Darkside wrote:
Now is as good a time as any for a quick refresher.
Rule 1
Treat every gun as if it were loaded.
This means that if you pick up a weapon, even one you may have previously unloaded, you check it. You check it again. You check it again. When handed a weapon, I will drop the magazine and cycle its action three times or in the case of a revolver, open the cylinder and examine each chamber. You examine the barrel. Almost every AD comes with the explanation "I thought it was empty". This is impossible if you follow rule 1.
This actually happened to me once where someone handed me a loaded gun thinking it was empty. If you want the story I'll tell it in a reply.
Rule 2
Never point the muzzle at anything you don't want to destroy
This goes with rule 1 nicely. If you manage to fuck up royally by ignoring rule 1 you can't fuck up if you follow rule 2. It's simple. There's no mechanics involved. Don't point the gun at anything you wouldn't mind destroying.
Rule 3
Keep your booger hook off the bang switch
If you fuck up rule 1 and rule 2, rule 3 is there to save you. You don't put your finger on the trigger until you're ready to actually fire the weapon. On my preferred platform, it is simple to let your fingertip of your index finger ride the front trigger guard and easily slip onto the trigger when necessary. I'm always watching films looking for proper trigger discipline and love it when I see it. It's becoming more and more common a sight. Watch for it.
Rule 4
Be sure of your target and what is behind it
Shot spreads. Bullets can over penatrate (those pesky "safer" ball ammo rounds are more likely to hit something behind your target than those evil scary hollow points by the way). You have to anticipate that you will, not may, will hit something behind your target. Hopefully all you'll ever see is a paper target with a professional backstop behind it. But in a defensive situation awareness is the difference between life and death.
Darkos rules... unofficial but smart things to know...
Hitting moving targets is pretty fucking hard.
Hitting someone with a bullet won't make them fly back like they were hit by a truck. Lots of times people might not know that they were hit.
Aim for center mass. You're not going to hit a leg or a shoulder or score a head shot on a moving target.
Don't go guns blazing. Controlled fire is critical to winning an engagement. It took me years and tens of thousands of shots to perfect a double tap with my 1911 and every gun is different. I can't pull them off for shit with my wife's gun but I know my guns balance and recoil. I'm still training on Mozambiques. I'm good, not great at them.
Learn to reload in the dark.
If you're going to carry, be prepared to carry in condition 1 unless you're a highly skilled Israeli operator.
Go to the range. Shoot often. Shoot often. Did I mention often? I've got close to 50k 1911 .45 ACP rounds downrange and I'm still little more than a skilled amateur.
You always, always, always clear every weapon you touch. If i pick up a gun to hand to you, I will drop the magazine, cycle the action three times and hand it to you with the action open and pointed down. I will expect you to accept the weapon, check to ensure there is no magazine in it and cycle the action three times.
Sounds stupid but don't look into the barrel from the business end.
Eyes and ears.
If it's safe to do so at the range you go to shoot from multiple positions. Sure it's easy enough to hit a paper target with the weaver stance but can you do it one handed? Can you do it with your left if you're a righty? Can you shoot from a prone position? On one knee?
If you carry a holstered weapon practice drawing safely with snap caps. Practice a lot. Then practice more.
As much as possible, hold the gun with two hands. This stuff you see in the movies where people are practically marksmen when shooting with one hand is bullshit.
Unless your job dictates it, you're getting ready to shoot, or you feel like your weapon is needed in a particular environment, have the safety on.
Clean your weapon on a regular basis, preferably after you're done firing it.