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Forums
Competition, Tactics & Training
Gun Club/Range Talk
Why do ranges not want you loading mags on shelves on back wall?
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<blockquote data-quote="tRidiot" data-source="post: 2973968" data-attributes="member: 9374"><p>Our range in Bartlesville generally manages itself quite well. There is no full-time super or range officer. Everyone for the most part watches out for each other and most of the people I have seen and met all have good range safety and etiquette.</p><p></p><p>Each shooting station has a switch and a flashing red light above it. If one switch on the line is tripped, all the lights and all the buzzers go off, alerting the entire line to cease firing, put their weapons down and back away from the bench. When all shooters have returned from downrange and flipped their switches back to off, the buzzer ceases sounding (it is intermittent) and the lights go out.</p><p></p><p>It works pretty well.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="tRidiot, post: 2973968, member: 9374"] Our range in Bartlesville generally manages itself quite well. There is no full-time super or range officer. Everyone for the most part watches out for each other and most of the people I have seen and met all have good range safety and etiquette. Each shooting station has a switch and a flashing red light above it. If one switch on the line is tripped, all the lights and all the buzzers go off, alerting the entire line to cease firing, put their weapons down and back away from the bench. When all shooters have returned from downrange and flipped their switches back to off, the buzzer ceases sounding (it is intermittent) and the lights go out. It works pretty well. [/QUOTE]
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Why do ranges not want you loading mags on shelves on back wall?
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