14 minutes in and I'm watching deer learn about home defence with bolt-action's. Next hunting season if the deer start shooting back we know who to blame!
My wife's great aunt once successfully defended herself against would be attackers at her home in East Texas with a single shot bolt action .22 rifle. It was all she had, but she knew how to use it, and it saved her life.
The Good Lord saved her life but she used her God given skills in the appropriate manner. Kudos! Personally, even IF all I had was a bolt gun, in my darkened home, I’d rather use one of my knives than a bolt gun unless it was one of the WW1 military guns and had an attached bayonet. I’d rather use that than the firearm itself.
I'm glad you shared...that's a good story..good for her.. hope it didn't spoiled her too much .. depending on the situation that can still stay with ya..even if knobody got hurt..thanx again
RIP Paul. This is the sort of firearm content that I enjoy and will miss: actual practical knowledge and wisdom and not some guy in his midlife crisis trying to sell you a bunch of tactifool gear while serving up some stupid power fantasy about being in the apocalypse getting ambushed by 12 superpowered ninjas who can only be stopped by 100 rounds in 2 seconds from an AR decked in 5 different ACOGs and flashlights. A gun is a gun and people have to be flexible and Paul understood that better than anyone.
Paul really felt like your decent, everyday American. Nothing fancy or "jacked up miltary larp" like you mentioned. Nope. Just a great down-to-earth neighbor and educator in all things firearms.
The bare minimum standard for home defense would be: 1. A gapless perimiter of claymore and (not or - and) anti-tank mines 2. At least one radar-guided CIWS on the roof - preferably one autocannon and one missile-based system 3. A battery of 17th-19th century smoothbore cannon loaded with canister shot, covering all angles of your property from a central position (riot control) 4. Stainless steel fantasy sword bought for 15 bucks at a faire
Had someone break into my house and my Mosin M44 got them to leave. It was the only gun I owned at the time. I had sold the rest during hard times. The only reason I had it was because It wasn't worth much. I'm extremely thankful I had it.
Yea bro its a good idea to keep something for home protection. I got into some financial trouble a couple years ago and sold everything but somehow i managed to hang onto my glock19 because i live in a bad neighborhood.
one of the things i appreciate about professor harrell which is somewhat a trademark of the channel now is how he isn't instantly dismissive of old or "outdated" guns for use in self defense and he always has valuable experience to offer. i get where he's coming from, he's saying if you only have access to these tools, you might as well be proficient and learn how to be as effective as possible with it. but i almost wish he'd for once come out and just say "for pete's sakes, just buy an m&p 2.0, your [insert boomer device here] has way too many disadvantages in the modern environment". what's next? your black powder rifle for home defense, your musket for home defense? there needs to be a line drawn where we stop entertaining these weirdo oddball people's illusions and self delusions. your bolt action rifle is almost worthless in a cqb fight with multiple opponents using glocks and the like. it's only useful as a deterrent against unarmed criminals
Back when my old Dad was farming sheep in the middle of nowhere, a bolt action was what he had (an old Lee Enfield). He kept us and the dogs fed with it, kept feral animals in check, and on a couple of occasions, indeed used it to defend the property (the bad guys took off). We had no spare money at all but did have enough. Best time of our lives, looking back.
Those old Enfields were great! I used to (back about 1992-3) buy them from Roses Dept store for $49.99! (Mosin Nagants were $39.99) About once a month, they'd run a coupon for $10 off of $50, so I'd buy the L-E with a box of ammo ($4.99) totalling $54.98, less the $10! They paid me $5 to take the ammo! Oh, the good old days...
@@arthurchadwell9267 Back in the 90’s you could buy a gun for less than $100, nowadays you can’t… 😥 Sucks for me, I am a broke college kid so my max firearm budget is 100$… So no firearm for me...
@@crazysilly2914 -- yes, most of the dept. stores had ffls for long arms back then( circa early 1990s)... Roses, Woolworths ($200 M1 carbines and Hakim autoloaders), Boscovs, Sears, Kmart... probably more. They began to give it up under Clinton. Woolworth's when they went out of biz in 1997, Kmart about '99, etc. Real shame, but they all got scared of anti-gun activists, politicians and, of course, lawsuits.
So I was recently a "witness" to a home defense shooting. The kid had utilized a bolt-action .22 rifle and shot an intruder in the neck, killing him. I say "witness" because all myself and a few friends saw was the kid running out of the house flailing his arms holding a rifle and calling for help. Still, this was quite insane as it is not the cliché home defense story everyone hypothesizes or talks about.
Paul Harrell "The Joy of Firearms". He is definitely the Bob Ross of Firearms and that makes his videos soothing and a joy to watch! Keep up the awesome work Paul!
I don't know he kind of reminds Wilson from Home Improvement. He's just that old chill dude who's always up to something and has good advice to go along with it. Even some of the deer behind him when he's firing off the Mosin are like "wait I want to hear what he has to say".
This channel is indeed a treasure of gun related information. For some reason, though, I get a 1980ies retro feeling when watching Mr. Harrell's videos. Maybe it's the camera he is using, or his clothing, or both.
When I was a broke college student I actually had a Mosin Nagant as my home defense gun because it was the only gun I could afford at the time. Thankfully I never had to use it for that purpose.
Garbage rod for the strobe light psycho, all your have to do is cycle that horrid bolt and the intruder will just leave from the terrible gravely noise
I was given a bolt action rifle from my father years ago. While he was in the Korean war, he picked up 7.7mm Arisaka for $15.00. Not the most high quality but it worked great with Norma soft nose 180 grain boat tail bullets. Finally gave it to my youngest son several years ago. It is still working just fine.
My grandfather brought home an Arisaka chambered in 30-06 that was used by the South Korean gendarmerie, it's definitely one of my favorite family relics and she still gets plenty of time plinking, sadly he tore down and threw away his smuggled m1 carbines after the FOPA was passed in the 80's so I never got to experience those
I own a very early war 7.7x58 T99 Arisaka, I load my own ammo for it using .303 speer-hotcor spitzer projectile and cast round nose 180 grain (a little extreme). This rifle at 100 yards with only iron sights is very accurate; I load the rounds pretty hot so it kicks pretty good but this is one of the best rifles you can fire. Even the late war ones are not bad, you just have to be careful and inspect them!
Then you do your best to have the army you want. You get the army you want. The solution to recruits with a lesser physical fitness is not to lower the fitness standard because "you fight with what you have, not what you want" because that will just decrease combat efficiency.
@@Briselance That's not even what the phrase is about. When you're in an immediate pinch, you make do with what you have. If you can't get your hands on a better weapon in that instance, you can't and don't try to get a better weapon. You use what you have nearby or on hand.
14:15 nobodys mentioning how chill the deer in the background are, they want to learn this stuff too! Everyone and everything loves your presentations, Paul- keep up the great work!
It's almost like Paul makes videos with consideration for international viewers. Thanks Paul, you're a legend, in Australia here it's really easy for us to purchase bolt, pump and lever rifles but semi auto requires a commercial licence.
@@mattbrown5511 Thats a total awesome skill! Props to you folks who can pull that off👍👍👍 I'de practice that, but the ranges around my part of Canada have been closed for the past couple of years due to... You guessed it... COVID-19!!!!😡
I remember going shooting back in the 70's with a couple of my great-uncles, both of whom were WW II vets, and being amazed with the rate of fire they could achieve with an old surplus Mk IV SMLE.
My first home defense gun was an old 30-30 lever action. It worked well to deter would be thieves who liked to case my rental at the time. It was an upgrade when I switched to a 12ga pump shotgun sometime later on. Nowadays I’ve got AR’s, AK’s, shotguns, pistols, etc. The point is, use what you have and train with what you’ve got.
@Raylan Givens I'd be tempted to agree but as with all things it depends on a lot of circumstances. I'd much prefer to have a 7mm rem mag than a .30-30 for shear firepower alone. But if followup shots and reloading are a concern than the nod goes to the lever action. I was always taught the adage of "beware the man with only 1 rifle, because he probably knows very well how to utilize it" I'm more afraid of old man Jenkins with his war trophy Garand than some mall ninja with a tactical carbine. That goes twice as much if it's in the country rather than in an urban environment.
@@tricksterjoy9740 I'm really fast with my bolt action 22-250. At least as fast as Paul was with his lever action. That being said, still prefer my 12ga semi-auto for home defense and 10 round mags.
Consider this. Your 30-30 lever action rounds had "almost double" the length and mass of an 7.5 FK BRNO handgun round, and both a 30-30 lever action and a 7.5 FK BRNO fire rounds at 2,000+ feet-per-second. So, your 30-30 round could easily do double the amount of damage (per shot), hitting the same target, as a 7.5 FK BRNO.
I love that at around 14 minutes, he is just casually surrounded by deer while holding an M-44 Mosin and giving a breakdown of top off loading. The best.
@@edwardphillips8460 Deer really do not move much when a gun goes off. My cabin in Michigan, we are doing mag dumps and the deer in the field by our back stop will just watch us and eat. So funny
@@KarlGustov76 Folks/deer must be friendlier down there. Most deer around here understand if they hang around when the shooting starts they’ll be on the menu!
@@edwardphillips8460 I suppose the ones that heard a gun go off and still lived passed down a lack of fear in some areas Thank the village idiot 10 generations of deer ago for giving some of us an easy time
Thanks for this. I lived through just such a scenario when mass rioting and looting broke out overnight in my home province of KZN in South Africa in July last year. Police disappeared for a week and we had to barricade and secure our neighbourhoods. For most licensed firearm owners we only had our hunting bolt action rifles and shotguns available.
@@Freeontheland2030 ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-qPleungQrW0.html These guys are from a neighbourhood watch from a suburb called Amanzimtoti
@@Dogirot Even without the corrupt governments, a lot of Africa isn’t good for humans to live in because of how good the conditions are for other life forms like bugs and viruses they carry. The animals you can shoot might look more deadly but the fact you can shoot them really helps.
I feel that these types of demonstrations involving nonstandard firearms for self-defense are very helpful especially to those folks that are in those situations. For many years my only firearm was a .303 British rifle, you use what you have. I must say that the one round of .338 Win Mag on the meat target was quite impressive.
@@carminemurray6624 I am a broke college kid, I can only spend 100$ or less on a firearm, so far I haven’t found any in that price range… Somebody else commented that you could buy a lee-enfield for $50 in ’93, but nowadays there are essentially no guns in that range. Yes, I do have a summer job, but all that money is going to my education. And once I graduate and get a full-time job, I can buy plenty of firearms, but that is a year away, so in the meantime I am just wishing I could have ANY firearm, even if it single shot… And I don’t know anybody to do a trade with, and I am not on the best terms with my father, so I’m not gonna ask to inherit any of his guns...
@@carminemurray6624 Still too much money for me to afford. Some company should make a semi-auto sub-gun in the same vein as a Luty (but that would work way better lol), that would be made out of commonly available hardware store parts and just a little very basic metal working on a lathing machine for like 90$. because of all the gun regulation, gun prices are through the roof, and while it may not seem like a ton to a middle-class person with a job, for working class people or broke college kids (like me lol), they are a huge expense. If I was living in ’93 though I could have bought TWO bolt-action mosins for 100$… Man have times changed...
When I heard "Why would someone use a bolt action rifle for home defense?" the first thing I thought "Well obviously it's because it's the only firearm they have." I'm feeling smug and satisfied with myself. I will now take my victory lap.
I remember seeing, years ago, where an old woman used an .303 british Lee-Enfield to stop a polar bear that was trying to break into her house. One shot stopped it. Out here where I live, feral hogs are sometimes a problem. 9mm won't cut it. On the really big ones, you need to have a rifle. And they will come up to your house.
@@johngifford7725 With the small ones a 9mm might stop them. With the big ones go right ahead and do a mag dump. Maybe you'll finish pulling the trigger on the last round before they kill you.
The example of trading an "old junk car" for a bolt action rifle cracked me up. I once traded an old .22 revolver and a VCR for a 1975 Ford LTD, needed wheels to get back to the base more than I needed a .22 revolver.
When I scrapped my old rusty minivan, I took the cash I got from it, went to my local gun store a few days later, and picked myself up a used CZ 75 clone with the money I got from the van. It's old and well-worn, but still shoots straight and runs like a dream.
@@bluefalconssuck5881 hey it could just be an unfortunate set of circumstances, maybe the dude with the rifle is going to shoot your knee caps out and then let you bleed to death and the chainsaw guy could make a real effort to kill you as fast as possible, I mean I don't think its possible to cleanly take someone's head off with a chainsaw but you could probably do it within 5 seconds so only 2-3 seconds of pain.
As always, clear, concise, and informative with no overtones of "preachy". Just logical facts, informed opinions, and practical field tests. - that's why I love this guy
You always do such a thorough analysis, and I love the non-judgmental attitude you have towards things like, "It might be the only gun they have access to."
I love the full explanation, non-judgmental dressing-down of the judgmental people. We really need more of that civility modeled, but it's hard to be consistent.
I agree with a lot of the points Paul makes. Especially if you've trained a great deal on one, I would rather have a rifle I know inside and out and can reload in the dark than something I am unfamiliar with, and honestly, it's better than a pointy stick, which is still better than nothing. "A hi-point on the nightstand is better than a 1911 on layaway"
Pointy stick was the king of the battlefield until we worked out how to send rocks really fast and far, and even then the pointy stick of the bayonet lives on.
Paul is a natural instructor, I have been working as a technical instructor for almost 20 years, trained by some big names in the training industry, and I am here learning how to demonstrate and keep the audience engaged.
I'm sitting here thinking about all the walking, planning, building of meat targets, editing, and talking you had to do to put this video together. Thank you for all the work that went into it. It certainly isn't unappreciated
Thanks, Paul. I've seen hundreds of GSW's, as I work as an X-ray and CT tech at a major trauma center ER. The difference between what most handgun calibers will do to a human body, and what about any modern hunting rifle will do to a human body, is orders of magnitude worse. Same for short range shotgun injuries, like out to 7 yards. A 9mm will break your humerus. A 30-06 will leave your arm dangling by a little skin. A handgun will blow a hole in your liver big as a nickle, a 12 ga (at close range) will leave a 8" deep hole you can drop a golf ball into, with all the shot at the bottom. A .270 with a hunting bullet will blow up your liver into lumpy hamburger. .357 to the knee, you get a full knee reconstruction. A rifle round to the knee you get a long-stem knee replacement after plating the femoral shaft, if you don't get an amputation. I've seen a patient be paralyzed from the waist down just by the hydrostatic shock of a HP rifle round passing close to his spine without touching either spinal cord or vertebrae. FMJ ammo really does act different, though. Also, like it or not, people just don't miss very often with long guns, and people miss a LOT with handguns, some better at it than others, of course.
A former X-ray tech myself, I get a laugh out of those who say there's very little difference between 9mm, 357 mag, 45, 44mag, etc. For those with experience, it truly is evident. We used to hang GSW films in our ER and place bets on what caliber was used.
One other consideration when choosing a bolt action rifle for home defense, is to select one that has a bayonet lug to attach the implement of last resort. My SMLE has a 19” bayonet, which is quite an attention getter and works without ammo.
I agree. That would be the primary factor for me if I were to chose a bolt action for home defense. Other than "use what you have on hand," of course. I wonder how using the bayonet would change things in jurisdictions where using a firearm in home defense results in murder charges.
@@atomicfro Honestly? If you had it mounted and didn't do so just prior to engaging (and being prepared doesn't count as premeditation already, in which case a loaded gun would get you in trouble as well) it at least demonstrates that the invader was very close to you, and more plausibly a threat to life and limb.
Exactly!!! I have a Persian Mauser with it's original bayonet. in my living room, that rifle with it's 7.92x57mm round and that bayonet is pretty formidable. Also, I tried a bayonet on a rifle against body armor and it can actually penetrate a lot of types of body armor. Mauser military rifles can all use stripper clips and are very fast to reload. In fact most all old military bolt actions can use stripper clips.
I had this exact self defense scenario happen with one of the examples cited in this video. Way back when I was living with my dad, he was having fun drinking with a buddy of his when said friend got belligerent in a way that tells you "he's not afraid to throw punches and he's gonna be hard to talk down and he's 300lbs 6ft" so I had my Mosin Nagant rifle, in the ballpark of 4-5ft, loaded it with two 7.62x54R cartridges, and approached from the hallway, half hidden to conceal the rifle out of sight in the crook of my arm, and firmly told him, "I think you should leave." He was about five feet away from me and I had about 10 feet of hallway to back up into, just enough to work the action and fire the second round if the first failed. By a stroke of fortune, he left when I spoke up. Maybe he saw the rifle, maybe he heard me. It was over, and no shots were fired. And has Paul described, it's what I had. Glad the talking worked first.
I was shocked when I saw those deer just stay there after Paul started shooting. I have personally never seen anything like it. Those deer seem to know their rights. I bet Paul trained them! He is a good instructor.
@JoozdontliketheTruth My family's mountain graze land is strictly off limits for any kind of hunting. The deer and elk there act the same way. They really do not care about what humans are doing unless you try to approach them.
I appreciate that Paul makes videos for everybody. Years ago I searched the topic of this video and there were basically no good resources available. Thanks for contributing good information to the community.
Your story at 25:09 reminded me of a hunting story of mine. I was on the rifle team in my highschool. We shot 20 lb guns chambered in 22 lr. It was a real crunchy winter day (top layer was thin ice and below it was hard snow) of deer season and I was walking into the woods to my favorite spot. I was walking in a little later than I should've and it was daylight. When I got close to the spot, I heard some deer running away through the brush so I positioned myself in a way that if I could see where they were going I might be able to get a shot. Well after a few seconds I heard some crunch about 40 yards beside me on my right side. When I looked over there was a small (very small) 8 point buck walking my way. The only thing I could do without moving my feet (didn't want the deer to hear me crunching) was take a rifle team pose just like the one Paul did. But since I was used to shooting 22lr, My shoulder was back farther than it should've been. When I pulled the trigger on the deer, the recoil of the 30-06 jerked the scope right into my forehead. I got the deer but I had a half moon shaped lump between my eyes for a week and a half. REMEMBER: you'll perform the way you practice!!
Years ago I had a bolt action British Enfield 303 rifle as my weapon of choice for Civil unrest and home defense ,it had a really slick action and a 10 round magazine, I could rack rounds in the chamber quite fast and stay on target , it wasn't good as a AR-15 or other semi auto rifles in terms of firepower but in capable hands still a effective weapon
@@Solomons_Descent I was assuming the topic of the video was if a person wanted or had to use a bolt action rifle as their primary home defense or SHTF weapon, I would opt for the British Enfield for its smooth fast action and 10 round capacity which is better than anything else out there that have only a 5 round capacity, but as a weapon of war for civil unrest where a lot of other people have semi auto handguns and rifles like AK47s and AR15, a bolt action rifle probably would not be the best choice
Excellent review of this topic. There are so many scenarios and reasons one may find themselves needing to employ the bolt action rifle for their defense rifle. It would not be anywhere near my first choice but if it were the only choice I had give me the bolt action rifle. I was hoping there would be a meat target demonstration and was not disappointed!
Yeah that meat target demonstration was pretty impressive. However, it would have been better to also to see it done with a more common .308, 30-06. .270, or 6.5 Creedmoore bolt-action rifle.
I've always been interested in what you do with the meat targets after they've been shot at. I'm surprised this never made it into a Q&A special. Maybe at 800k subscribers? Thanks.
@@kobudo Would you trow out all the hunting meat? Unless you are using a bow, they should all have been hit with lead... I guess you just take the lead out!
I grew up with a .303 Enfield no4 mk1 in the family, it was the only gun in our home growing up, my mom didn't like guns all that much, no gun toys etc, but it was her dads gun, and the only one recovered after his death and his guns were stolen, it had no mag, and more than once she used it to fend off bears and trespassers, so when i was 18 i took it over, cleaned it, read up on it, pre youtube, got proficient with it, got it a mag and it again was ready for action, it now rests on its laurels proudly atop my gun rack, coming down only for deer season, as the mag fed 12 pump and g30, have taken the primary defense roles in the home, but its still ready incase of burglars or the old enemies return.
This was an absolutely perfect video, Paul! I'd love to hear your thoughts on scout rifles and more modern bolt-actions like the Sig Cross or The Fix by Q.
One of the things I like about Mr Harrell, is that he recognizes that different people have different situations. When we first got married 50 years ago we had 3 firearms. My father's single shot bolt action Winchester 22LR, my grandfather's 5 shot Winchester bolt action 22LR and my wife's modified Webley Mk VI that we loaded with 45AR. So my choices were a bolt action 22LR or an obsolete 45 revolver. I never felt disadvantaged with that old Webley beside the bed. Andthe night our basset hound woke me up because some one was trying to break into our home through the back door, that individual felt very disadvantaged when I stuck the obsolete 45 revolver in his face. Fortunately he remembered an important appointment somewhere else and took off running with our basset hound right behind him. He cleared the 4 foot fence at the alley behind our house and as far as I know, 50 years latter he's still running. After our children moved out and started their own families I started collecting guns that I had wanted but couldn't justify spending money on that could be better spent on our kids. Today I have my choice of any number of guns from my collection including both Winchester models 88 & 100 in 308 and dozens of bolt action rifles from 22-250 to 30-06 and most calibers in between. Including two bolt actions that can be TOPPED OFF. Both are Krag Jorgensen's one in 30-40 US and one in 6.5x55. But my primary home defense arms are a S&W 442 a Maverick 88 and for my wife an AR 15 as she is a veteran of the WACs and the US ARMY Reserve where she was trained on the M16. These are my choices based on our experiences and training and what firearms are available to us. I have a friend also retired from the US ARMY but not a gun person or a hunter, his only gun is a HiPoint 45ACP. He is now at a point in his life where he can afford what I my opinion would be a better option (just about any gun made in the last few years) but he says everytime he takes it to the range it goes bang when he pulls the trigger and a hole appears in the target where he was aiming. When he asks me what a newer prettier gun could do that would be better or more effective, what can I say it works for him, he at least has something better than a golf club to defend himself and his wife. The guns we currently keep for home defense have replaced others that served us over the years some of them, others might believe would be better choices such as the 9mm HiPoint carbine or the 45ACP Marlin Camp Carbine or the 2 M1 Carbines or one of my S&W Model 29s. I can't deny that any of them would and have served at various times, but we are comfortable with our current choices. Someone once said something to the effect that "the best gun to defend yourself with, is the one in your hand when the need arises".
Thank you for sharing your story. I would tell a person more new to firearms than me to try out a Hi-Point carbine, if that's all they could afford. Then save their nickels to help with trading in that Hi-Point carbine for a Ruger AR or PCC (or not. Firearms, ammunition, minimum amount of accessories add up quick)
@@DomoArigatoRobot0 I recently acquired an Enfield #4. My second one. Went to Bass Pro in search of .303. Great news! They're loaded down with 5.56 and 9mm. Also, .350 Legend, 300 blackout, .450 whatsit. Oh yeah, plenty of .308. The real find? 7×57 Mauser. This was in Pearl,Ms. I know about a pawn shop Chilean Mauser in Natchez for...200$. The #4 is a Long Branch star. Sporterized( butchered) and drilled and tapped for a side mount. Has the flip up battle sights. Another sight in Pearl has about 300 rounds of 7mm Mauser, but no 303. What to do, oh Mercy, what shall I do?
I had nearly the same thing happen in my home once, except I had a 30-06 bolt action, and I was running down the stairs I put around in the chamber and I think that guy became an Olympic sprinter is fast as he was running from the house, I was yelling at my wife to call the police and tell him I killed this mother f continued. He was gone
It amazes me how many people want to disagree with you when it's obvious that you know quite a lot about firearms. Love the Pop Tart thing at the beginning as well.
I was hoping he would explain it. It is an aluminized paper, a sugar glaze layer followed by a cookie layer, jelly representing internal organs followed by another cookie layer glazed sugar, and paper. Their are 20 layers of high tech blankets as a back stop.
The past 9 mos or so has seen a big influx of fake experts, trash talking "collectors" who never train, safe queens who yammer about some gun or ammo NOT under discussion in Paul's video, or just simple dumb juvenilia probably trying to disrupt the comments section -- for reasons known only to the liar, the fraud, the cretin, the immature, or the simply stupid & bored. It used to be these comments sections after Paul's videos were interesting. Now they're like a gossip talk show, or a tabloid rag.
On the only gun available, during the 91 LA riots my far left brother in law, who lived in Echo Park in a million dollar plus house drove to the high desert to borrow a 20 gauge single shot Beretta shotgun from me, to protect his wife, son and house. California wouldn't let him buy a gun for any price , fifteen day waiting period. After the riots he bought a cheap 9mm automatic... somehow all his anti-gun rhetoric disappeared when they were rioting on his street.
He wasn't that "far left" he was center "democrat" which to every other country in Europe is still Right leaning. Actual far left leaning people love guns for defense purposes.
@Brandon S. It’s interesting though that all “the real times” is been tired has lead to confiscation of arms and usually far worse. I know what you mean, the rhetoric says to arm the proletariat, but let’s be real; It’s guns for me, not for thee.
Its good to see those deer in the back at the 14 min mark show up to get a better understanding on the topic of bolt actions for home defense. Knowledge is power.
"Excellent, now we know how effective bolt action rifles are to defend our homes! Now if only we could figure out how to get thumbs so we can use the damn things..." ~Deer Weapons R&D Department
Love this sort of content! Paul has an amazing way of taking a topic and breaking it down so that beginners can understand it as well as provide great information for seasoned shooters!
EXACTLY. This guy’s content is only for the total novice. He’s a tedious speaker and slightly condescending. I speak as a retired teacher of AP American Government and an NRA Instructor for 35 years and a former infantry captain. This guy’s a poser. Look at the “tie down” on his right leg for a sidearm that’s not requiring such a device because it’s already sitting high enough on the hip. Just for show.
@@ExSoldier762 actually he covered that holster before, he's wearing it as it was instructed to be used since he's doing a long term review. He isn't a poser, his credentials have been presented and even verified by some viewers. All I hear is some random guy on the internet making claims calling out other people. And just because you were a teacher doesn't mean you were any good at it, or others can't be as well. Your opinions are your own, but throwing accusations and insults anonymously on the internet belies your petty and insignificant nature. Given the age you must be to have so many years of experience it is truly sad to see how immature you behave. I feel sorry for the poor men who served under you and the children who had the misfortune to be assigned to you. The school system truly has failed.
There was a period of a few years in my life when a Yugoslavian M24 Mauser was my home defense weapon. Because that's all I had. I knew what those 190 gr. Sierras would do to meat, too. Huge bonus points for using the .338 on the meat target. I was really hoping that's what you would use.
i could not agree more when i got a question about a firearm and he has a video on it he dont just answer the question he goes into why he says what he says ..such a good teacher i adore his content
Who says he's "underrated", that is such a LAME comment. UNDERRATED, hmmm... it reminds me of the guy at the bar just talking to himself, actually Arguing with himself, and everyone else just ignores him... all night long.
I had an attempted break-in many years ago and met the miscreant at the door with a single shot H&R 12 gauge shotgun...all I had. "Moved up" to a cheap single action .22 WMR revolver from the local pawn shop. I'm doing better now and have more options, but I understand the concept of bringing what you have.
Long ago the missus had a problem, and couldn't find her .38...she was throwing .22 all over the place trying to load an old Ithaca lever action...the bad guy eventually went on, but the episode has stuck in her mind...now she keeps several revolvers handy...I'm keeping a lazy eye out for a couple of single shot or double barrels, just because...
Those deers really know their right to not be shot outside of season. Happens with gamebirds too. Outside of season those are far more tame and let you to come closer when moving in forest. But after those couple shots in that first day good luck to get closer than 200 meters if those spot you first.
Paul, in you I've found the way to ignore the "experts" who told me my old double-action single action was too difficult for a beginner to learn on. Now I shoot more naturally and confidently than many of the instructors I come across. Then they told me my Rock Island snub nose 38 Special wasn't good enough to compete in Club pistol matches. It's true I couldn't hit the silhouette at 50 yards, but I didn't take last place and I could reload faster than some of the semi-auto shooters, and now I'm working on my 50-yard accuracy. I have some other fun pistols now too, but I'm not limited to only knowing how to shoot a Glock. Thank you and I'm looking forward to watching this new video
I find that simplicity is best for home defense. I think I would grab a double barrel coachgun before my SPAS 12, I can never remember which button does what:)
Other observation from this video with the bolt action being slower. Once a defense shooting occurs you maybe will have to address a jury. Defense will say slower so better control. Prosecution, omg you used a gun designed specifically for hunting, so you must have intended to hunt your poor victim. You know how it would go down In court. Spin it everywhich way but right.
@@seanoneil277 same reason you don't want hair trigger, or full auto. Taking your time and only shooting when absolutely necessary, alot harder for prosecution to show indiscriminate loss of life. Prosecution is always gonna try to bring up every negative for whatever weapon is used. Remember kyle and the hollow point vs full Metal jacket bullets brought up by prosecution?
Why do legends die in order to be recognized ( even more) GOD bless this man, his content and family that will live on forever. Funny dude 0:11 love it❤ thank you
There was a time when all I had, gun wise, was a .22LR bolt action rifle with 2 10 round box mags. I kept it at my bedside for home defense because it sure beat out anything else I owned. Eventually, yes, I did upgrade to something better, but I still have that .22, and if I had needed it, I would have used it back then. God be praised, I never did. When it's all you got, any gun is better than no gun.
22 is a very underrated calibre anyways, rimfire variants have virtually no recoil and are really quiet when silenced. my great grandfather had a really nice geko .22 rimfire, bolt action rifle, was one of the best, most controllable guns I ever shot
8:00--I've seen Paul do some pretty good shooting, but this is the hardest I've seen. Try shooting a sawed-off equivalent from the hip and I almost guarantee you shoot high. He busted all the soda bottles. This is deceptively difficult to do with that short shotgun.
He has a video where he is shooting from “some sort of assault position” after hitting all the targets he states he has A LOT of practice shooting like that.
A good friend of mine inherited a 9mm Makarov pistol when he graduated high school, and for the first 2 or 3 years of young adulthood, that is what he carried every day and trained with. It was probably the best cared for Makarov in history. He finally traded it to someone for a Taurus PT24/7 and some cash, and in another few years traded that up for a Glock. It was several years before I could even think about buying a firearm. I simply did not have hundreds of dollars to spare to purchase a gun and ammo after expenses. I didn't even have more than a handful of dollars every month that could even be saved toward such a thing. I can only imagine how much tougher it is going to be for young people today, since entry level wages don't go as far as they did 20 years ago. Moral of the story is, it is not uncommon for all manner of odd firearms to be pressed into service due to personal finances, and it is nice that there is someone who puts some critical thought toward those situations.
@@lardomcfarty9866 Funny you should mention that, because I specifically remember him having a mind blown moment when firing and using the Glock for the first time compared to the Taurus. You may have a point about the Makarov, but one of his problems was getting ammo for it locally. This was early 2000s so buying online wasn't really common yet.
@@doc_sav yeah. 9mm makarov is hard to come by these days, and it won't wow anyone ballistically. But they are reliable and will get the job done, unlike a taurus.
A Makarov is far different from a bolt action rifle. The Makarov is actually an adequate weapon for home and general self defense. I enjoyed mine along w several other weapons around that frame, caliber, capacity, and feel. It's nice to have extra rounds on tap but 7 or 8 rounds along q a spare mag will get u outta 99 percent of situations
A lot of valid points. While I considered that "the best gun is the one you have" right at the beginning of the presentation, I failed to consider that the home invader may be an apex predator and more effectively engaged with a more substantial round. As a side note, Mr. Harrell, have you ever done any rapid trigger work with bolts actions similar to what the Tommys of WWI and WWII did with their Lee Enfields ala the "Mad Minute"? I think people would like to see you do some of that. -S.
@Paul Martin >Hear a shuffling sound in the garage >Jump out of bed in nothing but my skivvies >Grab a .300 WM and a couple spare rounds which are lodged firmly between my asscheeks >See two hooded urban miscreants absconding with a 72” plasma screen TV into a rented uhaul >Take aim, then blow a golf ball sized hole through the first one >He’s dead on the spot >The second pulls out his forty-five “problem solver” out of his baggy sweatpants >Rack the bolt back >Notice the magazine is empty >Luckily for me, he fumbles the safety, looking straight down the barrel to check if it’s loaded >Reach into my arsecheeks and shove a second round into the chamber >Bits of lung, heart, and other viscera paint the inside of the truck >Squat over him as he collapses onto the floor and goes into hypovolemic shock >”Sir, your vibes are atrocious.” >Police never arrive because they were defunded >Such is life in downtown Seattle
This kind of thing is useful because home defense isn't always about having something purposefully bought and setup in place for the scenario of home defense. Sometimes it's about you're in a situation and you only have X or Y and whether it's optimal or not you have to make the best of it and make it work as efficiently as possible. A lot of people only own long, heavy, non-close quarters friendly rifles. You can't just give up and say "yeah would be good if I had a shotgun or handgun right about now" if a bolt-action rifle is what they've got available then that's what they need to work with.
Paul, I appeciate your perspective on this. I have to disagree, however. For home defense a paltry 338 simply won't do the job. Whenever some large predator like a grouse were to invade my home, I'd rather have the more reasonable 50BMG on full auto. At shorter distances I prefer the 700 Nitro Express. It might not carry all the way across the living room, but it sure packs a punch.
@@jamesjanssen8252 The RPG-7 certainly is a good option. I do have some concerns about ammo availability and cost. 700 NE factory rounds, on the other hand, can be had starting at just $100 a piece! So it can double as a fun, inexpensive plinking load.😀
There are reasons why many millions of bolt-action firearms were produced. I would be most satisfied to have the single choice of military bolt action. Totally get how well you relate to a large spectrum that make up your audience. We used to say in Alabama, "Beware of the man with one gun. He may how to use it."
Sounds like the same mentality as the Bruce Lee quote "I do not fear the man who has practiced a thousand kicks once. I fear the man who has practiced one kick a thousand times".
Just to illustrate the first point of why someone might only have a bolt-action for home defense, I figure I might explain why this is probably the case for most Estonian firearms owners. While Estonia is the second least restrictive EU member in terms of firearms laws (the undisputed #1 being Czechia) and options such as pistols are legal for self-defense purposes, there are storage requirements for firearms and the requirement for one firearm can be the back of the closet or something similar - depends on the judgement of a police officer - but for multiple firearms a gun safe which is firmly attached to the building is required. It could easily be the case that someone owns a bolt-action rifle for hunting and would prefer to have a pistol for home defense, but this would mean buying not just a pistol but also a gun safe, which would then have to be installed properly. Makarov pistols can go for less than 100 EUR and might easily be affordable, but the cheapest safes that can fit a rifle (which the person already owns, as I explained) are about three times that and may be well outside the budget restrictions. Or it could be that the person could very well afford both a pistol and a safe, but the installation would require bolting it to a wall and their landlord won't allow that. Or maybe they've watched enough LockPickingLawyer to know that security by obscurity is more likely to keep their children away from the firearm than a lock.
When it comes to home defense, I'm definitely in the "barricade and let the bad guy come to you" school of thought. But to make that work, you have to have, or install, barriers to entry for your residence that will give you enough time before the bad guy is in your face to implement the strategy, and you must use them religiously. I installed metal front and rear doors to replace the flimsy wooden ones, and high quality deadbolt looks on them which I use when I am home as a matter or habit. That way, if someone tries to force entry into my home, I have plenty of time to gather my family, go to my safe room, and manage the event from the place of my choosing. I am perfectly willing to allow an intruder to loot the rest of my home. I have often said that home defense begins at the hardware store and not the gun store. But I also realize that not everyone has the same level of control over their barriers and may have to do something else. But I have seen people place multiple loaded firearms all over their homes worth thousands of dollars and pose a safety risk rather than replace a substandard door or lock. This approach makes little sense to me.
This is exactly right. I had a home invasion but luckily the guy breaking in picked the second worst entry point. Maybe THE worst. We were in an apartment building on the first floor. Plenty of windows, two sliding patio doors, a windowed door to a patio, and a normal door. He went first for a window but failed to pry that open. I guess he didn’t want to break the glass and then crawl in over the shards. He jumped onto the patio and began breaking through the windowed door. I happened to be in the room at the time and saw him shattering the glass and pushing his way in through the blinds. We weren’t using that door at the time and because of the small size of the apartment, I had put a heavy wooden shelf in front of that door since I had nowhere else to put it. In effect, this was a makeshift accidental barricade which confused and slowed him down while I ran across the apartment to get my gun. Those extra few seconds were vital in giving me enough time to load my gun, give my wife an instruction, and get to an advantageous position within the apartment. It didn’t end well for him. Lesson of the story is: 1. You are never safe. Someone can break in in broad daylight in the middle of a crowded and gated apartment complex. 2. Any time which your home’s structure delays the home invader and allows you to get prepared is invaluable. Having a gun on you is one way, but it has its limitations. You won’t ALWAYS have a gun ready to go. There are times when you are in the shower or at work and only your wife (who doesn’t like guns much) is at home. It also only helps if the intruder alerts you to his presence, which is easier if there are obstacles which he has to break down to enter.
That works well until the attack happens as you are coming in or out of the door, possibly with full hands of groceries making rushing into the home and closing the door a compicated affair. The only sure defense is a reliable, easy to operate, or rather hard to misoperate, capable firearm on your person. Even just a shotgun or carbine tucked behind the door frame on your way in is much more effective than hoping you just get in the door and can close and lock it faster than your attacker or attackers. You need the arms to defend your property. No nation has ever stood without an army, no castle without ramparts, no land without a raisable militia, and no home without a weapon, and hopefully a capable man of the house.
I agree 💯% that home defense starts at the hardware store. You need the alarm system,the deadbolts,the cameras, the steel doors and triple glazed windows and safe room for wife and kids. Then the guns come out when any of those things fail. Good comment mate.👍
Small point. When unloading a bolt rifle, I remove the round in the chamber first, then dump the contents of the magazine with the chamber empty and the bolt open, rather than manipulate the magazine with a loaded chamber. That's just a preferred method for me. IF you keep the rifle always pointed in a safe direction, it really isn't critical which way you do it.
thats how I was taught to. it just makes it even less of a chance that an accident will happen, espicially if you are distracted. i know i have had a negligent misfire (into a hill) when lowering the hammer on my dads leveraction 30.30 while hunting as a kid. things happen, better to just reduce the possible accident points
In Austria, long non semi automatic guns are considered free weapons, anyone over 18 can purchase them without restrictions. Many other countries have similar laws.
@@smartfella7914you need a permit to own a semi. Means you make a psychological exam on a computer and apply for a permit at your local police station. Only other prerequisite is that you have no criminal record.
@@VlastimirStankovic Here in America, some states make you go apply for a permit at your local PD for AR style rifles and Pistols, atleast where i live, so i guess it’s not *that* different to ours. Thanks for the info, hope you have a great day!
Love this vid! My first centerfire rifle was a classic beater P17 in 30-06 when I was a kid. I would never feel lacking while armed with this fine, old war horse. I admit, I was hoping to see you splatter the meat target with the 375 H&H.
.338 win mag can get prettttty close to 375 H&H...not sure the meat target would have shown much difference with as much energy as left the back of it with either cartridge.
My first centerfire rifle was a Steyr-Mannlicher M-1895. I wouldn't feel lacking either, I just knew it probably wasn't the best choice. I got it for $200.00 that being the reason I had it to begin with. It even came with three enbloc clips loaded with original ammo from 1938, and a couple more unloaded ones, a bag full of brass, and a reloading die, oh and the bayonet, and bayonet scabbard. That rifle kicked like a mule.
Thanks once again for a great video. As someone who for a few years relied on a 1953 Poñish M44 Mosin using modified Hansen and S&B hunting rounds for home defense, I greatly appreciate the perspective of your videos and your aversion to the snarky "don't be a poor" mentality. Sadly, the reality of the here and now is often suboptimal. As an aside, your practice of seasoning them with some occasional dry humor is equally appreciated. The "vacation" comment was awesome.
Great video. Lots of places in the EU you can easily get a licence for a hunting rifle or break barrel shotgun but most handguns and auto loaders are outright banned.
Havent watched it yet, but my perspective for disadvantages for bolt rifles would be: Over penetration Limited ammunition Rate of fire Advantages, though: Heavy (milsurp can be used as a club) Powerful (more for my situation living in bear country Legal (not many laws against them) Un threatening (a milsurp or nice hunting rifle can be placed in the open ad decoration wheras an ar15 cannot)
The advantage is it’s a tool that expels a projectile and if it’s all you have it’s better than not having any tool that expels a projectile at all. That’s the entire point of the video.
Great video, as always. Especially useful pointer to me is the low ready under the arm for close in, plus the "around the corner" demonstrations. Question, if possible for a future video: IMO the meat target demo with the high powered rifle showed the potential for serious overpenetration on a "not a lion, tiger or bear" sized intended home defense target. Would it be possible to do a similar demo with a meat target, typical exterior wall (dry wall, 1/2" sheathing, some kind of siding) then another meat target to see what the capability is, with common "hunting" or "surplus" bolt action calibers?
This is a worthwhile follow-up, in my humble opinion. I think I already know the answer, round goes through MT #1, through the wall, does at least a little bit less damage to MT #2. Might be interesting to see with different calibers and ammunitions to see if there is any difference or if any round at least as powerful as .223 won’t go through the wall.
I would be very surprised if an already expanded round made it through a meat target and 1/2” sheathing, and then still had enough energy to penetrate another meat target. I’m not saying it couldn’t do any damage, especially to more delicate targets. But the sheathing would slow down a mushroomed bullet a lot.
I tell everyone when they shoot my Marlin.30-30 not to pussyfoot the lever action when cocking the gun or bring it down or turn it sideways because it will almost certainly jam on you. You need to cock it like you mean it. They say I understand and then do exactly how I said not to, even after I show them exactly how to do it. They all say, “well I don’t want to break it!” To which I remind them your holding a piece metal designed to withstand an explosion happening inside of it… you’re not going to break it. If you could I wouldn’t be shooting it.