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#1
posted to rec.boats
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wrote:
On Mon, 27 Feb 2017 19:46:53 -0500, Alex wrote: In response to your rant - some people can afford to have several firearms for a variety of purposes. I have a few .357 Magnums and enjoy firing them, too. My Ruger SP101 is a great self-defense firearm and I prefer it over the J-frames. There's a lot of personal preference when it comes to guns and different calibers. I'm lucky enough that I no longer have to sell a gun in order to buy a new gun. I have an old trooper that I got right after the OM. Both are pretty much twins except the OM has a bull barrel and the trooper has the longer .357 cylinder. Both stay in the safe pretty much all the time. My go to house gun is the Ruger KP90 and I have the Barretta in a quick access compartment near the front door just in case something does come up and I want it in my pocket. My 1897 and M1A are in a quick open, locked compartment in the bedroom in case the philistines are really coming over the hill. For the most parts I still think of these as "safes" since they are hard to get into and pretty hard to find. That "building" stuff really comes in handy if you want to lose a few cubic feet in a place that is hard to triangulate on. ;-) Trooper is a nice .357. I bought one used when a friend wanted my Ruger ..30 carbine pistol. The Ruger was an interesting firearm, but unless you were reloading ammo, was nasty to shoot. Huge fireball, and I understand it was the 3rd noisiest handgun made. |
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#2
posted to rec.boats
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On Tue, 28 Feb 2017 03:09:53 -0000 (UTC), Bill
wrote: wrote: On Mon, 27 Feb 2017 19:46:53 -0500, Alex wrote: In response to your rant - some people can afford to have several firearms for a variety of purposes. I have a few .357 Magnums and enjoy firing them, too. My Ruger SP101 is a great self-defense firearm and I prefer it over the J-frames. There's a lot of personal preference when it comes to guns and different calibers. I'm lucky enough that I no longer have to sell a gun in order to buy a new gun. I have an old trooper that I got right after the OM. Both are pretty much twins except the OM has a bull barrel and the trooper has the longer .357 cylinder. Both stay in the safe pretty much all the time. My go to house gun is the Ruger KP90 and I have the Barretta in a quick access compartment near the front door just in case something does come up and I want it in my pocket. My 1897 and M1A are in a quick open, locked compartment in the bedroom in case the philistines are really coming over the hill. For the most parts I still think of these as "safes" since they are hard to get into and pretty hard to find. That "building" stuff really comes in handy if you want to lose a few cubic feet in a place that is hard to triangulate on. ;-) Trooper is a nice .357. I bought one used when a friend wanted my Ruger .30 carbine pistol. The Ruger was an interesting firearm, but unless you were reloading ammo, was nasty to shoot. Huge fireball, and I understand it was the 3rd noisiest handgun made. That is a common problem with pistols and carbines, going either way. The stuff I was loading for my Ruger carbine was nasty in a 29 Smith but it performed a whole lot better than the regular commercial 44 mag ammo, designed for a pistol. If you are really working up the load for a particular barrel length, you have to match the speed of the powder to the burn time before it gets to the muzzle. They complain about the SoCom M1A for the same problem. Regular 7.62x51 ammo is still burning on high when the bullet comes out and the blast is supposed to be brutal. My biggest problem with the 44 was, out of my carbine, it beat the crap out of my bullet trap in the basement. My chronograph was a home built, made from 2821 cards so I needed 120v and it is hard to find a place to shoot with power. I had to put a sheet or two of plywood in front of the trap to scrub off a little speed. Fortunately I knew construction guys then too and they gave me lots of small pieces of scrap. I am not sure where my log book is but I had lots of loads I played with in there. |
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#3
posted to rec.boats
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On Monday, February 27, 2017 at 10:11:50 PM UTC-5, Bill wrote:
wrote: On Mon, 27 Feb 2017 19:46:53 -0500, Alex wrote: In response to your rant - some people can afford to have several firearms for a variety of purposes. I have a few .357 Magnums and enjoy firing them, too. My Ruger SP101 is a great self-defense firearm and I prefer it over the J-frames. There's a lot of personal preference when it comes to guns and different calibers. I'm lucky enough that I no longer have to sell a gun in order to buy a new gun. I have an old trooper that I got right after the OM. Both are pretty much twins except the OM has a bull barrel and the trooper has the longer .357 cylinder. Both stay in the safe pretty much all the time. My go to house gun is the Ruger KP90 and I have the Barretta in a quick access compartment near the front door just in case something does come up and I want it in my pocket. My 1897 and M1A are in a quick open, locked compartment in the bedroom in case the philistines are really coming over the hill. For the most parts I still think of these as "safes" since they are hard to get into and pretty hard to find. That "building" stuff really comes in handy if you want to lose a few cubic feet in a place that is hard to triangulate on. ;-) Trooper is a nice .357. I bought one used when a friend wanted my Ruger .30 carbine pistol. The Ruger was an interesting firearm, but unless you were reloading ammo, was nasty to shoot. Huge fireball, and I understand it was the 3rd noisiest handgun made. I have a Blackhawk in .30 carbine. I think it's fun to shoot! Puts a grin on my face every time. |
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#4
posted to rec.boats
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Its Me wrote:
On Monday, February 27, 2017 at 10:11:50 PM UTC-5, Bill wrote: wrote: On Mon, 27 Feb 2017 19:46:53 -0500, Alex wrote: In response to your rant - some people can afford to have several firearms for a variety of purposes. I have a few .357 Magnums and enjoy firing them, too. My Ruger SP101 is a great self-defense firearm and I prefer it over the J-frames. There's a lot of personal preference when it comes to guns and different calibers. I'm lucky enough that I no longer have to sell a gun in order to buy a new gun. I have an old trooper that I got right after the OM. Both are pretty much twins except the OM has a bull barrel and the trooper has the longer .357 cylinder. Both stay in the safe pretty much all the time. My go to house gun is the Ruger KP90 and I have the Barretta in a quick access compartment near the front door just in case something does come up and I want it in my pocket. My 1897 and M1A are in a quick open, locked compartment in the bedroom in case the philistines are really coming over the hill. For the most parts I still think of these as "safes" since they are hard to get into and pretty hard to find. That "building" stuff really comes in handy if you want to lose a few cubic feet in a place that is hard to triangulate on. ;-) Trooper is a nice .357. I bought one used when a friend wanted my Ruger .30 carbine pistol. The Ruger was an interesting firearm, but unless you were reloading ammo, was nasty to shoot. Huge fireball, and I understand it was the 3rd noisiest handgun made. I have a Blackhawk in .30 carbine. I think it's fun to shoot! Puts a grin on my face every time. It was. But I did not reload in those days, and the fireball and noise was too much, and a friend gave me a good offer. |
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