Tracers -- what are they for?

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smithers599

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Assume it's legal to own tracers, and you are a responsible person who doesn't go out into the woods and start forest fires.

What, exactly, is the purpose of tracers, for the individual rifleman?
 
For a normal civilian? None. Novelty at best.

In the military? So you can see where your machine gun fire is going and correct fire.

Is this a serious question?
 
QuietM4 said:
For a normal civilian? None. Novelty at best.

In the military? So you can see where your machine gun fire is going and correct fire.

Is this a serious question?
Yes. Serious question.
I get tracers for machine guns.

Mel Tappan wrote that a tracer near the bottom of a magazine would let you know when you were running low, but I found that I could not see the tracers when I was shooting; only bystanders could.

So, I see these Streak "cold" tracers on the market, and I am wondering if I am missing something that everybody else knows but me.

Jeff Cooper was asked once, "What's it for?" and he replied, "Why, it's for sale, of course."

Unless I am missing something.
 
When I was in the service we would use them when training at night and using gas masks. They would be placed in the mag every few rounds. It was a Bitch shooting with the gas mask on and when shooting with a gas mask at night the only way to adjust fire on targets was with the tracers. I was guessing at best. In my day we only had iron sights. Dont know if that has changed.
 
The curiosity is valid, as are the answers. But ultimately, the question itself is dangerously close to "who needs a military weapon?"

I realize the question posed here does not have the same hostile attitude attached to it. Just pointing out how close to the edge it is.
 
Scottsdale Gun Club uses the streak ammo for a cosmic shooting night. Beyond that it's fun to shoot those at night for fun. A neat thing for new shooters or kids to be involved. I don't think most people are going to use it in any tactical capacity as a civilian.
 
We would stagger them in the mag to see at night. Also would load 3 or 4 at the bottom so you would know you need a mag change.
 
Suck My Glock said:
The curiosity is valid, as are the answers. But ultimately, the question itself is dangerously close to "who needs a military weapon?"

I realize the question posed here does not have the same hostile attitude attached to it. Just pointing out how close to the edge it is.

Totally agree. Years ago I was in a gun store in Kingman that catered to hunters. The two other customers inside were yammering about how nobody needs a machine gun. I told them that machine gun owners need to contribute more money to keeping gun rights than hunters and that’s why they can freely buy a gun, not ask permission to check one out from a monitored club. They didn’t understand.
Divide and conquer, the democrat montra.
 
As others have said... in the military, in the case of machine guns, to walk your stream of fire onto the target at distance (although we always thought "the machine-gunner's life expectancy is short enough without providing even clearer visual evidence of where we are sitting).

In the civilian world - there really is not tactical necessity of them - but they are fun - especially for folks who have never seen them - or have never been to a night shoot.

Part of "gun culture" that folks tend to understate is that it can and should be fun at times. You can both be both "safe and serious" - and have a great time. It can be a rush to shoot something bigger, or faster (auto), or louder, or brighter - and that is a good thing. Tracers, when used in an appropriate environment, fall into that space...
 
I bought a bunch of pulled tracers a few years ago with the intent of loading up cheap 300 BO plinking ammo. Too dry to shoot them around here, but probably be fun if/when I move somewhere green.
 
Who remembers these fun rounds? Shooting them through my MP-5 and my RO635 is fun. When they came out Hornady said they may not be on the market forever so I got a pallets of them. Only tracer I can say never caught anything on fire during use. I shoot a box every year or so and they all still light up.

1-2.jpg
 
338lapua said:
Who remembers these fun rounds? Shooting them through my MP-5 and my RO635 is fun. When they came out Hornady said they may not be on the market forever so I got a pallets of them. Only tracer I can say never caught anything on fire during use. I shoot a box every year or so and they all still light up.

1-2.jpg
Bought a few boxes. I have one box left. Great fun -- for observers. When I am shooting them, I can't see the trace.
 
They sure help you hit the UAV's at the Big Sandy shoot - or at least help you claim bragging rights.
 
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