Erud wrote:Hey, could you post that picture again with the pool of blood on the concrete at some shooting range to illustrate how complicated and deadly loading ammunition is? I realize the picture really had nothing to do with reloading, but it should still be a lesson to us all, for some reason. Personally, I think that no one should be allowed to even watch someone else reload until they have WRITTEN their own book on the subject - then and only then can they be trusted to be able to comprehend the mind-bending complexities involved in this death-defying hobby.
I wish I would have had access to this board back when I started reloading - could have saved myself lots of blown-up guns and countless thousands in ER bills!
Yeah well, have you ever been three feet and two seconds away from getting a piece of a 44 magnum pistol in your face? Obviously not. I have. Was shooting at Oakdale to the right of some young guy shooting a 44, and the cylinder gap was wide to begin with, so I was getting pieces of stuff spanging off my hands pretty good. He reloads, and is shooting DA, and goes BOOM! BOOM! BOOM! BOOMP! and the gun kind of wavers in his hand without him really lowering it, and I and one of his buddies start to say something, and he points the gun down at the ground. Yup, semi squib lodged the bullet solid in the bore about half way down. Turns out this guy's idiot Uncle had loaded up the ammo for him, and had obviously screwed the pooch completely on one of his powder charges. If that guy had been shooting just a little bit faster (like Timed Fire rate), he would have pulled that trigger again and my head was less than 3 feet away from that gun in the next bay.
It's real easy to crack wise when all the parts of your body are still attached. Oh it could never happen to ME!!! Oh no, it can't happen here! So, you think all the reloading accidents happen by the reloader waking up saying to himself, by God, I'm gonna screw up today and blow myself to kingdom come!! Nope. It's 100% reloader error.
What you're really saying with your sarcasm, of course, is that "I'm smarter and more careful than most of the reloaders out there, so I can just poo-poo all this doomsday stuff because it will never happen to me!"

Oh, Rodentman knows whereof he speaks also - he's missing one leg above the knee. Not a reloading accident, so feel free to discount his opinion of reloading safety too...