Heym SR20
Well-Known Member
I am cross dominant, left eyed, right handed to write with but I don’t have an issue using left hand to use tools.
I much prefer left handed rifles as they just much more intuitive to use. Yes I can a right handed bolt with either hand, and I do have a right handed Rigby rifle.
My father is naturally left handed but was made to use his right hand at School. He draws with his left and writes with his write. And he shoots with his left.
Going back military firearms and weapons. They have always been right handed. With a matchlock and then flintlocks, the pan was on the side away from your face, for the simple reason is that it spurts out sideways. And troops were drilled to use the rifles as right handed troops. Fundamentally the military didn’t really care. If you were a soldier you used the weapons provided right handed. If you were left handed, you just learned the other way round. If you were a poor shot or poor with a sword, your days on the battlefield weren’t that long. Soldiers were expected to die.
This continues to this day. Most armies issue right handed weapons. If you don’t pass marksmanship at basic training you are either not taken forward or you are streamed to other jobs - gun crew, porter, drivers or any one of the many other roles that are there in the military.
As for failures of cartridges. Go to a shooting range or gun club. In my experience there will be stoppages due to ammo on most days. Thankfully catastrophic failures are rare, but they do happen. They are not reported widely, which I think is not helpful, but they happen. A friend is a ballistics expert and has investigated a number of incidents of cartridge failure of one sort or another.
I much prefer left handed rifles as they just much more intuitive to use. Yes I can a right handed bolt with either hand, and I do have a right handed Rigby rifle.
My father is naturally left handed but was made to use his right hand at School. He draws with his left and writes with his write. And he shoots with his left.
Going back military firearms and weapons. They have always been right handed. With a matchlock and then flintlocks, the pan was on the side away from your face, for the simple reason is that it spurts out sideways. And troops were drilled to use the rifles as right handed troops. Fundamentally the military didn’t really care. If you were a soldier you used the weapons provided right handed. If you were left handed, you just learned the other way round. If you were a poor shot or poor with a sword, your days on the battlefield weren’t that long. Soldiers were expected to die.
This continues to this day. Most armies issue right handed weapons. If you don’t pass marksmanship at basic training you are either not taken forward or you are streamed to other jobs - gun crew, porter, drivers or any one of the many other roles that are there in the military.
As for failures of cartridges. Go to a shooting range or gun club. In my experience there will be stoppages due to ammo on most days. Thankfully catastrophic failures are rare, but they do happen. They are not reported widely, which I think is not helpful, but they happen. A friend is a ballistics expert and has investigated a number of incidents of cartridge failure of one sort or another.
