Just had a detached retina repaired and heard from the ophthalmologist that he discourages shooting because of the recoil. I love to shoot and am hopeful that we have some others on this forum that have had a detached retina and have some advice for what may work. Thinking of smaller bores with a can. I live in Idaho and love to hunt deer and elk and have learned to appreciate my 280ai and 30cal but vision is important to me too
30' 06 w/48 grs. of H4895 and a 130 gr. TTSX at 2800 fps is a pussie cat. Bad shoulder research for me worked and what I use now at 70 yrs old after racing dirt bikes forever. Crashed a few times. lol.
30' 06 w/48 grs. of H4895 and a 130 gr. TTSX at 2800 fps is a pussie cat. Bad shoulder research for me worked and what I use now at 70 yrs old after racing dirt bikes forever. Crashed a few times. lol.
I had a full rotator cuff tear requiring surgery. I got full recovery, sighted in my good bud’s .416 Rem but off a standing bench. And several years later.
I had a vitrectomy for retina hole. Had the vitreous removed, eye filled with a gas. Had to lie around for a couple of weeks. Not a detachment, but bad enough. I still shoot big stuff.
But, I’d listen to your doc. If your retina is trying to detach even more, recoil is not your friend. If ya gonna shoot anyway, I’d consider a Creed or .22-250 as Paul previously posted.
As Stick loves to say, It’s the boolit not the head stamp. Of course, gotta put it in the right spot.
Having just went through the surgery this past Monday I have no interest in going back for another!
Do cans reduce recoil much? I have not used one before
I do not know about "cans" but I do know that Magna-Porting a heavy recoiling rifle reduces recoil ... or it did on my Ruger 77, .338 Win. Mag.
Good luck.
L.W.
My Tanger .338 is so equipped, with a Decelerator pad in addition. It does not reduce actual ft# recoil by much, it does reduce FELT recoil by reducing muzzle jump considerably, and seemingly slows the shoulder punch just a touch.
Not the way to go with a detached retina without the Dr's go- ahead.
Since last March ,I've had 3 operations to repair a detached retina . On the second operation ( the first ,unsuccessful ,i feel the insurance would not pay for the operation I recieved on the second go round but that's another story) ,they removed my lense as it was too cloudy for the surgeon to see . The third ,the lense install & another " vitrectomy" too.
Next friday I have another follow up and am hoping they will start talking about glasses . I have too much time invested in healing ,I do not dare go to the range . I'm hoping someday very soon I can take up shooting again.
I would not shoot unless the Doc gives clearance ,to detach it worse ,lemme tell you its a bad deal
Website : New website coming soon thanks for your patience
Thanks for all the comments. I know I can’t be the only hunter that has had this happen. The thought of hanging up the hunt forever seems really rough and that is why I was asking if others had the same scenario.
By all means - heed the doc's advice even though every case is different. I have experienced two retinal detachments.............one in each eye (2010 and 2016). I was literally "blind but now I see" - thanks to some great medical care and the grace of God. Each time I spent >6 weeks staring at the floor and sleeping on my face followed by many subsequent weeks with dissolving gas bubbles.
Opthmalogist told me each time to not shoot anything for 6 months. He also suggested I avoid contact sports (those days were many decades ago) and avoid any heavy recoil if I did start shooting. I was terrified of another detachment when I started shooting again.
To make a short story long - the .22 LR, .243 Win, 7-08, 28-g and 20g shotguns with reduced recoil turkey loads have become my best friends. Even the lead sled is used to pattern anything. As much as it pained me to do so, I sold my .338 WM, .7mm RM, 12-turkey guns, 12-trap guns, etc. just to avoid the temptation. Just my $0.02 but maybe skip the muzzle brakes. Next thing your know, you or your shooting friends may suffer hearing loss.
A threaded 6.5 creedmoor with a brake and a good recoil pad is a good combo. I set one up for my 9 year old granddaughter. Plenty of punch with 130gr bullets. And recoil with a muzzle brakes and more brake is a pleasure to shoot.