Population pre-event, fifteen million. Population post-event, ten million and dropping. Four Operatives. My share of the initial casualty count was one million, two hundred and fifty fucking thousand people. The number was meaningless except as a strategic calculation and a sick, horrible comment percolated thorough my thoughts.
I. Am. A. Weapon. Of. Mass. Destruction.
Kenneth Chinran A character in the book The Weapon, Page 440. By Michael Z. Williamson [A few days after I made this post on April 1 2008Freehold and The Weapon showed up on my desk at work courtesy of Tony. As Jim said, “Joe, if you haven’t read Freehold and The Weapon by Michael Z. Williamson you really ought to, they describe your ‘April Fools’ scenario almost to a T.”
I don’t have much time for reading dead tree stuff but I put these books on the top of my stack. I finished Freehold in about three or four months and I currently have only a handful of pages left on The Weapon. They are very good books. Had I decided to take the time they would have been the type of book I would have read straight through stopping only to tell Barb to leave me alone–I really didn’t need to eat or sleep yet.
Being an engineer I would have liked more detail on some things. But being a good engineer I can figure out the details for myself should I have the need.
I received the same email that Kevin did abut he got a post up before me so just head over to his place to see how to order this great shirt. Both of my daughters requested one and now proudly wear them.
For more information contact: Dave Thomas (360) 855-2245
Scholastic Steel Challenge Launches New Website
SEDRO-WOOLLEY, Wash. — The Scholastic Steel Challenge (SSC), the national team-oriented youth shooting program developed by the Steel Challenge Shooting Association (SCSA), announced that it has launched its new website at www.scholasticsteelchallenge.com.
The site features program information, team registration forms, scoring information, stage diagrams, program news and more. As the SSC program expands, participants will be able to track their scores against those of other teams from around the country and see who among them can claim the title of the nation’s fastest.
“The SSC website will play a key role in the program,” explained Scott Moore, director of SSC. “It will not only be the main information and resource center for coaches and parents, but because the SSC format allows shooters to directly compare their performance against that of others, we also expect teams to use the site to constantly track their progress and develop friendly rivalries with other teams around the country.”
“We also hope to expand the site to give competitors a community in which they can share information on shooting techniques and equipment as well as build the kinds of cross country friendships that many in the shooting sports already enjoy.”
The Scholastic Steel Challenge, which is funded in part by the firearms industry, is open to young men and women ages 12 to 20 and offers them the opportunity to compete as a four person team for a national title in the action pistol discipline of speed shooting.
Already SSC has received wide support from industry leaders such as the National Shooting Sports Foundation (NSSF), Smith & Wesson, the Outdoor Wire Digital Network, Action Target and Glock which have committed over $150,000 to the program.
For more information on the Scholastic Steel Challenge and the Steel Challenge Shooting Association please visit www.steelchallenge.com.
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About SCSA: The Steel Challenge Shooting Association (SCSA) is the governing body of the sport of Speed Shooting and organizer of the Steel Challenge World Speed Shooting Championships. To learn more about the Steel Challenge Shooting Association and the Steel Challenge visit the Web site at www.steelchallenge.com. There you will find diagrams of the stages of fire, complete listing of past results, a list of past champions, world record times and more.
I listened to all (I only had time for half of #7 which I had previously heard) the Vicious Circle podcasts on my way to/from Idaho this weekend. The most common topic is guns with some porn and technology discussions thrown in. My kind of stuff!
With very little structure, mediocre production quality, and a fair amount of rambling it’s never going to win any awards. But I enjoyed it. It certainly was much better than merely listening to road noise.
In some episodes (especially #8, We be hating) it sort of reminded me of gossipy Jr. High girls whispering to each other about someone else behind their back. And then there was another than made perhaps a few too many “short jokes” for me to be entirely comfortable with it (and I’m not short). But there wasn’t really anything I hadn’t said in private conversations before. But I wouldn’t make those sort of conversations public.
I’ll be adding more to my Zune as they come out for further entertainment while on the road.
Full disclosure:
#7, Boomershoot 2009, was very favorable about Boomershoot. Late in #5 a favorable mention of somethings I have said appears to be at least partial inspiration for episode #6. I think there was another favorable mention or two of me in some of the episodes as well.
I don’t believe these significantly affected my opinion of the podcasts but I thought you should know they might have.
Boomershoot ended as quickly as it began. It only felt like a few hours, but it was most of the day. I guess time flies when you’re blowing shit up.
ErnestThing May 11, 2009 Boomershoot 2009 [Yeah, time does seem to fly during Boomershoot. I sometimes worry that people aren’t getting their money’s worth out of the event because it’s all over so fast. But people start leaving before I call the final ceasefire so I can’t be that much of a spoil sport.–Joe]
ALWAYS take at least one knife to a gunfight, just in case you run out of spare mags.
Evelyn Logan 5/28/2009 From the email list NRAInstructorsRKBA. [Good point. You don’t have to reload a knife. But as I heard Greg Hamilton once say, “If I run out of ammo there will be lots of unused guns and ammo on the ground for me to pick up.”–Joe]
It sounds like they are talking greater than .30 caliber. My hottest loads with the highest BC bullets in my .300 Win Mag won’t meet the requirement of being supersonic at the target.
For those of you that want to run the numbers yourself assume range conditions of 400 feet above sea level and 75F.
One of the people participating at Boomershoot this year was a U.K. citizen. Via Facebook I found out the following:
I Got a call from the cops at 2300 last night, suggesting that I haven’t been shooting my guns enough.
It was the UK police on the phone, calling my US cel number. I have a UK firearms certificate – one of the requirements to keep my UK firearms certificate is that I must shoot every 12 months, and my UK rifle club just reported that I hadn’t done so… I told them that I’ve definitely shot in the past 12 months, so now I need to send them proof. This is, actually, the least surreal part of this experience.
So… in the land where handguns are banned and long guns are severely restricted the cops will call you and threaten to take away your firearms certificate if you haven’t been shooting enough.
Since I knew he had been shooting three inch square boxes filled with explosives dangling from paracord nearly 700 yards away just a three weeks ago I offered to confirm his story. He said if he needed my help he would let me know.
I couldn’t be in Phoenix with all the cool kids so I went to all the stores in town that sold ammunition and/or components. Here is what I found:
Walmart
Shotgun primers only
A little bit of brass and I bought all the .45 ACP brass they had
Virtually no handgun ammo
Virtually no powder
Tri-State
Lots of rifle and shotgun ammo
Lots of .40 S&W ammo
Three boxes of .45 ACP ammo but I bought two of them adhering to Tamara’s etiquette
Don’t carry reloading components
Big Five
Don’t carry reloading components
Virtually no handgun ammo
Some rifle ammo
Sure Shot
Lots of powder
Lots of used 9mm and .40 S&W brass
Shotgun primers only
Virtually no handgun ammo
Some rifle ammo
About half of Tri-State’s rifle ammo and in the foreground 2/3s of the .45 ACP ammo for sale in the city.
Apparently Barb called ahead for me. But I didn’t see any gun I really wanted except for the AR-50A1 and there was no indication Barb would allow me to buy the ammo to feed it.
Sure Shot had lots of powder and 9mm and .40 S&W brass.
Over the years I’ve been reading that a little bit of alcohol is good for your health. I, basically, don’t drink at all so it could be said that I was risking my health by not drinking. Not wanting to risk my health over something that was fairly easily remedied I decided maybe I would drink just a little bit every once in a while.
Red wine seems to get lots of nods from the medical researchers so I bought a bottle a couple months ago. I opened it up and had a small glass, maybe six ounces, tonight with my dinner.
I then started working on the mathematics for a nifty new way to do range estimation. I had an exceedingly difficult time doing the simplest of math problems. It wasn’t even algebra. It was simple ratios. Things that are normally intuitively obvious to me required that I work out several example in order to find the general equation. I think I finally got it but it must have taken me at least four times as long as normal and I don’t really trust my work.
No more wine for me except when it’s strictly a social situation. Why drink if it’s going to make me brain dead for the evening?
I’ve long been disgusted by Hollywood’s portrayal of sounds. Sounds in space, sound traveling at the speed of light, and the ridiculous sounds of gunfire made up in a studio. Even the news services will often do a time-shift, to synchronize the sound of a distant event with the video even though anyone who’s been alive long enough to understand what they’re seeing on TV knows that sound and light travel at different rates. I just, do, not, get why TV and movie people have to screw up reality so much. Far from adding anything, it subtracts from the final product.
For example, I think the long delay in the sound of a distant explosion at Boomershoot makes the experience more awesome. It adds to the perception of enormity. The movie, “Band of Brothers” is an attempt to show it like it really was, and for the most part they seem to have done a good job. Not when it comes to sound editing though. Super-sonic bullets whiz by, “whoosh-whoosh, zip, zip” and so on, and of course the sound always travels at the speed of light. It’s taking a serious subject and turning it into slapstick.
In the interest of universal understanding, I made this recording of .308 rifle fire from about 380 yards while setting up some rifles for Boomershoot. The camera is about 20 yards from the targets (yeah, I was holding the camera, but I was behind a hill from the gun and in radio communication with the shooter– completely safe). Each shot delivers multiple sonic effects or events. First is the “CRACK-hiss” (mini sonic boom) from the bullet. Take the sonic boom from a jet flying over, speed it up a few octaves, and you’ll have about the same thing. That bit is interesting in that it does not come from the gun, but from the bullet. You have no sense of the direction from which the bullet came. Imagine standing in the water on the shore of a lake and feeling the wake from a passing boat on your legs. From that sensation alone, you have no idea of where the boat came from, and little or no information about its direction of travel. The bullet’s wake, as sound, gives you no more information– just a “snap” that seems to come from nowhere. Next is the sound of impact, which is only audible in the first shot in this recording. Then comes the “boom” from the muzzle blast, followed by the reverberation in the surrounding hills and trees.
Note that the reverb almost seems louder than the crack-boom. That’s due to the AGC (Automatic Gain Control) circuitry, A.K.A. “compression” built into the camera. The initial crack drives circuitry into gain reduction, and the gain comes back up for the reverb. To get the relative levels of the events portrayed accurately, I’ll have to take a full-range stereo recorder into the field on another day and use its un-compressed level mode. If you have some nice speakers (and pretty powerful, as the dynamic range is quite wide) you’ll hear it as if you were actually standing there. Regular CD audio has a dynamic range of about 100dB, IIRC– close enough. This recording isn’t all that bad, though. Crank up the volume, use good speakers, and boost the bass to get the full effect (the mini electret mic on the camera isn’t great for bass response);
This year I decided to have a Boomershoot Gun Blogger Day. If you were a gun blogger you could show up on Thursday and get a behind the scenes tour and help (with the proper ATF paperwork) or watch the explosives being made. As it turned out most of it consisted of me standing around and telling stories. I had hoped they would have some fun ideas for doing things with the explosives like putting them in the water and/or mud, making craters, or blowing holes in old logs or some such thing. But everyone seemed to have a good time anyway, even after putting out the fire from the fireball demo.
Here is the list of Boomershoot Gun Bloggers and their posts about the event who were in attendence for at least part of Boomershoot (arranged by their shooting position on the line):
I think a “Cache” is two, an “Arsenal” is 2-4, a “Stockpile” is 3-5, and an “Armory” is more than 4. The confusion stems from the fact that there is an overlap, for example, a “Stockpile” can also be an “Armory” OR an “Arsenal”. As for me, I’m going for the much heralded status of “Third World Military Power”, which is 20 or more and includes reloading equipment or at the very least “Warlord” status, which is more than 10.
Matt Groom Comment to More than a cache? May 4th, 2009 at 2:23 pm [This reminds me of about 10 or 12 years ago when a bunch of us gun nuts at Microsoft started referring to each others homes as “compounds” and buying a few bricks of .22 rim-fire ammo as “resupplying our arsenal”. This was because of the way the press treated gun owners. Times have not changed much.–Joe]