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Camera Gun Would Let Hunters Get Killer Wildlife Shots

Zothecula writes "Not too long ago, brothers Randy and Michael Gregg were out on a hunting expedition. It was the day after deer season had ended, yet they spied a handsome animal bedded down in the snow. Not wanting to pass up an opportunity, they silently crept up on their quarry, raised their rifle, lined the deer up in the crosshairs ... and then took a picture through the scope with a mobile phone. That photo provided all the proof they needed that they had successfully stalked their prey, without bringing home an illegally-obtained carcass. It also inspired them to create the Kill Shot — a replica hunting rifle, that takes pictures instead of firing bullets." The Kill Shot isn't just for hunters. Think of how great this would be at sporting events or family reunions!

19 of 263 comments (clear)

  1. Too bad these are so new. by grub · · Score: 5, Funny


    It's too bad they didn't have these in 1963. It would have been nice to have a close-up of Kennedy's awesome hair.

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    1. Re:Too bad these are so new. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      Yeah. And I suppose we'd have 20 photos, then? All from different angles?

    2. Re:Too bad these are so new. by Dyinobal · · Score: 5, Insightful

      From multiple angles too...

      Seriously even I think this is tasteless and only going to get more so before we are done.

    3. Re:Too bad these are so new. by ViperOrel · · Score: 4, Funny

      I want a SLR shaped gun to go with my gun shaped SLR... Soon as someone says to take the shot, spectacular confusion ensues :D

    4. Re:Too bad these are so new. by squidflakes · · Score: 3, Informative

      Yep, those have been readily available for quite a while. Wild-life photographers like the stock holders because they make working with a very long lens a much simpler affair. They also help with providing a more stable base so you get less blur and thus can use a slower shutter speed at very long focal distances.

  2. Problematic by DakotaSmith · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think a replica rifle is liable to cause some consternation at your average sporting event.

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    1. Re:Problematic by sunderland56 · · Score: 4, Informative

      I think a replica rifle is liable to cause some consternation at your average sporting event.

      Or your average airport - don't take one on holidays with you.

    2. Re:Problematic by durrr · · Score: 4, Funny

      Just wait till you hear about someone shooting cops with this.

    3. Re:Problematic by sunderland56 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Just wait until your wife sees you taking a picture of your mother-in-law with one.

    4. Re:Problematic by operagost · · Score: 5, Insightful

      +5, Clever. What's more dangerous to police: firearms, or cameras?

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  3. And just think... by NecroPuppy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Police will be called out to those events because "there's someone with a gun!" Family reunion becomes a family bloodbath.

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  4. Just beware of the potential misunderstandings by Resol · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My aunt and uncle are avid bird watchers in Canada. My uncle built up a spotting scope on a rifle stock that he uses up there all the time. He brought it down here to SoCal and was out at the edge of a lagoon looking at shore birds when all of a sudden a number of police cars showed up, lights flashing, and the officers jumped out and drew their service pistols. Seems a number of folks had reported a lunatic (I'm not dismissing that assessment) with a gun out in the lagoon. Luckily they didn't shoot my uncle, but instead had a bit of a chuckle about the whole thing with the ultimate suggestion that his selection of bird watching paraphernalia could be better ;-) Relatives!

    1. Re:Just beware of the potential misunderstandings by gman003 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Sounds more like evidence that the US needs to sit down, shut up, and take a chill pill. Just mellow out.

  5. Re:Not new by durrr · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Why not combine the best of both worlds? A rifle that first shoots a bullet and a photograph a split second later.

  6. Russians did it before these guys by lemur3 · · Score: 3, Informative

    http://www.cryptomuseum.com/covert/sniper/index.htm

    Hooray for the russians!!

    The Photo Sniper was initially made for the Russian market. The text on the camera body, on the pistol grip and on the container was in Russian. ÐÐzÐÐz ÐÐÐÐ(TM)ÐYÐÐ means FOTO SNAIPER (Photo Sniper). The container was usually painted in the typical Russian grey hammerite colour.

  7. Re:'Kill shot' cameras by ClioCJS · · Score: 4, Informative

    Actually, deer collisions kill hundreds and injure 10s of 1000s every year. They multiply, have fewer predators in more populated areas, eat up all the food, get malnourished, wander to new places looking for food, and cause accidents. They absolutely must be thinned out, and there's no reason anyone who shoots a deer can't eat it. (They should. Venison chili is delicious, and no corporate growth hormones.)

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  8. Re:'Kill shot' cameras by holmedog · · Score: 5, Informative

    I get so sick of this sentiment. I am a hunter. I know many, many people who hunt. You don't hunt for the pleasure of killing - you hunt for the "thrill of the hunt". It's a base desire to be a predator. And, yes, part of that fulfillment is when you squeeze the trigger or release the arrow. But, that moment is celebrated for the completion of the hunt - not the act of killing.

    To put this in perspective, a common part of hunting is "finishing the kill". This is where you have mortally wounded the animal (eg, a lung shot to a deer), but it is bleeding out still and not entirely dead. Once all threat of the animal getting up and injuring the hunter is removed the hunter will use a knife to quickly finish the kill. I don't know anyone who enjoys this - and that's the actual moment the animal dies. It makes you feel weird having to do it. I can't really express the emotion well with written words, but it's definitely not a good feeling.

    TLDR; Hunters are in it for the rush of the hunt, not the actual kill.

  9. Re: killing other living things by M.+Baranczak · · Score: 3, Informative

    Humans can't live without killing other living things. Until we learn to photosynthesize, that is. You just sound like someone who doesn't want to think about where his dinner came from.

  10. Re:'Kill shot' cameras by blkmajik · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Except for varmint shooters (I'm one). That's all for the kill. Gophers/Prairie dogs exploding in a ball of red mist is just amazing.

    They make really heavy guns shooting small caliber bullets out of medium cartidges (.204 Ruger/.17 Fireball) for two things: Target (read paper) and Varmint (dead sploded things). The heavy guns let you see the target in scope as it blows up. Without the combination of lighter cartridge and heavy gun the recoil would not allow you to see the action.

    The design of the varmint bullets is such that you have a bullet spinning at a couple hundred thousand RPMs that is highly frangible. This is what makes the things go *poof*. There is far more varmint type bullets from commercial manufacturers than there are target bullets in these calibers. That's what people want, and for good reason: it's fun.

    Down south some of these critters actually get big enough to be a source of food. Where I live (up north) that's not the case. They are tiny little critters that just annoy ranchers and farmers. The annoyance is in the form of broken legs on cows/horses and crop damage. My fun actually helps things, but I do it for the fun, not out of helping a fellow human down the road.