I always took the "no steel cased ammo" as a round about way of saying "we collect all the brass and sell it and we don't want to have to pick your tula casings out of our sweet sweet roomba loot"
@@polishpotatos9282 That's his point I think, the dumb range owners could just pick them out with a magnet but they're too lazy. Would probably take minimal time.
"Only load one round at a time." I live right next to a range that is run by fudds. I drive 20mins out to the next closest range instead. The 2A community is changing from hunters to folks who want to train, so hopefully, ranges will follow.
@@Tap_rack5.56 it's been a dream of mine as well. I live in Rhode Island, only 5 or 6 private ranges all but one require a membership. State range is rimfire rifle, shotgun and pistol, no center fire rifle.
Depends on the club. Just joined one in the Carolinas that's fantastic. Great group of guys with no asinine rules. The only one thats a little silly is the no .50, but thats because we dont have the proper setup.
We just moved to Georgia a year ago. I spent 2 years looking for the right property. Found it, 40 acres with a 500 yard range and a hillside as a backstop. NO MORE range fuds for me!
I used to have a range in my back yard when I lived in " Cumming" I could sit in my hot tub and shoot. ( probably shot more rounds naked than anyone I know). Then it became " Johns Creek" and gunfire was prohibited. Not even a damned grandfather clause!.. I sold & moved.
I just moved to Washington recently and I was looking for that holy grail shooting spot too. I asked the guys at the local gun shop and they acted like I was asking them for their secret fishing spot. They finally pinned some google maps for me, but their reason was they didn't want random people going out there and trashing the place. I get it. Every time I go out there I bring back at least one garbage bag full of crap just because I want to keep shooting there.
Lucky bastard. I have a local shooting range 1 mile from me but its 25 yds max. If I'm shooting a pistol I have to tolerate some jerk next to me with a 7" AR with a muzzle brake on it the entire time. Way to small for any rifle besides like a 22lr but its what's nearby. I hope to one day be able to have land to shoot on.
Had a guy at a public outdoor range ask me for paperwork on my Hellion, because he thought it was an SBR. When I explained that it was a bullpup with a full length barrel, he still didn't believe me even after I took the gun apart and showed him where the barrel started and where it ended. That shit really got me to be honest
I went to an indoor pistol range for the first time because it recently opened and heard good things about their variety of steel targets available (and because it's starting to get cold, so I figured it was a win-win). I'm an experienced shooter, and after warming up in a bay with a static target I decided to move to the vacant bay with a falling plate rack target (5 plate) and started shooting how I normally practice for speed. After my very first sequence of 5 shots at the target and before I could even began resetting the plates by pulling the rope to prop the targets back up and the range officer came RUNNING up on me YELLING about their no rapid fire rule. I have no poker face, and gave him the most wtf-are-you-talking-about look I've ever given to anyone. I pointed to the target and told him I scored hits on all 5 plates and tried to explain I am an experienced shooter and used to shoot competitively. He rattled off some BS that it's unsafe and makes other shooters uneasy and not allowed under any circumstance. I immediately packed up my shit and left, no intention of ever going back.
As a new shooter anytime someone rapid fires I tend to peak over to see the stance of the person that is if they’re accurate. Gotta take notes from more experienced shooters tbh
1 shot every 3 seconds? My 90 year old mother does better. Arbitrary rules cause rule breaking by the sheer stupidity of the rule. Musket loaders can load in 3 seconds 😂
I think the best one comes from my dad, he has a pump action Winchester 22 that he took to an outdoor range and was told that he couldn't use it because it might somehow go full auto. We still haven't figured that one out.
@@Fixxate I would guess (though this is just a guess) that it is a 62. I am going by the fact that it was my grandmother's before it was dad's and he was born in the 40's where it looks like the change over happened but that is just a guess.
I have shot old Winchester 1890/1906 .22 pump actions that you can hold the trigger back and fire while just pumping the action. Old gallery guns will do that. Perhaps that’s the “full auto” reference?
I’ve had the argument with range staff about picking up my own brass. It was my own handloads. I told them I would be picking up my brass weather they liked it or not because it is my property and I would not be back to their range. I’m so blessed that I have a range on my property now.
I may have added that your reloads may or may not be done to major power factor fo competition. Tell them now that they have been informed the cases may be more likely to rupture if reloaded again. They may be liable for any damage or injury if they or someone else reloads them. Member of my club who reloads won't pick up casings from action bays after a competition for this reason.
I’m an instructor at a local indoor range. We allow drawing, reloads, transitions, rapid fire. You can do it all. Our RSO just wants to watch a couple reps first to make sure you’re doing it correctly and safely.
I remember the first time my dad took me to the local gun range to try out my Marlin/Glenfield model 60. After about 2 or 3 shots, I went for broke going 15 more as fast as I could. The older guys at the range simply smiled. Ah, the good old days.
I went to visit my mom in San Antonio and I brought her to an indoor range because she hasn’t gone shooting in a long time. When we got to our bay I was showing her how to hold a handgun properly and the guy in the next bay stepped in and said I was wrong and he knows because he was NRA certified to teach handgun classes…. I shoot uspsa often and professionally carry a gun for work. I know what I’m talking about. A few minutes later my mom was up to shoot and the nra guy sent a round into the celling. That experience just solidified that NRA certifications mean jack shit.
You have no idea if that person was actually NRA certified. Based on his lack of shooting skills, I would venture to guess that he was not NRA certified in anything.
@@tylerk158 They are a portal to do a lot of things, like operate ranges, run competitions, RSO events, offer NRA certified training, get your CCW permit, among dozens of others. So, they actually amount to quite a bit. Just like any other organization, there are "undesirables" who do a poor job.
the ones I hate is when the range rules are not applied equally. I was in a small gun club, they had a small pistol range, 22 rimfire only. the local police were allowed to use the range..and they'd destroy it. they used .308 and shot through the back wall. they shot 12 gauge buckshot on clay pigeons, destroyed the target holders and left the mess. and no one on the board of directors would do anything about it. I quit that club when they started trying to blame other people, like the junior pistol team who always cleaned up, for the mess.
My local gun range had a Barney Fife range master. There was a customer who was a poor, old guy could barely stand up straight due to his back. During a cease-fire he was standing behind the line, but the edge of his shoe was slightly over the edge of the 4 inch painted line. The dufus range master couldn't just ignore it, or gently remind the guy, he had to yell at him. Some guys shouldn't be given any authority. It goes to their head.
This makes me feel even more blessed for the outdoor mountain shooting range im a member with. The RSOs are only there on public days (weekends from 8am-2) and after that they just leave and let any members come and use their multiple 200-300yrd dynamic ranges. Nothing beats being able to gear up in all your kit and do moving or cover drills . Hell they say if you want to risk your vehicle you’re allowed to practice shooting around your car or in it with the windows down. Gotta love it!
Outdoor ranges not open to the public have almost zero liability to worry about, because the only person you are going to hurt is yourself and by definition it will be your own dumb fault.
Literally almost got kicked out of an indoor range for "rapid firing".. Literally just like a shot per second or so but they told me to wait a few seconds between each round. Never went back
It's not you that people like me are worried about. It's the hoodrats with lasers that come from big cities and are the best alley marksmen in their neighborhood. They can't hit anything, and they're just doing that faster.
I'm 62 and I've been shooting over 50 years. I've been to a lot of ranges over the years. I've only been to one range with a "range nanny". Never went back. That range was closed a few years later.
can confirm this interesting little fact. county/municipal ranges are more often than not a fantastic place to shoot. local law enforcement sure loves to keep their temple immaculate lol. the public gets a clean and well-serviced range while subsidizing the cost of running it. can't say I've seen a more obvious win-win
I got told to "slow it down, no rapid fire" at my former indoor range after I mag dumped a p22 (all the rounds were on target) so I showed up on the last day of my membership with a 460 XVR and a big fat muzzle brake and fired off a few +p bear loads that filled the whole range up with smoke, that was pretty funny
+P probably isn't the best option. Get some low maximum pressure ammo (those cartridges with slow-burning powder like the M193 in the early days in Vietnam) and you are literally going to spit fire XD
I almost shot on an indoor range once. The require all first time shooters at the location to watch a short video, even if you've been shooting for 50 years. One of the rules mentioned was no more than 1 shot in 5 seconds. 5 seconds between shots? We packed up our stuff and went home. I'm so glad I have relatives with property I can shoot on.
Probably more an annoyance than anything, but at our county range I took my 38 revolver to shoot (it was my Dad's). When I would load it with the muzzle pointed down range with the gun at a slight angle down so the rounds wouldn't fall out of the cylinder. I had one range officer you can't point that at the ground. Well once I load the cylinder and closed it I would point it straight down range. I mean if a revolver discharges with the cylinder open while loading it, we have a real big problem.
Reading your comment and my experience of shooting shotgun shells off the floor (9mm used) with one of the employees(I was a member of the range at that time), I'm thinking that doesn't happen to often after reading many of these comments. I am shock to see round limits and telling people what can be printed on a piece of paper. I hope people share information about these types of places and hoping people will not have to settle for such micro management of every little detail.
I stopped going to ranges because I got tired of getting chewed out for violating the "1-second" rule, training my self-defense draw and fire. Fud RO said I might not notice a squib. Sir, I would notice a squib. That's the point of my training. I also got yelled at by a watch watcher RO who thought I was shooting too fast and gave me a "final warning" for shooting too fast when I was deliberately counting "One-thousand-One" between shots.... just made it impossible to practice. Shouted "ONE-THOUSAND-ONE" *FIRE* for the rest of the mag and packed up and left. And when I was practicing tap and rack with dummies, they panicked and thought I was having legit malfunctions and would harass me to make safe and inspect when I was just doing malfunction drills. (Luckily, this time, I had another competent RO speak up for me and tell the Fud to back off) I also ran into the no steel case rule... and OFC, I also had an SKS that concerned them as well. Had enough. So, I stopped patronizing those establishments. I just wanted to practice and be more competent.
On the range brass sweeping: I have noticed, they will _claim_ it's about safety, not wanting anyone to trip. But several of us observed that they were so eager to get the brass, especially where it was back from the line/could be grabbed by us, that *they frequently came close to tripping the finishing shooters holding a gun that had just been firing.*
There is a range in Bergin NY that is fantastic. They are the best, machine gun rentals, amazing staff, best place ever. They are tearing it down and rebuilding it even better
I won't shoot anywhere where ROs are present or they don't let me shoot my reloads or pick up my fired brass or retrieve/dig out my fired lead bullets out of the backstop. I've been shooting for over 40 years and reloading and casting my own bullets for over 30 years. I'm also a highly experienced and seasoned factory certified armorer on many makes and models, a amateur gunsmith and builder. I forgot more than they will ever know about the subject...trust me!
I've been to a range where you were not allowed to use any target that closely resembled a human silhouette. They took this rule so far they wouldn't let me or my friend use the Army's M4/M16A2 zeroing target.
I went to a range that took things further than no silhouette, someone complained about the black ink colored B2X targets, then someone complained about the blue silhouette targets representing police, red/firemen etc , so they outlawed them alt.
The State owned range at yellowstone in Wisconsin is one of my favorites. Have not been there in a few years. Its free, and a gem, and I hope not too many people find out about it
I've taken a lot of first time shooters to a gun range, and collecting their first round as a souvenir for them. It's hilarious how many RSOs have tried to stop us from picking up brass. Half of RSOs were so embarrassed after being told they let us do whatever afterwards. The other half tried to inject their instruction or do some stupid pop quiz. I had one who had a complete meltdown when I explained picking up brass was allowed.
I’ve been at a particular indoor range several times which has a “no rapid fire” rule. I am a new shooter and they know it. On more than a few occasions I have been practicing by myself or with only a couple people on the line, and the RO will tell me to just dump the mag, have at it. Those are the ranges you need to find!
I'm blessed that I don't have to go to a range. I genuinely feel for people that have to deal with all the shit you guys talked about. I wish no one had to put up with that.
Thanks. I wish I had access to my family's former 175 acre farm or brother-in-law's parents 40 acre property that abutted 1,000 acres! I deal with many of these pathetic "Fuddery" & Anti-2A liability rules! I have to drive 45+ minutes to shoot at an outside range! Also, 2 indoor ones I loved were shut down due to leftists...
I’ve got one for you fellas. Last spring I shot at an outdoor range in Arizona. (I’m in Minnesota where indoor ranges are almost a necessity during the winter months.) Here’s the rule that blew my mind and I have never heard of. No silhouette targets. They didn’t care if it was a zombie, alien, evil clown, Bigfoot or just a run of the mill silhouette. Targets only. Weird…….
Yes I have been to ranges like that I purchased several hundred military targets from cheaper than dirt Then when I hung them up at the range the RO informed me you can`t use those So I had to use the blank side and used them that way
My home range has the same rule. I’ve ask why and was told it started back in the eighties locals thought the club was training radicals. They did this to appease the nuts and they have just not gotten rid of it. The local police use it all the time and they use them?
"Can't pick up brass" has to be the most absurd thing I've ever heard. I never even imagined that could be a thing. It's literally YOUR brass. You're the owner; you own it. They can't just steal it because it's on their property.
I went to one range where the RO offered unrequested, unwanted "advice" to shooters on everything from stance and grip to type of ammo. It was the first and last time I went to that range.
You can have some cool people who teach you things and have know it alls. The worse is guys who aren’t even ROs just guys who are at the range the same time you are. They make sure their gun is packed up before they approach you to coerce you into letting them shoot yours.
A lot. Work at a gun range in Wisconsin. They're dictated by insurers from previous instances of poor gun handling on a customers part. Your average gun owner isn't intelligent.
@@printingwithpeek4897 Blasting away trying to shoot 8 shots a second not even aiming, yeah, that should be stopped not just for safety but because you aren't learning to shoot you're just going on an ego-trip. But limiting to no more than 1 round per second is too great a limitation. A more realistic limit is around 103 beats per minute which lots of people know from songs as it's a very popular rhythm rate, like the BeeGees "stayin alive" or Queen's "another one bites the dust". Though they aren't entirely wrong, these people who do claim to shoot really fast and "accurately" are BARELY landing all rounds "on target" that being a target which is about 2 foot wide. Now I don't know what has a thoracic cavity that's 2 feet wide but other than that it's a poor accuracy standard.
NONE! These "rules" are usually the product of a bunch of old geeezers living in years past and clinging to old concepts and ideas--ALL of those the result of old wives tales and ignorant hicks. I so confused an old geeeezer type RO he went into the club house for awhile to rest whatever brain he had. He was enthusiastically enforcing the "one round a sec" rule. I asked him if they shot bullseye matches there. He replied they did and in fact had a couple of members who are "double distinguished"!! This term was uttered in whispers with reverence and bated breath. I again breached the one a sec issue. I told him according to club rules those matches were against their rules. He looked surprised and asked how that could be. I asked if they shot the rapid fire portion of the course. He answered they did. I told him that was in violation of the rules. Now he was confused. I explained the rapid fire portion required the competitor to fire more than one shot a second! You have ten seconds for five shots. It takes over a second for the first shot--or longer for some shooters so the shooter must fire more than one shot a second to make the time limit. A confused look came over his face and he went in the clubhouse for the rest of the after noon. Mindless folks have no place at a shooting range.
@@Treblaine So... if a person has the ability to (quickly) put 10 rounds into a target, 7 yrd out, and keep them in a 4" grouping... are you ok with that? (asking for a friend)
Going to the range for me means walking literally 15 feet to the back porch and letting the lead fly. My backstop is a mountain that the world's largest ICBM would only make a dent.I love living out in the sticks!
One of my favorite indoor ranges several years ago was shutdown due to the the insurance company kept increasing their rates for any reason the insurance company came up with (not based on a risk situation). The owner said they could no longer afford the increasing rates and keep the cost reasonable for patrons, plus trying to keep all the insurance requirements up to date. The owner firmly believed that the insurance company was purposely trying to make it so difficult to operate the owner would have to shut down the range.
My worst range experience was an outdoor range I went too that does not allow you to shoot pistols and rifles at the same time ON THE SAME RANGE even if the rifles fire pistol calibers. You have to go inside the building and ask to swap your range cards from pistol to rifle and Vice versa. Oh and by the way, this range has a cease fire every 30 minutes. You have to put your targets far out there so if you need to change your targets and you are trying to switch from pistol to rifle or vice versa, if you don’t do all of that by the time the cease fire ends, you have to wait a whole 30 minutes for the next ceasefire to happen. Last but not least, you can only fire your rifles sitting down aiming through a slot with a big wall in your way. That’s only good for sniper rifles but regular ARs and stuff? Laughable. Worst range I ever went too. Not to mention the range officer also liked to yell over little honest mistakes like it’s the military hahahah pathetic.
There's an outdoor range where I live that has probably the dumbest rule of all time: you're not allowed to load more than 3 rifle rounds or 6 handgun rounds at a time
Seems like you and I are the only two people that have experienced this one. For me it was five rounds per mag at the only fricken public range on that rock known as Oahu. Thank God I moved back to the mainland. I wish someone would explain the reasoning behind that one.
Don't you just love emptying 30 rds out of a std cap. mag just to load them back in 3 at a time 10x. All of PA's SGL's have that rule, it's pretty dumb. Ik it probably exists bc some idiot did something stupid, and I'm getting really damn tired of everything in society being dumbed down to the lowest common denominator, as if suffering the idiots themselves isn't bad enough I have to suffer stupid rules put in place bc of them too.
I have the same rule and got a stern talking to last time I was there and shot a fully loaded 20 rd Glock mag. Thing is, everyone else was doing it, I’m the only one who got the warning. At least it was warning though and not a fine. The Game Commission runs the range in question and can actually fine you. Next time I’m bringing 2 or 3 revolvers and popping off 12-18 quick shots just to see what happens.
When I first got my M1 Garand. I first went to my favorite local indoor shop. My 1970s Greek 30 cal ammo stuck to magnet so they turned me away. Then I went to this one outdoor range. But they only allowed one shot loaded at a time, even for an AR. So for a garand, one round is a pain having to load directly into breach rather than using a full clip. So I finally found another outdoor range that is about an hour drive away that is way better for rules and more accommodating
With the M1 Garand,you lay the round onto the magazine follower instead of shoving it into the breech. The bolt needs the weight of the cartridge to slow its speed down enough to avoid/reduce slam fire.
@@doughesson CMP used to sell single cartridge en blocs called SLEDs, something like Single Loading Enhancement Device, ('cause it's got to have an acronym, right?), to use for the reason you mentioned. I just had a look; CMP doesn't have any but they are on eBay, of course. It's good you bring up the slam fire issue. I saw a guy lose an eye in a slam fire incident with an M1A some years ago. Apparently the round was a hand load which hadn't been resized. Have to check those hand loads. Check and double check.
I always wondered why indoor ranges wouldn’t allow steel core ammo until my last range trip. A guy was shooting at a target 7yds away and the steel core ammo was striking the ground in the background and creating sparks along the ground. The RSO told him that due to unburnt powder on the ground it could cause a fire. So I assumed that’s why they don’t allow it. Your explanation of damaging backstops is something I didn’t think about.
Damaging backstops is a real thing. Penetrating a steel helmet at 300m was one of the design requirements of the SS109/M855 (aka "Green tip") ammo. Think what thousands of rounds of that will do to a steel backstop at 25m.
The Broward County public range has plenty of fud rules. The silliest is no silhouette or human shaped targets. The funny part is there is a simple wall separating the Sheriff's range. It uses mostly silhouette targets.
Just went to one near Saint Augustine FL that only allows one shot per 2 seconds unless you are a member and go to the designated long range/rapid fire range. The public or guest range has those FUDS that will just sit there and listen for you to break the 2 shot rule and constantly give you a hard time. They also don't allow pistol AR's with folding stocks or no stocks. Probably won't go back
We have one here in SA, TX that has the same no AR/AK pistol rule. You’re limited to one shot per 5 seconds though - worst I’ve seen so far is 1 shot every 7 seconds. Of course, if you get the private bay then you don’t have to follow that, but there’s no reserving a private bay there
@@hellishcyberdemon7112 there are 2 outdoor ranges directly across US1 from each other in St Augustine, both are gun clubs, but one has a 770 yard range that is by appointment only.
@@hellishcyberdemon7112 i'm pretty sure it has to be Saltwaters with the 770 yard range, because the other one is a private club. They also have 200 yard ranges.
What's more fun is the indoor range that not only wants to keep your brass but also wants you to sweep up apparently their brass for them now when you're done shooting .
How they expect you to shoot: Sit for 20 mins, fire one shot, staring at your scope for 30 mins, have lunch, take a nap, fire a second shot. And go home.
In Missouri, there are a lot of public outdoor ranges that are pretty decent. Best of all, they're never crowded, and there's never an overseer. But those ranges are for simple folk with no imagination. I found my own sweet spots, deep in the Mark Twain National Forest that have a natural backstop. I'll even camp out for a couple days and just have a shooting vacation
I've been searching for an unstaffed area near me but no luck so far. Dept. of Conservation ranges are nice, but not the same as by yourself. I wish I lived closer to Mark Twain forest. So nice down there.
Sometimes it’s not even dumb rules, it’s just overly aggressive enforcement of good rules. Like you can’t cross the yellow line while people are setting up their targets, makes sense, good rule. But then if you have your baby toe over the yellow line for one nano second and the RO just loses his shit on you
Sounds like a public range here called trail glades. In their defense there was an injury a week before my first time. All new members are forced to take a safety class before getting their range card. I get it though, but that yelling over the PA step back behind the line is crazy🤣
Fair I guess, but still, their job is safety and the yellow line is there for good reason. No part of you should cross the line at any point for any reason. But like I said it's not the point.
I'm so glad my local range is awesome and chill. They let you shoot as fast as you want as long as you can control it, the staff is always willing to help you, and they've never once asked to see my tax stamps. The only thing they've ever asked me is if they can try shooting my guns after seeing how fun they are. I love spooking people with my binary trigger lol
That's a good standard, the only standard that matters. Sure the worst shooter with the most inappropriately powerful gun needs to wait several seconds between each shot but that is their limitation.
I agree man!!!! I actually go to 2 different gun ranges, and that's because the one I actually have a membership at (despite them being cool) has a rule that you can't bring in any outside ammo, even if it is legally purchased and had receipts to back that up. They did make one exception for me, was when I took my Desert Eagle out for the very first time. The secondary range that I often go to, not only gives range attendees the option to purchase ammo from them, but they also allow you to bring your own ammo as well.
I have run into a range where the RO was sweeping up brass quickly. And got a lot of my brass initially. I opened up my range bag and placed it about where most of my brass had been landing. That solved him sweeping my brass.
This one guy did that to me with my 5.45 casings which were lacquered steel but if you didn’t know any better you would think they were brass. When I packed up to go from the 25 yard to the 100 he was all over the ground and in the grass for awhile bending over picking up the casings. It’s always funny seeing brass bandits all over that 5.45 like it’s exotic and worth so much more
Having been an RSO on an indoor range I’ll say we’re not always after your brass… I for one was told to sweep the brass forward of the benches so no one stepped on/slips on the brass. Personally I don’t have a reloading setup at home so I save my own brass for the day when I finally do have a setup, but I won’t chase anyone else’s… it’s not worth it.
You should have communicated to the RSO that you were saving your brass. What you obviously don't know is that too much brass on the floor becomes a slip hazard.
I was told i couldn't shoot my .223 ar pistol with strike industries cookie cutter "loudncer" because the muzzle flash could burn down the range. I was told that muzzle brake specifically was banned from the range. I complied and put the gun away and asked for a list of banned items so i wouldn't waste time bringing something that i didnt know was banned. The RO told me he was the list...🤦🏽♂️
Have ya'll ever considered doing range reviews? For Example, go to a range, unannounced or planned ahead, and film your experience there. Then talk about it in studio afterwards. I think it would help highlight the good, the bad, and the ugly (obvious boomer reference) in the industry for folks. As someone that has worked at both outdoor and indoor ranges as an instructor and RSO, I think could be very beneficial for the entire 2A community as a whole. And, if you're ever interested in doing something like that, I'd like to volunteer my current place of employment as tribute. Practical Tactical Plus LLC in La Grange, MO. Keep up the great work gents!
I am one of the guys who took a Yugo SKS to the range without soaking the bolt in gasoline. But to my credit, all five rounds hit the target. They just did it really damn fast.
I saw a guy with a pistol built from an 80% frame that fired single shots most of the time, but then occasionally bam-bam!! One trigger pull, two shots fired as fast as it would cycle. He tried a different slide, same problem. Dunno if he ever fixed it. That's not a gun I'd ever want to leave loaded...
I saw a guy unknowingly shooting burst fire with his SKS on the range. After pointing it out he told me he just bought it "off a gunsmith." Seemed too likely to fire out of battery. I packed up my shit and left.
Living in Alaska, having an indoor range nearby is a nice thing. However, I have to be desperate to go into the Mat-Su Valley Sportsmen’s range. The overzealous Fudds in this place make it nearly unbearable. Rules, such as no drawing from a holster without one of these Fudds monitoring you, if they have time, kills it for me. Also, when done shooting, your weapon has to be on the table, facing down range, with the action locked open (even though all the targets are remotely operated). Had a hell of a time explaining my Kel-Tec P38T’s inability to lock open to one of these Fudds, to the point where he attempted to show me otherwise. Fortunately we have a public outdoor range, where if you can brave winter off-road conditions to access it, there’s no RSO’s, and you may have the range to yourself.
The issue with no rapid fire practice is that in a self defense situation you're not going to slowly aquire your target and slowly pull the trigger. The idea is train how you fight. If you train to accurately rapid fire 3 to 5 rounds into a target at self defense distances it increases your odds of being able to do that in real life.
I've been to ranges in LA that won't allow you to use your own ammo and charge damn near $50 per bag of their reloads, then there's a range in Laredo, TX that won't let you use your own targets. You have to buy their thick wax infused targets and they claim some bs about regular paper or cardboard targets possibly catching on fire. Absolutely ridiculous!
Bro, find another range to practice. There are some bad ones operated by unscrupulous owners/management; they’re all about making a cash grab and scamming customers out of their money. There are good ranges out there where you the receive the excellent level of customer service you expect at a gun range. Respect, minus the bullshit.
@Robert Bowen that I understand. I've darn near had targets smoking outdoors in the military at Camp Pendleton, but not expected inside a climate controlled range with integrated sprinkler system.
That's ridiculous. Our range did have to put up some rules regarding targets, but they will let you take your own, they just have to *see it first*. Reason? People where taking targets with all the things you can imagine (from pictures of politicians to ex girlfriends) and they where getting complains about it. Other than that, you can bring anything you want. They also have a lot of metal targets you can use, and they make sure there's enough paint to go around.
Years ago I went to a local outdoor gun range. its located on a piece of land just out of town and is fairly nice. I was checking in with the RO, signing the usual safety stuff when I noticed all the way at the bottom of the rules was "All magazine cannot be loaded with more then 5 rounds". needles to say the RO wasnt happy when I started laughing.
@@jaywatson8898 that's almost 100% of trap, Skeet, and sporting clays courses....and it is actually a very good rule. On the clays course, yes you may end up shooting 4, 6, 8 or 10 times on a station. Loading two at a time only, at the end of each pair of birds thrown, youll have a clear gun. Slam 5 in, shoot 4 birds, and walk out assuming your gun is clear when it isnt.....isn't..... Having said that, yes I have loaded more than 2 on occasion however I take special care to clear the gun before mov8ng out of the cage
Man I grew up shooting in a field behind our house the first time I went to the range I got chewed out and almost kicked out for mag dumping my s&w honesty scared the shit out of me to have someone yell at you for something like that
I had one time, myself and a few friends hit the range. 3 of us benched up with some AR’s. We shot in succession and in tandem, purely coincidental, and the RSO gives us the “NO RAPID FIRE!” line. I said, “no, we aren’t. We are shooting consecutive shots.” He didn’t like that answer and threatened to kick us all out. Real SOB.
The girl shot the instructor with the Uzi, not her dad. It had nothing to do with the ammo and it was outdoors too in the desert. The instructor went from couple single shots straight to full auto and didn't have a proper position.
That is fine and dandy. But it is like an engine. Use the oil it was designed for. So my 1911 would not get used there. There is good reason for jacket rounds. Oh I got thrown off a outdoor range for loading 5 rounds in a 44 black powder pistol. With the can of Crisco sitting next to me. Yep Crisco the patch. Then Crisco the ball. But the range person is the 'expert'.. But yes it was the black powder that really was the bad thing. Must have been a military armory specialist. There are lots of people that think you should not have a Mustang GT on the street. Until they drive one.
@@isiahaf1359 Then you drive one. Then. I have to get one those. But that means having too much fun. It is a really bad thing for those that can't handle fun.
I think I've got the craziest rule. A buddy wanted to take me to the range he frequents and I wanted to bring my AR. According to him the rules were I had to remove the upper then put the gun back together on the range and I couldn't bring in any loaded mags. Also, all of my ammo would be inspected. So instead of that I went to a different range. All they asked was what calibers I would be shooting.
If it was outdoor range they probably didn’t want you shooting full metal jacket if it was indoor they probably didn’t want you shooting incendiary or tracer
ALL the ranges here inspect your ammo, and you cannot bring in loaded mags. if i wanna shoot my mini 14 at the indoor range, it's 223 only, and i have to buy it from them.
I have a out door range just down the road from my house same way told the guy they they can go f themselves and find some to fill my membership. $200 a year and close sounded good but all the bs rules that make no since and complete bs.
I was a member of an outdoor range, their rules for targets was only paper or steel, when I brought my kids they wanted to pop balloons with 22, so as I was putting the balloons on the targets RSO came very angry to let us know we were breaking rules by using balloons
I dealt with this at a couple local indoor ranges. Some of those ranges are no longer open. These are the same people complaining that there are no ranges in the area. We don't go to any of them anymore.
I was once at an indoor range that only sold silhouette targets and kicked out an entire group because one person had fired a "headshot". This rule was also no stated in the 20+ range rules you must read and agree to to use that particular range.
I've seen this too and their reasoning was so they could try and avoid people shooting the carrier since the head is close to the top of the silhouette target. We were allowed to flip the target upside down if we wanted to use the head spot. Somewhat understandable, still seems a little silly.
a lot of outdoor ranges have been isolated in rural areas and safe for years but recently had suburbs encroach in which causes issues of liability. range in my area finally gave up and closed after being sued so many times for noise and errant rounds by surrounding residential developments that were built around it in the past 10 years.
Yeah the city people need to stop pouring into the rural areas. They like how peaceful the land is but get mad when they find out guns are a part of life.
Stricklands in Daytona fl had this happen... the county or city of daytona Beach got mad at them, took land right next to them and forced them to close.
I've never had any issues when I go to the range. I have seen the 1 shot per second rule, but that range had a secondary area that was walled off and if you asked to use that room, you could practice double tap or mag dumps, as long as it wasn't into the ceiling. They also took the time to get to know you so they knew who they could and couldn't trust in the exclusive area. My preference is to go 'out of town' and setup targets. There's nothing like shooting in the open.
I was once told that I couldn't shoot my rifle chambered in 7.62x54r without a class 3. I didn't have to have a class 3 to buy it but somehow I had to have it to shoot it at an outdoor range
I'm 64 years old. Shooting hasn't been fun for years because of the kind of people you have to be around. Two years ago I moved to a southern state in a rural area where I'm near a National Forrest un-supervised public range. Drive in and use it. Frequently I can spend half a day there with nobody else on the place. Life is good.
I can understand to a point about drawing the firearm from a holster at a public range. If you have some yahoo who’s not experienced at drawing from a holster (especially concealed) I can understand the liability and safety concern. I feel if you can demonstrate to a RO that you know how to draw safely from a holster (dry fire) you should be allowed to practice drawing. If the range is into making money, at least require you to take a class on drawing so you can practice drawing from holster. Not allowing rapid fire total bs.
@@leonardmiletello5245 I mean, they're guns. If you're inexperienced you're a danger regardless of what you're doing. Me drawing from a holster isn't any more dangerous than some newbie swinging a gun around with his finger on the trigger.
The range I go to has some of these rules however slightly different. They only require you to be "approved" by an RSO in order to draw and shoot , rapid fire, shoot from retention etc. Plus They dont really keep a list or anything so its more like if you dont seem like you know what you are doing they will approach you. Its a little different but I dont mind showing that I am proficient and I also like that it better assures me that everyone around me knows what they are doing too.
Yeah that’s pretty cool. The new range I go to the guy was even giving me tips but not in a know it all way but an advice way. He shot about 50 rounds of my ammo but I am not complaining to have an experience with a genuinely cool dude passionate about concealed carry.
LOL! I agree with that comment! However, sometimes I've seen people put in the "far"" or "nearer" range so they can be "watched..." Not necessarily the bay next to the wall, though...
One and only time I went to one I brought someone who had never shot before, they put us in the far lane. I don't know that's a thing putting them there for that reason.. maybe.
Got the "no rapid fire" at an indoor range awhile back. The only reason I ever went to the more expensive indoor ranges was to practice double and triple taps since they allowed rapid fire, never going back there.
These kind of rules are exactly why I used my local ranges year membership 1 time and did not renew it. I drive the 45 minutes out to some public land with my own set of steel targets
I shot competition and USPSA back in the 80s and 90s, tried out IDPA in the 2000s. I was classified master in both and multiple divisions. I’ve always had to do my own gunsmithing to correct or address minor issues that commercial gunsmiths can’t spend the time on. Part of this process involves having to take my firearms to a range and shoot at similar cadence to verify function, etc. i’ve ran into the “no rapidfire“ policy numerous times, which means I can’t use that range to do what I need to do. Part of my trips to the range I have observed the general public shooting. I can see why they have very restrictive rules with such horrendous gun handling that you will see from video game gun experts shooting a real gun for the first time.
My buddy shot IDPA all the time he kept asking me to go so I went one Saturday he told me that this day it was cross-draw day so I set up my holster get up to the line and the range officer flipped LOL I felt like such an idiot my buddies laughing like a jackass
YES! I positively HATE going to the range - I understand the rules and ins. liabilities, etc. but honestly too many fuds and know-it-all range ninjas. I relish every chance I get to go and practice on private property in the middle of nowhere.
I went to an indoor range once where I was the only person on the range. The safety officer sat right behind me and watched every move I made. I don't know what his deal was. Maybe he thought I looked suspicious. Maybe he had a bad experience with another shooter the day before. I'm not really sure what was on his mind but it sure was uncomfortable for me. I shot for about five minutes and decided I was tired of him sitting right behind me and staring at me constantly. I left and never went back to shoot there again.
Or simply that his job duties were to be RO whenever the range was active , and you were just the only one there . He wasn't going to take a nap , or play solitare on his phone , and there wasn't anything else to watch .
I always ask the range owner, “I k ow you don’t like rapid fire but I like to train for double taps” and since they all believe in double and even triple tapping when firing defensively with a handgun they all say “ok, you can do that” then I fire as fast as I want and they leave me alone. They may come out and observe but once they see my grouping they typically walk away confident that I’m not going to hurt myself or anyone else.
I once enjoyed a firend's MAC-10 with a Lage Mfg. upper on it while firing it at a indoor range in central Texas. This range had a rule that if a gun was not currently being used- that it's action was to be left open. Naturally, this particular submachine gun fires from the open bolt, so having the bolt closed was a safer way of determining that this thing was not dangerous, and not ready to fire. The RSO had a fit, and swore up and down that this wasen't the case, and me and my friend were being unsafe. We schooled him hardcore, and found out later that he quit soon after the next time I visited that range.
The only indoor range near me changed owners but they used to have a rule that you couldn't bring your own ammo and you couldn't shoot anything but pistols. The only issue is their ammo is three times the price so nobody went there and they shut down then the cool gun shop near me bought the place hopefully they open up the range with better rules
A indoor range in my area requires you take a rifle safety class to shoot any rifle calibers. This class of course costs money, and is only held in the morning on Saturday. And has to be renewed every few years.
And is taught by their employees, right. Go in with a NRA certificate of training and be required to learn from them, because the NRA is just a money grab.
Have one in my area newbies have to watch a 15 min video in order to use the range. But as a construction worker at work I have to watch a 20 minute video on every new job I work at before I can work so I guess I can deal with it.
There was an outdoor range near me that didn't allow M193 because it would "go through the berm", but allowed calibers up to (including) .338. They also banned reloads that had Hornady projectiles. They had a ton of other ammo regulations (no steel core, steel case, they checked every round with magnets when you got there, etc.) but didn't sell ammo there. The RSO walked downrange one day I was there while the range was hot, so I made it a point to never go back there.
I know someone who had an RO at an outdoor range tell him all FMJ was armor piercing and therefore banned. Everyone else shooting on the range that day was shooting FMJ but they threw my buddy out.
Makes me realize how lucky we are in central PA. We have a sportsman’s club, you go to the gun shop and buy a gate key once a year for $20, most of the time there’s nobody else there. And if there is and you wanna shoot alone, just pick a spot in the woods 150 yards away from any building, thats the only law.
I had a Sig Mosquito.22 was a jam master, jammed every single time I tried to shoot it, took it home polished the feed ramp, went back to the range , OHDNR RANGE, cost $25 a year, I shot the gun I just worked on 4 times fast, a range officer came down and said no rapid fire, and there was a guy next to me shooting and had a kid maybe 4 years old with no shoes on and no safety glasses and no hearing protection on, I said what about that kid to the officer and he said that wasn’t my concern…WOW..
I can definitely sympathize with a lot of these things. I'm in CA and when I first moved here it was a real culture shock compared to what I was used to at other outdoor ranges. I had to visit 4-5 different ones so I could find a good place to train. Of course when I finally found a range that will allow actual training, like draws from concealment and rapid fire, its the one that's 2 hours from my house. Unfortunately due to these policies it is preventing people from getting proper training outside of the expensive classes where those rules are relaxed just for the class. Of course there is always BLM land, but people are very tight lipped about the good spots and its very difficult for a new shooter, or someone new to the area, to find a good place.
I’m very lucky where I live to be a member of an absolutely amazing range. 800 yards, enclosed and temperature controlled rifle benches, clay trap range, multiple pistol ranges, I can take my bows out and they have a tower you can shoot from elevation like a tree stand. The owners are awesome, there are always training courses or events going on. Can’t say enough good things about them.
On a cold range my BIL had his foot slightly over the yellow line while reloading his mag. He got yelled at and was told I he could have been kicked out if he wasn’t feeling nice that day. All because half of his foot was over a “safety line”
As someone who occasionally walks down range to check targets while buddies are still throwing led, I think I would cause this dude to stroke out. B4 someone goes ape...I have level IVs on and a TQ...sall good.
Shit happens, he could have been drastically injured, I feel that way even stepping foot on a range with another shooter, dramatically more with people I don't know. One of the most dangerous places to go to is a public range.
In addition to the ones you mentioned. a local range no longer allows shotguns, even slugs. If you rent a gun, and buy THEIR ammo... you cannot use that ammo again on return trips in their rental guns... It has to be purchased THAT day... so stupid
My favorite one. Was at a range locally. Guys are shooting 308, 45-70, and .50 beowulf. The RSO tells me, I can't shoot my 7.62x39 because the caliber may damage the range. (Not joking.)
These rules actually were a determination in the purchase of my home. I had to have enough property and live in a area where I could have a backyard range. But now that’s being threatened because here in Michigan a proposed bill explains your not allowed to shoot on your own property.
In NY State you cant shoot in your backyard without 500 yards distance with your neighbor, so basically only the top 1% can shoot. Fortunately no one complies.
Range and Caliber are based on the range survey and Backstop material (indoor). Certified ranges have to rely on maximum range of the projectile. IF your range (outdoor) is not allowing you to shoot .50, .338 Lapua, it's usually because the range isn't long enough to ensure the round stays on the property if you overshoot the berm.
Yeah, the range I go to won’t allow anything from x round up. I say x because I didn’t recognize the round. It was like 400 h&h or something like that.
Usually the danger area behind the berm (backstop is the tem mostly used in the UK) is designed to that it will contain a bullet that strikes the ground between the firing point and the backstop. Not a round fired over the top of the backstop. Most UK 600 yard ranges will have about 1000 yards of danger area behind them. Which will most certainly not contain a 7.62×51/.308 Win in direct fire over the backstop. Range design is one of the subjects we covered in the NRA(GB) RCO course.
My attorney told me, yes, it's true, legally the only person who can demand your NFA paperwork (with consequences for noncompliance) is an AFT agent, HOWEVER, at least, in Texas there are laws that cover local LEOs enforcing federal laws that can be interpreted to cover this exact thing, so it's kind of a grey area. Her advice was its best to comply with local law enforcement if they threaten arrest unless you have VERY deep pockets and are trying to generate case law. Not a range, but took a shotgun to a gunsmith and when I brought it in we greeted each other and I started describing the issue, he held up a finger and wouldn't talk until he finished measuring the barrel, with a tape measure he had to go get, and once he was satisfied it was legal he then resumed the conversation like nothing just happened. It was a shorter shotgun, but he had this, "I disapprove of your choice in firearms attitude." He also said he wouldn't be able to work on my shotgun for quite some time because duck hunting season was starting soon, and those people take precedence. Needless to say, I went somewhere else and haven’t been back.
I'm in Canada and my range allows you to shoot the berm all you want within reason (you cant be blasting them with 1oz slugs all day etc), we regularly toss clays all over them to have our own version of a dueling tree since steel isn't allowed unless you're an RSO (any member can take RSO training) we just have regular member meets where there is no shooting and we all build up the berms and clean the ranges as a community.
Used to go to a range that reloaded ammo. They didn't allow steel case simply because they didn't want to have to sort it from the brass and dispose of it.
Our local conservation club was around since my grandfathers time. Then a rich guy bought all the land next to us and built a house close to the range. He complained us out of existence. Now he owns the land the range was on and race's his atvs there. But we were too loud.
@@chinchin3274 There is a shooting range at Laguna Seca. The racetrack has been there since 1957. Neighbors complain about the noise from the track and the range. The car people complain about range safety. The gun people complain that the range is closed on race days.
I love my gun range. Clean and very nice. Rapid fire is okay as long as you maintain enough control. Picking up brass is highly encourage as it keeps it clean for everyone. $25 yr membership fee. Up to 3 guest are allowed per visit. Family falls under your membership. Even a private fishing pond with lots of fish for the kids. Year round!!!
Took my Aug & X95 to a public range & got asked to see paper work for them because “those barrels aren’t 16 inches “ then told me they would call law enforcement
Midwest shooting range where I live is pretty laid back about everything, i pickup my brass everytime I shoot and havnt ever had anyone say anything to me, didn’t realize there was places that had problems with it, thank you for the video, very informative, can’t wait for the next one
I went to a range and saw a sign said "All brass that hits the floor becomes the property of (said range) including stripper clips". In Washington State.
@@gunfighterzero please forgive me, would you be happier if I said, early days of acceptance and popularity? I mean 86 was when it was developed, 89 when the feds used it and g2o was 91. Nevermind, I'll stick with what I wrote.
@@gunfighterzero and this is 2022, so less than ten years old and almost no one heard of it and nearly unavailable until 89. So I suppose perspective is the key. If you were 39, in perspective, wouldn't 8 years be early days? And my perspective is still late 80s before anyone really knew about it at a public level. But you seem like a guy that argues for the sake of it, because let's be honest, even if I grant 83, you're nitpicking.
@Mr Anderson I dunno who you think anyone and everyone is, But it was quite well known in gun circles. It was put into service in the FBI in 1989 so it was pretty much on everyone's radar. Not like it was some exotic wildcat cartridge. You got in when it first got popular not in the early days
There’s a rule at a range by me that says “no incendiary ammo” which I mean makes sense you don’t want a fire inside. But makes ya think who actuallly did that that it has to be a rule now 🤣
yeah the thought of going into a range just gives me the creeps. bunch of morons firing guns for kicks in one big room....i guess its a necessary evil sometimes though
Eh, depends on the time of day. There's only indoor ranges where I live... If i want a peaceful time at the range, I go there at like 10am, usually i'm the only person there. This is in NJ by the way, so 90% of the state doesn't own guns lol
Last time I was at a public (indoor) range, someone kept shooting my target. How bad of a shot do you have to be to constantly shoot someone else’s target?