification on the hunter. I have been and always will be a bolt gun kind of guy but I don't begrudge others for their preferences.
PA is suffering a decline in the hunter population for many reasons and the result is a deer population that is at problem levels. I'm in favor of change that brings more hunters into the field.
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