
Wapiti wrote:Nowhere near a gun, which were locked up elsewhere, but some ammo was found.
The license owner was charged with, as I was told by the blokes in the gunshop, "unsecured ammunition" and had his license revoked and guns taken pending .

Zappa wrote:I'm also conscious of this, when I get a knock on the door for a safe inspection, or my missus rings the cops for a unrelated manner and they spot the powder on my bench.
Generally anything that needs a license to buy, I tend to put away. Pain in the backside emptying the hopper everytime you leave the house but give them any excuse these days and you're pinged.


Wapiti wrote:Heard some news in town regarding a bloke who had police attend his place on a shooting related matter,
it seems that some new residents from out of town had made a complaint about a small holding next door, I think the places are 20-50-100 acre blocks where people pursue their dreams in having a few cows, chooks, goats etc to enjoy sort of being self-sufficient.
The kind of places close to town where people move in from the cities 100's of km away to supposedly enjoy the "laid-back country lifestyle" - as the real estate agents term it.
New neighbours moved in next to this family, and called the police about some "unsafe and frightening use of firearms" they were complaining about. Cops just did their job, attended the place and spoke to the family and found nothing illegal as far as firearms use had occurred.
However during discussions they discovered, in a shed, old-mates reloading set up and there was some ammo unattended being made on a reloading bench, with some ammo just having been assembled.
Nowhere near a gun, which were locked up elsewhere, but some ammo was found.
The license owner was charged with, as I was told by the blokes in the gunshop, "unsecured ammunition" and had his license revoked and guns taken pending a court hearing in town.
Not good, and this is going to cost this family quite a bit of money in legal fees, not to mention that it appears they inadvertently broke the law.
So, a tip, maybe do an emu parade and make sure there is no assembled ammo (or powder, primers) laying around unsecured to invite a charge that may be very stressful. Yeah I know, victimless crime, chase the real criminals, all that stuff, but when this happens you can't go back in time and fix it.


OyKurwa wrote:Well, as s**t as the situation with the neighbours is you have to follow the regs, which means all firearms and ammunition are secured. That shouldn't need to be a reminder, it should just be BAU for anyone who shoots and reloads.
The city people moving rural and complaining about shooters is a very real issue. I dealt with a dispute many years ago where some people had moved from Melbourne to a big rural block. Their neighbour was a mad deer hunter, who had a huge property and would legally shoot on it. These people would call 000 every time the guy took a shot on his own land.
I had a conversation with them where I explained that he was not breaking any law, and they were essentially making vexatious 000 calls. This earned me a complaint file.
They then switched from making firearm job 000 calls to instead calling in noise complaints, and started a noise pollution dispute through council which was still going when I left the area.
I felt sorry for that bloke, he was doing nothing wrong and the neighbours were completely, "Noone should own guns", types who were making life as hard as they possibly could for him.
If anything it's a great example of why suppressors should be legal and regulated as PPE.


OyKurwa wrote:Well, as s**t as the situation with the neighbours is you have to follow the regs, which means all firearms and ammunition are secured. That shouldn't need to be a reminder, it should just be BAU for anyone who shoots and reloads.
The city people moving rural and complaining about shooters is a very real issue. I dealt with a dispute many years ago where some people had moved from Melbourne to a big rural block. Their neighbour was a mad deer hunter, who had a huge property and would legally shoot on it. These people would call 000 every time the guy took a shot on his own land.

bigrich wrote:
good post, very timely topic . one other thing is ammunition being labelled . factory ammo in factory boxes is fine , but reloads in ammo containers are supposed to be labelled , calibre, number or rounds . i write that with permanent marker on top of my ammo cases . it's another reason you can get pinged
so the complainants in this case moved to the country , then complained cause the working farmer next door was using firearms . FFS. saw a news story a few years ago about a similar situation where a woman was crying and distraught about roo culling on the property next door .FFS again !
betcha these same tossers are the type to let their kids ride trailbikes non stop around their property boundary annoying the p!ss out of their neighbours . no wonder folk out in the regions are suspicious of people from the coast

Wapiti wrote:bigrich wrote:
good post, very timely topic . one other thing is ammunition being labelled . factory ammo in factory boxes is fine , but reloads in ammo containers are supposed to be labelled , calibre, number or rounds . i write that with permanent marker on top of my ammo cases . it's another reason you can get pinged
so the complainants in this case moved to the country , then complained cause the working farmer next door was using firearms . FFS. saw a news story a few years ago about a similar situation where a woman was crying and distraught about roo culling on the property next door .FFS again !
betcha these same tossers are the type to let their kids ride trailbikes non stop around their property boundary annoying the p!ss out of their neighbours . no wonder folk out in the regions are suspicious of people from the coast
Thanks Rich, another good reminder about reloaded ammo being labelled...
Looks like the latte pollies really have been thinking, I mean, when your ammo is stolen by miscreant interlopers from outta town, where there aren't any coppers to harass them stealing... from people who work and pay taxes to support the performance-expectation-free (except from the revenue raising numbers to meet on a weekly basis) politicians and police.
It's so important that the low-IQ thieves can sell-on that ammo to people who can actually read what the headstamps say, so the crims can match them to their stolen guns.


Fester wrote:I am not so sure about the labelling of ammo box laws, and I reckon I would have heard of it if it was a legality in the Nanny State of Wales.
There is a rule for flying with ammo, needs to be in the factory box.
The tree huggers are the new norm, and cops come to every shooting complaint.
As they bring their latte-sipping rules and habits with them and arrogance means they never change, they should only be given 1 or 2 chances before the cops threaten them with a time-wasting penalty.
Get that dirtbike fence track going and they will not think gunshots are so bad.


bladeracer wrote:
I only made 783rds this month as I'm waiting on bullets. I need to do about 4000 .44-40's and .38's with the powder I'm using (for Cowboy), then I can do 1000-odd AS50N .38 and .44-40 Wadcutter loads (for precision ISSF),


Jackaroo wrote:bladeracer wrote:
I only made 783rds this month as I'm waiting on bullets. I need to do about 4000 .44-40's and .38's with the powder I'm using (for Cowboy), then I can do 1000-odd AS50N .38 and .44-40 Wadcutter loads (for precision ISSF),
.44-40 for ISSF??????

bladeracer wrote:Jackaroo wrote:bladeracer wrote:
I only made 783rds this month as I'm waiting on bullets. I need to do about 4000 .44-40's and .38's with the powder I'm using (for Cowboy), then I can do 1000-odd AS50N .38 and .44-40 Wadcutter loads (for precision ISSF),
.44-40 for ISSF??????
Classic Pistol - Colt 1873



Wapiti wrote:If I'm up on a hilltop near my boundary and hear a shot, I'll be concerned a little too until I see what for or why.
If I see my neighbour on a distant hill with my binos, swigging XXXX and taking shots for dog meat or whatever, bloody great. He's doing what I'm doing, using his gun for his livelihood.
But if I hear shots along the road, and take a peek and see the typical not-from-here intellectually-challenged blow-ins having a weekend of shooting anything that has a heat signature, I'll certainly be doing something about it. I used to confront them, but after a few incidences where things could have escalated and one in fact resulted in a fist fight where the instigator got his ego chopped so came back with others and more guns, I don't do that now. It's pics from the phone and a call to the coppers in town.

Jackaroo wrote:I've been shooting ISSF for over forty years (still A grade for centrefire) ISSF centrefire is limited in the rule book to .38, does your club shoot something different but call it ISSF?
https://pistol.org.au/wp-content/upload ... ations.pdf


bladeracer wrote:Jackaroo wrote:I've been shooting ISSF for over forty years (still A grade for centrefire) ISSF centrefire is limited in the rule book to .38, does your club shoot something different but call it ISSF?
https://pistol.org.au/wp-content/upload ... ations.pdf
I've only been shooting ISSF since June 2024, but we shoot Classic Pistol, which is for (paraphrased from the VAPA Handbook) "...revolver or semi-automatic handgun of a calibre of .38 or less (event 33) or a calibre of more than .38 and not more than .45 (event 56)..." I believe Classic Pistol is an Australian discipline so probably won't be found in international rule books. I found a little bit here: https://cdpc.org.au/issf/
The match is the same as the Centrefire match except it only has 40rds instead of 60, can be shot two-handed, and "...guns need to conform to a production design prior to 1955...".
Must have a minimum 1360gm (3lb) trigger.
Three age classes:
Early is blackpowder pre 1890,
Late is 1890 to 1918,
Post which is 1918 to 1955.
Four type classes:
Greatcoat Revolver - breechloading revolver up to 4-1/2" barrel,
Service Revolver - breechloading revolver similar to a regulation pattern issued by any government to regular or volunteer armed forces,
Service self-loading pistol - any semi-auto similar to an issued regulation patternas above,
Private Purchase - any service issue or private purchase revolver or auto for which ammunition was available from field stores of an army.
I use the Model 19 .357 and the Browning Hi Power 9mm for Centrefire and the Pietta 1873 .44-40 for Classic Pistol for my Class 4 attendances.


deye243 wrote:So it doesn't have turning targets otherwise known as dueling issf centerfire and sport pistol do I'm also A grade in that discipline


alexjones wrote:Ever left a mag in your gun bag after a hunting trip or range visit only to find it weeks later and think oh F!!!
I haven't.

bladeracer wrote:alexjones wrote:Ever left a mag in your gun bag after a hunting trip or range visit only to find it weeks later and think oh F!!!
I haven't.
Mags stay in my guns.

bladeracer wrote:Jackaroo wrote:I've been shooting ISSF for over forty years (still A grade for centrefire) ISSF centrefire is limited in the rule book to .38, does your club shoot something different but call it ISSF?
https://pistol.org.au/wp-content/upload ... ations.pdf
I've only been shooting ISSF since June 2024, but we shoot Classic Pistol, which is for (paraphrased from the VAPA Handbook) "...revolver or semi-automatic handgun of a calibre of .38 or less (event 33) or a calibre of more than .38 and not more than .45 (event 56)..." I believe Classic Pistol is an Australian discipline so probably won't be found in international rule books. I found a little bit here: https://cdpc.org.au/issf/
The match is the same as the Centrefire match except it only has 40rds instead of 60, can be shot two-handed, and "...guns need to conform to a production design prior to 1955...".
Must have a minimum 1360gm (3lb) trigger.
Three age classes:
Early is blackpowder pre 1890,
Late is 1890 to 1918,
Post which is 1918 to 1955.
Four type classes:
Greatcoat Revolver - breechloading revolver up to 4-1/2" barrel,
Service Revolver - breechloading revolver similar to a regulation pattern issued by any government to regular or volunteer armed forces,
Service self-loading pistol - any semi-auto similar to an issued regulation patternas above,
Private Purchase - any service issue or private purchase revolver or auto for which ammunition was available from field stores of an army.
I use the Model 19 .357 and the Browning Hi Power 9mm for Centrefire and the Pietta 1873 .44-40 for Classic Pistol for my Class 4 attendances.

perentie wrote:There was talk a while back of fired cases being classed as ammo. Has anyone heard if thats still on or has common sense prevailed.?
Myself and the club have buckets of spent shells not locked up waiting to go to the scrap metal dealer.
