Chirs Mete!I can only get through this thread if I assume that the “organizational” is from down under and then read everything he’s posted in the most absurd kiwi accent I can conjure up.
Fucking press check a bolt gun.
Don’t leave your bolt gun laying around with a round in the chamber. If you’re not shooting it, the bolt is open and the magazine is out. Period. From an organiszzationall viewpoint.
I think its interesting youre viewing this as a binary, you're behind the gun ready to shoot or the gun is laying around on its own.
I'm getting the vibe that you're viewing this as a static transaction of lead on target. Maybe that's why you took slight for excluding PRS shooters?
Conceptually, do you think there could be a time that you might need to load, advance to threat, or change position in a threat environment with a round in the chamber in case you need to react to threat?
If you can entertain such a hypothetical scenario, would you move with the safety on, or would you spit the chambered round and move with the bolt to the rear, or completely unload? The ARs it's easy, it's just safety on. The bolt guns.... different theories. I'm open to the idea that I don't know everything which is why i posted the question. People do things differently for different reasons. Eg, we press check. We want to know there's a round in the chamber. You don't seem open to the idea that there's different ways of doing things. It could also be context or organisational operation dependant. One organisation may have a different requirement. For exe, your threat appears to be like a pizza and is delivered to your firing zone at which point you close the bolt and fire, then go back to your keyboard to be pretentious.
I'm am genuinely interested if you can stop being a chode for 2 seconds - but if you don't know, you can just not post.