Categories
All About Guns

I Have This Old Gun – Colt Model 1895 “Potato Digger”

Categories
All About Guns

Pietta Remington Pocket Pistol

Categories
All About Guns

The Colt Commando

Categories
All About Guns

12GA Birdshot – SPINNER CHALLENGE

Categories
All About Guns Ammo

M1 Carbine in 8mm Kurz? The Spanish 7.92×33 CB-51

The M1 Carbine is a lightweight, handy weapon that is well-liked by many. One of its weakest points for many people, however, is its cartridge: The .30 Carbine caliber is regarded by some as being too weak to be a true intermediate caliber round fully capable of effective 300m fire.

Still, the .30 Carbine is short, so maybe there is another caliber out there that could fit into an M1 Carbine’s action while giving it a little more punch… It turns out that during the late 1940s and early 1950s, at least one Spanish small arms designer felt the same way, and invented the gun in the Forgotten Weapons video below:

Ian does something a little odd in the video when he identifies the rifle as being “heavily influenced by the M1 Garand”, and continues to repeat that idea several times in the video. He’s not entirely wrong, but… To my eye the rifle looks much more obviously derived from the M1 Carbine, not the M1 (Garand) Rifle.

There are a couple of clues to this: The general style of the action (mechanically similar to both rifles, but aesthetically much more M1 Carbine than Garand), the fire control group, and the mass on the operating rod. Interestingly, in lieu of the tappet gas system, the Mosqueton CB-51 uses a fixed piston with many turbulence-generating rings, that looks inspired by the StG-44.

2b0EIN0

You can see how similar the Mosqueton is to the M1 Carbine below:

M1-Carbine-Animation2

Calling this rifle an M1 Carbine copy isn’t quite doing it justice, honestly (although it makes for a very snappy title). The rifle isn’t in truth a direct clone of anything, although it does seem to take more from the M1 Carbine than anything else. Besides the different gas system, the rifle features an odd grip safety, and a very German-looking front end, as well as stripper clip guides!

It’s worth noting that while this rifle is called “CB-51”, it’s not the only rifle called CB-51. It seems to me that maybe “CB-51” was the name of a trial or a program to which these different weapons were submitted, although that’s only speculation on my part.

Nathaniel F

Nathaniel is a history enthusiast and firearms hobbyist whose primary interest lies in military small arms technological developments beginning with the smokeless powder era. He can be reached via email at nathaniel.f@staff.thefirearmblog.com.

Categories
All About Guns Gun Info for Rookies

How to Rust Blue a Rifle Presented by Larry Potterfield | MidwayUSA Gunsmithing

Categories
All About Guns

Minute of Mae: Winchester 1892

Categories
Fieldcraft

RULE #4 | Be Sure of Your Target and What’s Beyond By Erick Gelhaus

Rule #4 reads, “Be Sure of your target and what’s beyond it.” That’s easy on a square range with a two-dimensional target in front of a tall earthen berm. Too easy. Maybe you are moving. Far more often, the target is not moving; it is just static. And there is generally a lack of No Shoots downrange behind the targets we are shooting. As a result, there is not much opportunity to practice Rule #4 and the downrange problem.

If your instructor adds in “… and what is between you and the target as well as around it” that makes the downrange problem even more difficult.

How big of an issue is this downrange problem? How concerned do we, as armed professionals and armed citizens, need to be about this?

As groups, armed professionals and citizens have unfortunately shot uninvolved or non-hostile individuals, wounding or killing them with rounds that missed those whose actions justified deadly force. Those killed have included victims, bystanders, and uniformed, on-duty police officers.

This is an issue, and we need to be concerned about it.

The Four Safety Rules (photo courtesy of the Gunsite.com website). Always be sure of your target.

This past weekend was Tom Givens’ yearly Rangemaster Tactical Conference, also known as TacCon, at the Dallas Pistol Club in Carrollton, Texas.

Numerous presenters gave classroom and live-fire presentations on a broad spectrum of topics for the self-defense community. I was fortunate to have been invited to be a presenter. One of my classroom presentations was based on several research studies, including Tom Aveni’s 2008 work for the Police Policy Studies Council, titled “Critical Analysis of Police Shootings Under Ambiguous Circumstances. Numerous officers from six different agencies participated in the study that focused on decision-making driven by suspect behaviors. Each officer had multiple scenarios for the study.

A problematic finding in the study had to do with a mugging scenario that involved victims who were farther downrange than the suspects. The victim was positioned in the officer’s line of fire when the suspect drew on and then shot at the officers. Most officers in the study – though not all – returned fire at the suspect when shot at. Many of those officers had one or more rounds hit the downrange victim or bystander.

Unfortunately, the study only uses the words” most” and “many” as it did not capture the numbers of victims and bystanders that were hit.

While there are other lessons from that study, the downrange problem is one that trainers and instructors need to be aware of and address.

One large west coast agency has experienced a couple of these events in the last few years. These were cases where the suspects’ violent actions created the situations that led to the tragic outcome. Even though COVID has adversely impacted a lot of training over the past couple of years, it will not give us a pass.

What are some different ways of doing this?

Including bystanders and victims near or behind the suspects during force-on-force scenarios is one idea. Program the problem into the firearms training simulators like those from FATS and VirTra.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Categories
All About Guns Anti Civil Rights ideas & "Friends" California Some Sick Puppies!

Just another reason on why I am a born again Cynic!

Categories
All About Guns You have to be kidding, right!?!

Something from one of my nightmares

Photo of Bolsa Gunsmithing - Westminster, CA, United States