Traditions Vortek Ultralight User Manual

Page 6

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4. Be sure of your target, and what is around and

beyond it. The bullet fired from your rifle can

travel over one mile, and has the potential to kill

or seriously injure someone at that distance!

Once you pull the trigger, you cannot call the

bullet back, so you must positively identify your

target before you fire. Never fire (for instance, at

a noise, a movement, a rustling bush, or a shape

in the dark) until you have positively identified

your target as something you intend to shoot.

Fire only with a safe backstop behind your target

- something that will stop and contain the bullets

you fire, even if you miss the target or your bullet

passes through it.

5. Whenever you handle a firearm that, even

momentarily, has been out of your direct control,

start by checking its condition to determine

whether or not it is loaded. A firearm in your

hands is a lethal weapon which is YOuR

responsibility, so YOu must check it yourself,

NOW, not later. Do not rely on someone else to

check it. Do not take someone else’s word for

the firearm’s condition. Do not rely on your

memory of having checked the firearm previously,

or on your belief that you left it unloaded the

last time you used or handled it. Check it again

yourself now.

6. Never give a firearm to anyone, or take a firearm

from anyone, unless it is unloaded and the action

is open. If someone tries to hand you a firearm

with the action closed, politely ask them to open it

before you take it from them. If you need to open

the action of a firearm with which you are not

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RULES OF FIREARMS SAFETY

1. Treat all firearms as if they were loaded, at all

times. Many accidents occur with firearms that are

handled carelessly, because they are believed to

be “unloaded”. These accidents can be avoided by

handling all firearms the same way you would handle

a loaded firearm, at all times. even after you verify

that a gun is unloaded, you should continue handling

it as you would a loaded gun, and make sure that

others around you do the same.

2. Point the muzzle in a safe direction at all times. A

“safe direction” is one in which, if the firearm were

to discharge, there would be no injury to anyone.

Never point a gun (whether you think it is loaded or

unloaded - see Rule #1 above) directly at another

person or at yourself. Consider that a bullet can

ricochet (glance off) pavement, floors, walls, rocks,

the ground, water, ice or almost any other object it

strikes. Also, bullets can penetrate walls, ceilings,

floors, doors, windows, and many other materials to

kill or injure someone on the opposite side.

3. keep your finger off the trigger and outside the

trigger guard until you are aimed at a proper target

and have decided to fire. If your finger is inside

the trigger guard, you could fire your gun without

intending to - for instance, if you were startled, or

if you slipped or lost your balance. By keeping your

finger outside the trigger guard until you are on

target and intend to fire, you ensure that you will

never hit anything you do not intend to.

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