
Hings every gun owner
What's up guys? This is Chris here, and today we are going to be talking about five tips. Every gun owner should know. This will apply to a lot of new gun owners, but every gun owner can learn something from this video and take something away. So hopefully this helps out. Now, some of these are going to be common well known, and some of these are going to be a little more obscure, but all of them you can use. Now, before we get started, I do want to mention quick my patron supporters. Thank you guys. The biggest support of the channels and if you want to help out the channel, that's the best way to do it. Just go to the link in the description below and sign up. Also in that description is do a link to a local homeless shelter at the YSS. It brings you right to the Donny page and then also a link to my Twitter honest outlaw at x.
We're doing a lot of cool stuff over there, so make sure you go over there and subscribe. Now I want to talk about the first one and probably the most obvious one, and if you've ever been around a firearm safety class, you're going to get this one. The Firearms safety rules. Now these are things you should absolutely know because they cover a broad perspective of safety in a really quick way, in an easy way. They have a stacking structure, so if you break one of the firearm safety rules are usually good. You have to break multiple ones to actually have any issues. So let's go over those really quick. First, always keep the guns pointed in a safe direction. Do not point your gun in anything that you do not want to destroy. That's pretty obvious. Assume that there is a laser coming out of every gun that you ever touch right out of the barrel and never sweep anything you wouldn't want to remove forcefully from whatever you're aiming at.
That's a good way to go actually. That's actually a lot of times what I think. I kind of think there's a bore cider in every single gun. If I'm at a gun show, if I'm at a gun store, if I'm at somebody's house, it doesn't matter. I always make sure the gun is pointed in a safe direction and that laser little thing helps me out with that. Try to think of a light saver coming out of it, and I don't want to cut anyone's dick or foot off. So make sure to sweep that low and don't muzzle sweep people. It's also pretty rude and it shows your ineptitude with firearms if you do that. So if you're at a gun store and you do this makes you look like an idiot. Second thing, keep your trigger finger off the trigger until you are ready to shoot.
I would also add that you want to keep your finger completely out of the trigger guard instead of just off the trigger because sometimes people keep their finger like this and then you accidentally bump it or you're kind of a stressful situation and the gun goes off. So just keep that bad boy up here and that again makes you look like more of an expert gun handler. We've kept the gun in a safe direction. We've kept our finger out of the trigger guard. Now you're going to have to know what your target is and what's beyond it. So make sure that if you're firing at anything, especially if this is a serious situation, like a life or death situation, make sure you know what your target is and then what's past it. So if you miss you don't hit anything behind it or if you hit, you don't go through your target and hit something behind it, you don't want to hit as well.
And then we also want to treat all guns like they're loaded even if they're not. So if somebody hands you a firearm and they cleared it and you're like, here you go, this is safe, and they hand it to me at the gun store, I'm still going to grab the gun, I'm still going to keep my finger out of the trigger. I'm still going to keep that gun pointed in a safe direction. And then I'm also going to chamber check the gun just to make sure. Now I know that seems like excessive. A lot of people say that, but the reality is is the layers of defense are going to keep you from fucking up. If you have multiple levels of safety, you're going to have less of a chance of having anything bad actually happen. And firearms are awesome and they're fun and they're super cool to use and they can be an extremely useful tool, but we definitely don't want to be one of those statistics that you'll find on CNN.
And the last one is going to be never use drugs or alcohol while you're operating a firearm that seems relatively obvious. Don't do anything with a gun that you wouldn't do with a car. Now number two, I discussed this a little bit with the chamber checking, but make sure you know how to safely handle your firearm and that is going to be loading and unloading. That is going to be chamber checking and using all the firearm safety rules, and that is also going to be clearing malfunction safely if they happen. Now with the semi-automatic pistol, it is pretty easy simply if you want to make sure the firearm is safe, you just make sure there's no magazine in the gun. We have no magazine here, but we also have to check the chamber because there can be a full magazine or there could be one in the chamber or there could be both.
So if we have a full magazine here and we have it in the gun, we pull the magazine out of the gun, we see that there was a round in the magazine. So the first thing I'm going to do is lock the slide back, look in there and if it's a little dark at all, you can stick your finger in there. I know back when I was growing up, people were always like, make sure you get your finger in there and you look for an empty chamber. I actually look for a full chamber because every time you look for an empty chamber, you're usually going to see one and sometimes a little bit confusing in your brain. So a lot of times I make sure to train myself to look for brass, and if I see brass then I'm like, oh shit, we have a real problem because sometimes you can even eject a magazine and rack the slide back and there's a round that the extractor didn't catch and it's still stuck in there.
I've actually had that quite a few times. And on top of that, you could even potentially have a squibb load where there is a round in the middle of the chamber. So make sure that you know how to check your chamber and check your firearm and make sure it's safe. The second thing is loading and unloading you. Basically with a semi-automatic pistol, you essentially just load the magazine in and rack the slide and you are loaded up and ready to go. And if your firearm has a manual safety, you can put it on at that point, or if it has a decocker, you can do that as well. Now that is the basic way to operate a semi-automatic pistol, but every gun has its operation. So if you have an AR 15, you're going to have to load the mag rack charging handle and put it on safe.
It's a similar mechanism for every gun. However, it's going to be in different locations. All the safety is going to be different locations. The magazines are going to be in different locations. Sometimes you'll have a rifle with the magazines in the grip. Sometimes it'll be in the front of the grip, sometimes it'll a bolt pop, it'll be behind. So make sure read your manual and know how to safely handle your firearm. If it's a double barrel shotgun or it's a semi-automatic shotgun, they're going to load and operate differently, and you're going to have to know that. And then obviously once you know how to load and unload your firearm correctly, clear malfunctions is basically that process except when you don't want to. Now these things have a lot of places where you can find them. You can go to an instructor and learn this if you want to spend some money, or you could simply just look up a YouTube video or read the manual that comes with your firearm.
And if it didn't come with a manual, a lot of companies actually have online manuals that you can download on their website. Now the third thing you're going to need to know is how to take down and clean and maintain your firearm. Luing and cleaning is actually an important part of firearm usage. Not only does it keep the firearm working when you want it to work, but it keeps it from degrading over time. So if you don't lube the gun, it can get rusty, especially depending on what type of metal or depending on what type of coating it has. If you have sco, less so if you have bluing more. So particular guns need to be lubed or cleaned less or more, and that's an important thing to know too when you're getting into your firearm. If you own a 1911, it's a great gun, but it needs to be lubed more and something like this Glock here, it just depends on what type of gun it is, but you will have to clean it eventually and you will have to clean the internals of the slide and you'll probably have to clean the trigger group out at some point.
So it's good to know how to disassemble your firearm with Glocks. With striker fired pistols are relatively easy. You usually have a take down lever and a simple mechanism with a sig or an m and p, they have a lever. You push down, lock the slide to the rear and slide it off with a Glock. You pull the slide to the rear, you pull down the take down levers and slide it off. You take out the barrel assembly and the spring, and then you just basically do mediocre cleaning for anything up to 5,000 rounds. And then usually at that point you want to do a detailed cleaning, which you probably will need your manual or a video tutorial. Now, if you're just going out to the range for the first time, or if you go out a couple times a year, really all you have to do is lube the firearm, not clean it back in the day when I was younger, like in the nineties, it was literally clean your firearm every time you use it.
That's not the case these days, especially with modern firearms, you don't really need to do that. So you do need to lube your firearm pretty consistently, especially if it's an air 15 or if it's a CZ 75, like a tight one. Anything that has tight tolerances generally needs a little bit more lube. Glocks, super loose m and Ps, they don't need much, but if you just want a lube it the correct way, there's obviously manual tutorials if you want to do it really quickly, basically just need to do it on any spot that wears. So if you pull your gun apart and you can see where on the slide or where the slide connects to the frame or where the barrel lockup is with the slide, those things need lube. And you can do that literally without even taking your gun apart really quick if you want.
A lot of times they just lube the top of the chamber, lock the slide back, put some on the back slide rails on the front, and then just run the gun a bunch of times. Now, that's not the best way to lube your firearm, but it's a quick way, especially if you're experiencing malfunctions at the range and you don't want to take time to do things correctly. Now, the fourth thing you're going to need to know is how to store your firearm. And that's going to be different for every firearm, every person and every house in every state. That is going to be up to you how you want to do that, and you're going to have to decide whether you want it to be able to be accessed super quickly or whether you want it to be really, really safe. And a lot of that isn't going to depend just on those things, but it depends on who's in the house, right?
Because there is a certain age of a person that can handle and understand firearm usage, and there is an age where you are below that and you simply cannot. And if you have little children out there, you can teach them gun safety, that's great, but if five-year-old makes mistakes, so you're definitely going to need that gun locked up if you have children in the house and they have all kinds of cool safes these days, whether it comes from you want something like Gallo Tech like I, I personally love Gallo Tech. I have some of their cages and I have some of their display cases, and I have that in my locked gun room. I don't actually display my guns in my house in a room that can't be locked. So I like to keep the ammunition locked up away from the guns. In two separate cases.
I like to keep all the guns locked up in a gun cage in inside a locked room or in my several gun safe. Now, if you have a gun out for self-defense, I understand that if you have a concealed carry pistol, I would recommend, especially if you have children to still lock those things up, they have biometric safes that can be entered really, really quickly. There's also singular safes that you can open quickly, and there's those huge big old ones that are fireproof all those work. It just depends on how quickly you want to access your firearm. And number five, how to shoot accurately. Now, you don't necessarily need to learn how to shoot quick, although I do recommend that a good basis of time and speed with recall management and all that stuff. But the basics are there. If you want to be a good concealed carrier, if you want to be a good home defender, you want to be a good steward, you basically need good tactics, good.
And then you need a little accuracy, the right tactics, the right decision-making can lead to an advantage. In a home defense situation, you take a corner, you hide behind a bed, you hide behind cover and you call 9 1 1 and you wait for them to come to you. If you don't have people in the house that you need to protect, don't go around there clearing rooms like fucking Rambo. If you don't know what you're doing, just be safe. Stay in a room that you know is safe, and if you know there's somebody in the house, call 9 1 1. You barricade yourself and you wait for backup. But if you've got to shoot accurately, bigger guns are easier to shoot than small guns. Keep that in mind. So if you have a 1911, that's going to be easier to shoot than something like this. So if you want to be able to shoot this accurately, one thing you're going to have to understand is grip a little bit, trigger control side alignment and all that stuff.
And I actually did a previous video, how to shoot a gun correctly fixing low and left. That does fix low and left, but it basically gives you a tutorial on how to shoot a handgun in general. So if you're worried about this topic, I'm not going to cover it too much. I have a detailed complete video on that that I did last week. All you have to do is look it up or you can go through my Channel Q. But the reasons why you want to shoot accurately is a shooting at somebody, not hitting them is a liability. Every bullet that leaves your firearm has a lawyer attached to it, and you want to make sure that that aim is absolutely true. And the way to do that is practice. And the best way to practice is with live rounds on a range, a good time anyway.
So I don't see a reason why you wouldn't. If you are price restricted, there's always the manta systems and there's always dry fire practice. There's tons of drills. You can do a dry fire practice and only spend a little bit a month and then be an excellent shooter. And that way you don't have to worry about shooting anybody that you don't want to. But also being able to eliminate threats in stressful situations. You want to be a really good marksman if somebody takes your wife hostage, I'll tell you that there's a lot of situations where you want to have expert accuracy, and I think to be a gun owner and to own a gun for self-defense, it's your responsibility to be proficient with it. And then I don't want to give a bonus that seemed obvious, but my wife and I talked about it enough that I figured I would just put it on here and instead of six things, guys need to know, I thought five had a better ring to it.
So bonus, know your local laws. That seems obvious, but there's actually a lot of things that change and move depending on what state you're in or what age you are or what time the year it is for whatever elected officials that you specifically have. They change aid restrictions, they change part restrictions, and they change magazine restrictions all the time. I know a lot of old guys that own pistol brace guns that had no idea they were illegal at one point, so you have to keep up with the local laws a little bit, and the best way to do that is online sources. Honestly, the A TF sources sometimes, but mostly your local sheriff and your local law enforcement, that's a good way to go because they should know. And if they don't know, they can't arrest you for it Anyway, outlaw
Rules.
Outlaw rules. Yeah. Overall, I wanted this to be a quick video and kind of a overview of some things that you might want to know without getting too deep in them. We do have lots of videos on a lot of these topics, and if you want to know more about that, feel free to search my channel, but also feel free to search YouTube. There are many sources, especially like U-S-C-C-A that you can go to and learn a lot of things about some of the topics I just discussed. And if you're concerned about it, make sure to hit me with a comment and we can do a dedicated video on it. If you like this video, please like and subscribe. Please stop by our local homeless shelters and remember to recycle. I'll check you later.
Credit: Honest Outlaw