Fast14riot
Gold $$ Contributor
Why are all these range stories in CA?! Well, as a citizen if PRK, I have many of my own, lol! A year and a half ago I was at a local public range doing a little fire forming and load testing. A gentleman many years my senior (octogenarian at least) had a shiny new 700 in .223 dutifully strapped down to a lead sled like he was towing it cross country. I didn't pay much attention to him, I always spend the first 20-30 minutes at this range watching others targets to get an idea of potential issues and how they're shooting. Showing up with a fancy F/class gun, rest, chrony, data book, arbor press and tool kit usually will attract the unsure/new shooters to your bench.
This guy was shooting maybe 3/4-1 moa pretty reliably through at least 100 rounds. I mean he was out just to burn ammo. Then all of a sudden I hear a different BANG! RSO calls the line safe, he's hammering on his bolt to try and get it open. I offer a hand, he accepts, we get the bolt lifted, then work on extraction. Got it out and removed bolt with a very over pressure 5.56 case expanded to fill the entire bolt face and luckily not separate! Took 20 minutes with Leatherman pliers to get that case out of the bolt, but managed to save the extractor. I gave my inspection followed by my legal advice of "I'm not a gunsmith" and he shrugged, took his bolt, loaded more ammo and went about his way.
I asked him later, he said he throws all charges, couldn't remember what powder he used or what the charge was but knew it was a 62gr bullet!
Never mind the home built 2lb AR trigger i fixed that day (went full auto on a full mag) or the 25 year old "ghetto cowboy" shooting his new Marlin lever action from the hip standing up at 100 yards that day. Last time I ever went there on a Saturday.
This guy was shooting maybe 3/4-1 moa pretty reliably through at least 100 rounds. I mean he was out just to burn ammo. Then all of a sudden I hear a different BANG! RSO calls the line safe, he's hammering on his bolt to try and get it open. I offer a hand, he accepts, we get the bolt lifted, then work on extraction. Got it out and removed bolt with a very over pressure 5.56 case expanded to fill the entire bolt face and luckily not separate! Took 20 minutes with Leatherman pliers to get that case out of the bolt, but managed to save the extractor. I gave my inspection followed by my legal advice of "I'm not a gunsmith" and he shrugged, took his bolt, loaded more ammo and went about his way.
I asked him later, he said he throws all charges, couldn't remember what powder he used or what the charge was but knew it was a 62gr bullet!
Never mind the home built 2lb AR trigger i fixed that day (went full auto on a full mag) or the 25 year old "ghetto cowboy" shooting his new Marlin lever action from the hip standing up at 100 yards that day. Last time I ever went there on a Saturday.