Search found 1 match

by 03Lightningrocks
Tue Sep 22, 2020 4:29 pm
Forum: Never Again!!
Topic: ND at the gun club today during monthly pistol match
Replies: 30
Views: 15393

Re: ND at the gun club today during monthly pistol match

AndyC wrote: Tue Sep 22, 2020 11:29 am
imkopaka wrote: Tue Sep 22, 2020 9:39 am
Odinvalknir wrote: Mon Sep 14, 2020 8:24 pm Someone told me once, there are no ACCIDENTAL discharges. Only negligent ones. Point being when dealing with a tool such as a firearm, you shouldn't allow any accidents. I feel that's true. In the chemical plants our safety culture says ALL accidents are preventable, both with proper training and planning.
That's a common mindset. I disagree. While 99% of unintentional discharges are negligent, there are some that are truly accidental. Striker-fired handguns in particular have occasionally suffered from manufacturing defects that resulted in a shot going off when it shouldn't have. True accidental discharges are rare, but they happen.
:iagree:

I'll give you an example. I worked at an indoor range when I was young and an old codger came in with a Baby Browning .25 - he came out after shooting a while, saying he was having an issue with it.

I went in and had a look - the pistol was laying on its side and pointing downrange so I picked it up (keeping it pointed downrange, finger off the trigger) and used the heel mag-release to get the mag out to clear the pistol - whereupon it fired. The old coot went bananas but I didn't care about his erroneous opinion, my finger was nowhere near the trigger. I suspect the slight jarring of the pistol while trying to get the mag out was enough to allow the (very primitive) sear on the firing-pin to slip off and fire the pistol.

My negligence? Nope - just wear and tear combined with a poor design.

I guess what those people really mean is that almost always a claim of an AD can actually be traced back to negligence of some kind - but I don't usually bother to argue over how many angels can dance on the head of a pin.
I agree. An accidental discharge can happen. For instance I owned one of those Remington bolt actions that would fire a round off when you operated the bolt. The only part of that scenario happening that could be considered negligent would be having the barrel pointed in an unsafe direction when trying to operate the bolt. Firearms can malfunction. That is one reason we have a rule concerning the direction the muzzle is pointed in.

Return to “ND at the gun club today during monthly pistol match”