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They do.I was never given a choice on how I was to be taught. Not in grammar school, not in middle school, not in high school, not at the Naval Academy, not in any Navy school I ever was sent to, not in grad school, and not at any job I've ever had.
Millenials with that excuse can choke on a cock.
While I will concede that everyone has a preference for how information is conveyed, that is a preference. Saying "I don't" or "I can't" is a cop out. Reloading can be daunting- especially when your whole life the most dangerous thing you could imagine was a gun. No one wants their gun to explode in their face because of their incompetence. Then, you have a reloading manual that is several hundred pages in length.
"I have to read the whole thing?"
"No, it's for reference."
"Oh, ok. So where do I learn."
"In the book."
"You just said it was 'for reference.'"
"Oh for fuck's sake..."
I don't know anyone that learns less well with a mentor that without. But, most people suck at mentoring- this thread is witness to that. And, most people suck at being students. Beyond that, pretty much everyone sucks at honest introspection.
There is a lot going on in reloading. I was fortunate that when I was in grad school, a friend was into shooting and reloading. He took me through the basics and demystified the process. Seeing what he had told me what I needed, I then could experiment to see what I wanted to change/replace/add.
When I hear "I don't learn like that" I translate to "I don't know where to start and need some guidance to a good starting point..."
Well, I guess you think I just threw the book at this guy's feet and told him to read it and fuck off.
I guess you weren't there to see the several hours of hands on mentoring I gave him with my reloading equipment and the chapter by chapter review of the reloading manual showing him which chapters were key to know right away and which ones he could worry about later.
I guess I suck at mentoring. It couldn't be that he's a lazy fuck who thought his time was more valuable than mine.
OBTW, I did teach myself how to reload competently without any mentors. it was kinda easy after having to learn how to run nuclear reactors in the fucking Navy.
There's a big gap between writing a paper and stepping up to operate the real thing under stress.Oh, congrats on the nuclear reactor thing. I'd link to my dissertation, but it's not germane to the conversation.
All I want to do everyday is hold a gun and burn some gun powder.
You know what? Y’all are some crotchety bastards. No wonder you don’t have any friends.
Hate to break it to you but those are horses in the background, not dogs.. how well do you know your “friends”Only friends I need...wife and dogs in the the background.
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While I will concede that everyone has a preference for how information is conveyed, that is a preference. Saying "I don't" or "I can't" is a cop out. Reloading can be daunting- especially when your whole life the most dangerous thing you could imagine was a gun. No one wants their gun to explode in their face because of their incompetence. Then, you have a reloading manual that is several hundred pages in length.
"I have to read the whole thing?"
"No, it's for reference."
"Oh, ok. So where do I learn."
"In the book."
"You just said it was 'for reference.'"
"Oh for fuck's sake..."
I don't know anyone that learns less well with a mentor that without. But, most people suck at mentoring- this thread is witness to that. And, most people suck at being students. Beyond that, pretty much everyone sucks at honest introspection.
There is a lot going on in reloading. I was fortunate that when I was in grad school, a friend was into shooting and reloading. He took me through the basics and demystified the process. Seeing what he had told me what I needed, I then could experiment to see what I wanted to change/replace/add.
When I hear "I don't learn like that" I translate to "I don't know where to start and need some guidance to a good starting point..."
This. Everyone seems to want the results, but don't want to put in the work.A little over four decades ago, I asked a shooting mentor to "show me the ropes" of reloading. He gave me a manual and told to come back when I finished reading it. I read it at least three times before I saw him again. When I did he started asking questions, took me into his shop and began teaching me how to prep brass. It was probably a month or more before I touched a press.
If you're serious, you'll read the manual.
This. Everyone seems to want the results, but don't want to put in the work.
Given the fact that almost any newbie with solid equipment, quality components, and a general understanding of load data can produce math grade ammo from the get go, I actually do not blame them for going this route, if a problem arises, answers are at their fingertips within minutes. If crap is in spec<dies, chamber etc.., it'd be rare that problems are encountered till after the 2nd firing of brass.This. Everyone seems to want the results, but don't want to put in the work.
Why did you get rid of your m16? I rarely shoot mine and like long range stuff better but it is nice to have.
That has to be the most expensive 7.62x39 ammo ever made. I dont think you could gold plate it and make it worth $3 a round.
The ammo was only $1 per round, but that was around 1980 so I was just guessing that with inflation, it would have been equal to around $3 per round in today's money. In any case, my point was that lighting a $20 bill on fire would have had the $20 lasting longer than $20 worth of ammo in the magazine of the AK-47 back then.