The flash had subsided by the time your re-opened your eyes.C-dub wrote:"WOW!" Apparently, the muzzle flash was brilliant. I didn't even notice.

Moderator: carlson1
The flash had subsided by the time your re-opened your eyes.C-dub wrote:"WOW!" Apparently, the muzzle flash was brilliant. I didn't even notice.
It's there and gone so quickly that if you see anything at all, it's just an instantaneous flicker of light in front of the gun.karl wrote:Just curious in case I have to wander through my house at night with a pistol at the ready. The reason I asked in the first place is because I've seen all the pictures on that thread and on a google search, but they really don't transmit what your eyes would experience.
Iv'e never really fired at night. But I had a P229 in 357 sig and when I thru some HPs dwn range in the daytime, the muzzle flash was bad enough to cause some minor "whiteout" vision. If it did that during the day I can't imagine the vision impairment at night. It bothered me enough that I went ahead and switched back to my .40 barrel.karl wrote:Simply put, is muzzle flash from a handgun going to momentarily blind you at night?
I've searched the forum and skimmed a google search or two and found small mentions here or there but no facts confirming or denying it. I would like to know if the blinding is significant and if using a flashlight while aiming would reduce the perceived flash.
Thanks,
Karl
Now that's what a call a MUZZLE FLASH as opposed to muzzle flicker!Mithras61 wrote:Well, I've never found the muzzle blast of my pistols to be very distracting, but I used to work on the M198 in the service:
It isn't as big as some guns, but its big enough when you're standing between the trails looking downrange...