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glock 18c
wrote:
On Thu, 18 Dec 2014 22:21:29 -0600, Califbill wrote: "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 12/18/2014 9:38 PM, wrote: On Thu, 18 Dec 2014 20:16:54 -0500, Poquito Loco wrote: Yeah, after you mentioned it I looked on You Tube. That doesn't look like a lot of fun. Guess I'll bypass all the 'cowboy' SA revolvers and stick with what I've got, although I may consider a .22 DA revolver. I got a deal I couldn't refuse on my Colt Frontier scout (.22) but I pretty much just use it to shoot bird shot. It is pretty tough on rats out to 15 feet or so. I have a Colt Target Woodsman if I want to do any serious .22 pistol shooting. I had a "Pre-Woodsman" for a while. Made in 1922. My dad had a 1950's era woodsman. Worst shooting handgun he ever owned. Traded it for a Benjamin air pistol. You could bench rest that Woodsman and have a 5' pattern at 50'. The air pistol was hell on rats. Was the one with a pump, not co2. There must be something wrong with that woodsman. Mine is very accurate and the target model comes with the micro sights so you can really dial it in. Probably, but was easier to just trade the gun. My dad Owned a lot of weapons over the years. Most stolen when he went to the hospital for the big C. He was a machinist, so could have fixed it most likely. |
glock 18c
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glock 18c
On 12/19/2014 12:54 AM, Wayne.B wrote:
On Fri, 19 Dec 2014 00:19:00 -0500, wrote: Where we live, inside might be the safest place for an AD. === If the round didn't hit anything vital, SWMBO certainly would. I once saw a video of coasties getting ready to board one of their small boats for a mission. It looked like each one of them would stop briefly at a device that looked like it might have been a pole mounted bullet trap, point their sidearm inside, and cycle the action. I guess its possible they were putting a round in the chamber and then decocking and/or activating the safety. Any idea? The Coast Guard station in Scituate Harbor has one of those. Just a large pipe about 12 inches in diameter in the ground at an angle and located just outside the door of the station building. Never saw them cycling their weapons before they went out on the boat but they did whenever they returned. I always assumed it was just a required safety check to ensure no rounds were in the chamber before going back into the building. |
glock 18c
On Thursday, December 18, 2014 8:16:44 PM UTC-5, John H. wrote:
On Thu, 18 Dec 2014 19:15:14 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote: Yeah, on a SA revolver, the cylinder does not flip out. There's a "port" on the right side of the pistol, typically, a little door that flips open and you turn the cylinder by hand to line up each chamber with the port. Then you push out the "empty" with a built in ejector rod that sits under the barrel. The modern variant of the DA revolver, with a flip-out cylinder, didn't come along until nearly the end of the 19th Century, long after the Wild West was tamed. Yeah, after you mentioned it I looked on You Tube. That doesn't look like a lot of fun. Guess I'll bypass all the 'cowboy' SA revolvers and stick with what I've got, although I may consider a .22 DA revolver. My Ruger Blackhawk and Super Blackhawk are like that. It's not really a big deal, when target shooting I'm not in that much of a hurry. I also save the brass, and one at a time is easier to deal with than a handfull at once.. On the positive side the frames are inherently stronger, so you can shoot maximum loads with no worries. With the right load, the 44 mag or 45 LC will really rock your world. :-) |
glock 18c
On Thu, 18 Dec 2014 23:47:16 -0600, Califbill
wrote: wrote: On Thu, 18 Dec 2014 22:21:29 -0600, Califbill wrote: "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 12/18/2014 9:38 PM, wrote: On Thu, 18 Dec 2014 20:16:54 -0500, Poquito Loco wrote: Yeah, after you mentioned it I looked on You Tube. That doesn't look like a lot of fun. Guess I'll bypass all the 'cowboy' SA revolvers and stick with what I've got, although I may consider a .22 DA revolver. I got a deal I couldn't refuse on my Colt Frontier scout (.22) but I pretty much just use it to shoot bird shot. It is pretty tough on rats out to 15 feet or so. I have a Colt Target Woodsman if I want to do any serious .22 pistol shooting. I had a "Pre-Woodsman" for a while. Made in 1922. My dad had a 1950's era woodsman. Worst shooting handgun he ever owned. Traded it for a Benjamin air pistol. You could bench rest that Woodsman and have a 5' pattern at 50'. The air pistol was hell on rats. Was the one with a pump, not co2. There must be something wrong with that woodsman. Mine is very accurate and the target model comes with the micro sights so you can really dial it in. Probably, but was easier to just trade the gun. My dad Owned a lot of weapons over the years. Most stolen when he went to the hospital for the big C. He was a machinist, so could have fixed it most likely. As the subject has been revolvers, until Greg mentioned the Woodsman, I was thinking this was a revolver being discussed. After your post I went to gunbroker to see what this Woodsman was all about. Well I'll be...it's a semi-auto. And the damn things are not cheap either! |
glock 18c
On Fri, 19 Dec 2014 00:54:19 -0500, Wayne.B
wrote: On Fri, 19 Dec 2014 00:19:00 -0500, wrote: Where we live, inside might be the safest place for an AD. === If the round didn't hit anything vital, SWMBO certainly would. I once saw a video of coasties getting ready to board one of their small boats for a mission. It looked like each one of them would stop briefly at a device that looked like it might have been a pole mounted bullet trap, point their sidearm inside, and cycle the action. I guess its possible they were putting a round in the chamber and then decocking and/or activating the safety. Any idea? We had those in Vietnam at the gates of some of the bases. It's a 'clearing' station. A place to point the weapon after dropping the magazine and ejecting a chambered round - then pulling the trigger while pointing the gun into the clearing station. Every so often someone would forget to eject the round in the chamber. The ensuing 'bang' would get everyone's attention - if nothing else just to see how red the guy's face would get. |
glock 18c
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glock 18c
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glock 18c
Harry maybe that's part of my delima. Some of my ancestors liked rifles too! Lol!
http://www.archives.gov/research/nat...dians-089a.jpg |
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