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Also, someone buy this…. You need it…3. The Exo K4 was dynamite. Despite all my own issues, it felt really comfortable and carried a load really well. And when I was unloaded, it got really small which was nice as well. Highly recommend the Exo line. And hint hint, there is a nice K3 for sale on this forum
Yeah I’m curious too. I always hike on an empty chamber. Not worth slipping or falling and letting one fly. I don’t trust mechanical safeties.“1. CLICK... this will haunt me for a bit. Can't tell you how many times I made sure that chamber was loaded when I shut the car door during 3rd season. I was not making that mistake again. A rookie move that luckily only cause me a bull... and not elk all together.”
Like the lessons learned but curious what the general consensus is on this - I make a general point of keeping my rifle unloaded unless it’s in hand and I am still hunting through some very promising areas. What’d you all do?
I dropped a loaded gun with the barrel pointing at me once. Gun never went off but that was enough for me to never load the gun until I see my quarry at a close enough range. I had an angel looking over me that day.“1. CLICK... this will haunt me for a bit. Can't tell you how many times I made sure that chamber was loaded when I shut the car door during 3rd season. I was not making that mistake again. A rookie move that luckily only cause me a bull... and not elk all together.”
Like the lessons learned but curious what the general consensus is on this - I make a general point of keeping my rifle unloaded unless it’s in hand and I am still hunting through some very promising areas. What’d you all do?
This has been my preferred approach.Alone= When hiking from point A to point B- rifle slung & chamber empty. When still hunting from point A to point B = round in chamber and rifle in my hands. When it's multiple people hunting = a trusted individual takes the lead with a round chambered and rest follow with empty chambers.
Here are 16 pages on the topic. I feel like there is an older thread as well.Like the lessons learned but curious what the general consensus is on this - I make a general point of keeping my rifle unloaded unless it’s in hand and I am still hunting through some very promising areas. What’d you all do?
Did you disassemble the mag after that to see if there was debris caught in there causing the malfunction?I should also clarify that particular point regarding "click" was written half in jest, half right after a hunt in which I was hunting dark timber and had a loaded round, as I was solo and walking about as slow as could be.
I am 95% sure the problem that produced the "click" was an overloaded spring in the mag. For example, I loaded 4 rounds into a spare mag on this latest hunt and at the end of the hunt, I went to put the rounds back into the box for storage. I manually slid the top round out and the bottom three rounds didn't budge. They stayed exactly where they were as if that 4th and top round was still in there. Only after I tapped the magazine with some force did the round move to the top. Bottom line, 3 round in the mag, 4 is asking for trouble.
I will be doing that over the holiday break as part of my post hunting season cleaning routine. That said, I don't think that magazine left my pack in order to get dirty. But we shall soon see!Did you disassemble the mag after that to see if there was debris caught in there causing the malfunction?
Without reviving a 10+ page discussion, I chamber a round if I'm in country holding critters. That may be right out of the truck, or waiting until moving through an easement etc, just depends.Yeah I’m curious too. I always hike on an empty chamber. Not worth slipping or falling and letting one fly. I don’t trust mechanical safeties.
Curved Victorinix boning knives are fantastic for all butchering work, and do 95% of what is needed perfectly well. Most butchers I’ve known prefer them in 6” for all work in the shop, until saws and 12” knives are needed.