|
|||||||
| General General firearm-related talk that does not fit into any of the other forums. |
| View Poll Results: Do you have fire extinguishers? | |||
| No, just my guns. |
|
3 | 3.03% |
| Yes, but only in the home. |
|
55 | 55.56% |
| Yes, but only in the car. |
|
0 | 0% |
| Yes, both in my car and at home! |
|
41 | 41.41% |
| Voters: 99. You may not vote on this poll | |||
![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
|
||||
|
One in the kitchen, two in the basement (one next to the workbench, one next to the reloading bench), one in the garage, one in each car.
Fortunately, I've only had to use the one in the car a few times.
__________________
Complete equality isn't compatible with democracy, but it is agreeable to totalitarianism. After all the only way to ensure the equality of the slothful, the inept and the immoral is to suppress everyone else. - Iain Benson
|
|
|||
|
House: Kitchen, upstairs, basement, garage. One in each car.
I see a lot of chat about not trying to save the car in case it catches fire, but I give you this story as support for car carry: When I first met the woman who would become my wife, I was invited down for a gathering of her family. We all went in my FIL's car. Aside from the smell of a million Lucky Strikes, there was the stench of long-ago burned plastic. I asked about it and got the story. My late FIL, a dyed-in-the-wool New Englander used to commute to and from Hyannis on Cape Cod where he had a small furniture store. He also didn't believe in using the air conditioner so he drove with all the windows down. He was also a heavy smoker (3 packs a day of Luckies). One late Friday night (1970s) he was driving home from the Hyannis store when he flicked his cigarette out the window. It went about 2 feet in the air and zoomed back into the car, landing on the back seat. The back seat began to smolder. So he began a quest for a hose to put out the smoldering back seat (note the absence of a fire extinguisher). Smoke is pouring from his car, the few gas stations that were open wouldn't even let him stop (figuring he would explode and take the station with him), and it had gotten so late that stopping at a house was not an option. So he drove for about 45 minutes until he finally found a fire house that would unlimber a hose and put out the smolder. He replaced the back seat, and from that day forward carried a closed Clorox jug filled with water in the trunk (too cheap to buy a fire extinguisher). I decided then and there that a small fire extinguisher is probably not a bad idea. Never had to use one, always glad I have it. Besides, when traveling in the commie-pinko-seminationalsocialist northern states, it can also serve as an alternate weapon at need.
__________________
Moron Lave: Wash a Congressman |
|
|||
|
Quote:
Bingo. ............. |
|
||||
|
One upstairs and one downstairs one in each vehicle and one in the garage.
__________________
I'd rather be judged by twelve than carried by six! |
![]() |
| Bookmarks |
«
Now an AK receiver requires pistol paperwork
|
Defensive Handgun Training - Looking for something soon
»
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| SB 895 - Interesting | Brick | Pennsylvania | 2 | May 29th, 2009 12:06 AM |
| interesting pic my dad sent me... | Mity2 | Gun Pictures | 10 | February 12th, 2008 06:05 PM |
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 06:18 PM.














Linear Mode

