So, just what is the .357 Magnum like
in a confined space?
Monday, July 27, 2009 Filed in:
General gun
stuff, Competition, Humor
A number of years back my wife and I served as coordinators for the
defensive pistol matches at our gun club. Our matches were somewhat
similar to IDPA, but without the endless rules to make everything
"fair." We enjoyed a cadre of participants that were very involved,
and loved to build sets for stages.
(Some of them got a little carried away; one particular gentleman
once designed a stage that featured cardboard cows. Yes, cows,
complete with udders. He's a very creative sort.)
We held our matches on our club's metallic silhouette range, so we
had only a large open field in which to set up stages. We'd usually
set up four "open" stages (you could see the entire thing), but
also liked to set up one secret stage - the participants couldn't
see anything until they were actually in it. The way we usually
accomplished this was to hang large tarps on portable stakes to
block the view, but there were other approaches.
One particular match several guys got together and constructed a
dark tunnel. The premise was that you were walking down an alley at
night, and targets would swing out or come charging toward you. It
was a technical marvel, and all contained in a narrow structure
made of wood and black plastic ("visqueen.") As I recall, it was
about 8 feet wide, 8 feet tall, and perhaps 30 feet long.
Since the premise was darkness, the entire thing was sheathed in
that black plastic - including the roof. It took quite some time to
build, so the guys had been on the range the day before to do the
construction. When we arrived the next morning to start the match,
we found that it had rained overnight. That wasn't a problem,
because the black plastic roof had kept everything dry. What we
didn't think about were the large puddles of water on that
plastic.
Since I was the match director, I got to shoot first. I was using a
Ruger SP101 with the 2-1/8" barrel and fire-breathing 125grain JHP
magnums. The range officer and I entered the structure, closed the
door, and the buzzer went off.
I saw the first target and put two rounds into it, and immediately
heard peals of laughter behind me. Outside of the enclosure, the
other shooters were becoming hysterical.
I finished the stage (as I recall, there were three more targets)
and exited the enclosure to find the laughter had diminished only
slightly. People in the crowd told me that my first shot had
created such a large amount of pressure in the enclosure that the
sides were pushed out and the pooled water on the roof had been
thrown twenty feet into the air. The effect, they said, looked like
a Looney Toons cartoon of a stick of dynamite exploding in a
barrel.
In the heat of the moment I didn't really notice the concussion,
but the range officer mentioned that he didn't want to follow me so
closely any more!
-=[ Grant ]=-
Tags: .357