RoundKeep captures a range session as one entry — multiple firearms, multiple ammo types, target photos, and drills, all in one place. Save the entry and your ammo counts and firearm round counts update automatically.
Two kinds of session
- Range Trip — live fire. Deducts ammo. Adds to firearm round counts.
- Dry Fire — trigger practice with no ammo. Doesn't touch inventory or round counts. Tracked separately so dry discipline is visible without polluting your live numbers.
How you actually use it
Most sessions take under a minute to log. Open the form, pick the firearms you shot, pick the ammo for each, enter rounds, save. Ammo counts go down, round counts go up, and any maintenance task that crossed its threshold appears in the Maintenance tab.
A few things worth knowing:
- The math is checked before save. If you say you fired 300 rounds of an ammo you only have 60 of, the form flags it inline and tells you which ammo and which firearm. No silent negatives.
- Edits and deletes reverse cleanly. Edit a session from 100 to 80 rounds → 20 rounds added back to ammo. Delete it → all rounds return. Round counts update too.
Why log at all
Volume is the input you can actually control. You can't measure the practice you don't track — and round counts are what trigger maintenance, surface trends, and tell you whether last month's plan worked. Five seconds at the car after a session does it.