o1d_dude
'I battle gravity'
That is a gorgeous Marauder!
Well done!
Well done!
Just a little test
https://youtu.be/JZcdRiSrM6I
Even I have to ask myself, who needs one of these.......
Noise making junk. Let's see him hit anything shooting like that.
I have an old, very old, video tape called "Firearms and Fire Power" that adequately demonstrates the difference between automatic and semi-auto fire. Professional shooter puts a 30 rd mag in an FN-FAL, there are 5 targets ranging from 7 to 40 yards, he points, fires, sweeping the targets... One borderline hit. If the guy was wearing a thick jacket, it was a miss. He then puts a 5 rd mag in, switches to semi-, and in 5 seconds, 5 kills.
You can leave the bump-stock in its box.
I have no desire to own a bump stock. But I’m concerned about the abuse of any law that prohibits a device that simply makes it easier to pull the trigger faster. Poorly written laws always hurt more than help.
Steve Shannon
I have no desire to own a bump stock.
Like the guy that put a DBAL on his home defense carbine. I guess he thinks he'll have time to don his NVGs when the friendly intruder comes in.
Dad has a M-1 Garand that fired its real sweet, and a Japanese officer sword bring back from his father's time on Iwo Jima along with a cool news article of how they climbed the hill for the flag raisers. They ate a few grenades on the way up. Stepdad has an FAL. I want to pick up a FEG AP7.65 and a PTR91 GI. I can't make my mind up on which to get first. The FEG attracts me by the PPK look at a tenth of price from classic as maybe a backup CCW.Anyone else on here collect milsurp firearms.
Timney. 24 ounces. Crisp, and smooth as silk. Sweet!
As for fun of a bump fire... Different strokes for different folks.
Fun for me... Is putting the second round thru the first hole.
I have a couple of Garands - they are a ton of fun to shoot but a bit hard on my shoulder. I also have a collection of WWII era handguns which includes PPKs, PPs, and Lugers. Strangely no P38's. I shoot a few of the PPKs and PPs just to get that James Bond feeling. I also have a variety of other WWII rifles. The early German stuff is generally really nice but the Japanese items are typically very rough. One of my favorite WWII era firearms is an early Polish Radom VIS, considered by many to be the best autoloader of it's time. It's a great shooter.Dad has a M-1 Garand that fired its real sweet, and a Japanese officer sword bring back from his father's time on Iwo Jima along with a cool news article of how they climbed the hill for the flag raisers. They ate a few grenades on the way up. Stepdad has an FAL. I want to pick up a FEG AP7.65 and a PTR91 GI. I can't make my mind up on which to get first. The FEG attracts me by the PPK look at a tenth of price from classic as maybe a backup CCW.
Not many factory rifles chambered in that one though, a few but not many. IIRC Ruger and Remington at one time offered them in the models 700 and 77 both varmint weight guns.Out to 300 yards the 6PPC is the most accurate cartridge know to man.
Then switch to 6BR?Out to 300 yards the 6PPC is the most accurate cartridge know to man.
Heard Springfield rechambered an M1a in the round. It has very low drag bullets and a lot of range. I'd recommend buy reloading dies and a cheap press it'll pay for itself by halfing your round costs. You can get 6-10 reloads a casing. Or if your frugal like stepdad, he reloads till the brass splits on all NATO junk calibers. 7.62 NATO holds the edge slightly in price on bulk buys the surplus crate and common big box store commonality around the globe if that matters.Very, very cool..
Go for the 6.5 Creedmore..
Look up ballistics and cost per before you commit..
Glass is everything..
Teddy
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