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Anti Civil Rights ideas & "Friends"

Poor Oz!

Australia: Queensland’s Labor Party Government Targets MP for Gun Control Heresy

FRIDAY, JANUARY 19, 2018

Australia: Queensland’s Labor Party Government Targets MP for Gun Control HeresySUPPORT NRA-ILA

The sorry state of gun politics in Australia was put into stark relief recently, after Liberal National Party (LNP) Queensland Legislative Assembly MP Anthony Perrett took a principled stand in favor of his constituents’ gun rights. His bold moves to defend gun owners have earned Perrett an official rebuke from Queensland’s Australian Labor Party (ALP) government, who appear ready to malign anyone who dares question Australian anti-gun orthodoxy.

Back in October, Perrett caused a stir when he defied his party’s leadership to vote with the Katter’s Australian Party and One Nation in an attempt to block a gun control measure. Under Australian law, firearms are categorized by configuration. The measure moved lever-action shotguns that have a capacity of five rounds or fewer from category A to category B, making them more difficult to obtain. The measure also moved lever-action shotguns with a capacity greater than five rounds to category D, effectively prohibiting the weapons.

Perrett then continued his support for gun owners early this year. In mid-January, Queensland Minister of Police and Corrective Services Mark Ryan of the governing ALP launched an attack on LNP’s Deputy Opposition Leader MP Tim Mander for some mildly pro-gun statements that were captured on video. According to an account from the Australian Associated Press, the March 2017 video shows Mander responding to a questioner that asked if he “would support licensed owners having access to semi-automatic rifles for sports or hunting.” Mander offered a diplomatic answer, stating, “If a case can be given to me that shows that there’s a good rationale for that, and there’s no increase in safety risks or some other risk to the community, I’m very open-minded about those type of things.”

Perrett rushed to Mander’s defense, calling Ryan’s attack “nothing more than chest beating and manufacturing an agenda.” Reiterating his own support for gun rights, Perrett explained, “I have always and will continue to support law-abiding weapons license holders, gun owners, primary producers and sporting shooters.”

The MP went on to charge that the Queensland government is engaged in a crackdown on legitimate gun owners and that one of the ways in which it is doing so is by restricting the issuance of category H (handgun) licenses. Perrett said of the Queensland government,

They say that the rules haven’t changed but there is clear evidence that a ministerial directive has been given to the weapons licensing branch to make it harder for legitimate owners to access a tool of trade… All of a sudden licenses and renewals for Category H weapons are being consistently knocked back despite responsible, law-abiding owners having held and renewed them for decades without any incidents.

Perrett added,

The Labor government is not a friend of weapons license holders, sporting shooters or of primary producers who just want to have the right and effective tools of the trade so they can get on with their business. 

Perrett’s forceful comments were met with predictable contempt from Queensland’s Labor government. In a January 18 press release, Ryan demanded that LNP Opposition Leader MP Deborah Frecklington reign in the pro-gun rights members of her party and pledge her party’s eternal fealty to Australia’s gun control regime. Ryan also lamented Perrett’s October stance against the new shotgun restrictions.

In attacking Perrett, Ryan stated that the division over gun laws within the LNP “exposed the party’s insincerity over John Howard’s world-renowned National Firearm Agreement.” To read the left-wing American press, one might come to understand how Ryan would believe that Australia’s 1996 gun laws are celebrated the world over. However, many scientists are questioning whether those laws had any effect at all.

In 2013, the U.S. Department of Justice’s National Institute of Justice surveyed the available research on Australia’s gun laws and determined that Australia’s gun confiscation scheme “appears to have had no effect on gun homicide…”

A 2016 Journal of the American Medical Association article, authored by researchers from the University of Sydney, explained that intentional firearms fatalities were falling prior to the 1996 ban and fell at a faster pace following the ban. However, they also discovered that “the post-1996 decrease in the rates of non-firearm suicide and homicide was larger than the decreases for suicide and homicide involving firearms.” This led the authors to acknowledge, “it is not possible to determine whether the change in firearm deaths can be attributed to the gun law reforms.”

2017 paper published in the Journal of Experimental Criminology came to a similar conclusion. Applying an autoregressive integrated moving average model to the data, the researchers found Australia’s firearm homicide rates were not affected by the 1996 law. In their conclusion, the authors made clear that their findings cast doubt on previous academic efforts to bolster the law.

Rather than earning prestige for their onerous gun laws, Australia is achieving notoriety among many Americans for their state and federal governments’ increasingly petty attacks on gun owners. It is at least encouraging that in the midst of this gun control onslaught there are still a handful of Australian politicians that, in the face of unrelenting opposition, oppose further burdening their law-abiding constituents.

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All About Guns

The German MP40 Versus the American M3A1 Grease Gun by WILL DABBS on SEPTEMBER 7, 2017

Teutonic Refinement Meet Yankee Brown

World War II changed most everything about planet earth. Society, culture, industry, and politics all underwent a seismic shift during this worldwide conflict that ultimately claimed 50 million souls. This most horrible of wars spilt rivers of blood.
Previously gunmaking retained some modicum of art. Military weapons combined the machinist’s touch with the woodworker’s skill to produce weapons that were elegant, graceful, and expensive. Receivers typically began life as huge chunks of forged steel before being cut or turned into something mechanically complex, sometimes on machines still driven by steam. In the desperate fight for national survival that defined World War II, however, man perfected the mass production of his implements of destruction.

                                    MP40                                      M3A1 Grease Gun

  • Weight.                             8.75 lbs                                                         7.95 lbs
  • Length—Stock Extended 32.8 in                                                   29.8 in
  • Length—Stock Retracted 24.8                                                      22.8 in
  • Barrel Length                9.9 in                                                           8 in
  • Cartridge                         9mm                                                             .45 ACP
  • Muzzle velocity             1,300 feet/second                                       920 feet/second
  • Rate of Fire                     500 rounds/minute                                    450 rounds/minute
  • Sights                                 Fixed                                                              Fixed
  • Total wartime Production 1.1 million                                          700,000

German Origins

The MP38 was cut from a heavy steel tube and can be readily identified by the longitudinal grooves cut in the receiver. The MP38 also has a dime-sized lightening hole stamped into both sides of the magazine well. Otherwise, the MP38 incorporated stamped steel fire controls, sights, and ancillary widgets. The gun also eschewed the use of wood anywhere in its production.
The MP38 was initially intended for use within and around armored vehicles. As a result, a synthetic polymer barrel rest was included underneath the barrel. The hook on the end of the rest was designed to rest outside the armor of a halftrack such that the muzzle didn’t inadvertently wander into the crew compartment under recoil.

The German MP40 submachine gun ushered in an entirely new era in military gun building. Sporting stamped steel components and a collapsible stock, the MP40 was the world’s first martial weapon truly optimized for mass production.

The MP38 rendered superb service in the hands of German Fallschirmjagers during their parachute assaults into Norway, Poland and Belgium. This tidy little submachine gun also armed German Panzer troops on their Blitzkrieg across Europe early in the war. Despite its incorporation of advanced production techniques, the Germans still saw room for improvement.

The MP40

The primary difference between the MP38 and the subsequent MP40 rested in the production of the receiver. The receiver of the MP40 was pressed out of thin gauge sheet steel on industrial presses. As a result, the gun could be produced en masse by semi-skilled labor. Production of the MP40 continued until the MP44 assault rifle supplanted it. Around 1.1 million of these guns were ultimately produced.

The folding steel stock on the MP40 was a bit flimsy yet remained effective under hard use. The pivoting buttplate must be folded flat when stowed.

The MP40 fed from a double column 32-round box magazine that tapered to a single feed for presentation. While offering reliable feed geometry, this design was prone to stoppage when dirty and required a magazine loading tool to load. The gun also incorporated a unique recoil assembly wherein nested steel cups telescoped into themselves around the recoil spring. This gave the MP40 an unusually smooth firing cycle. When combined with the weapon’s sedate rate of fire and front-heavy design this made the gun imminently controllable. The weapon was fully automatic only.
The original MP38 and early MP40s lacked a manual safety beyond a cutout to lock the bolt to the rear. However, the gun could be dropped onto its butt with a loaded magazine in place and suffer an accidental discharge. In this circumstance, the bolt might drop back far enough to pick up a round but not far enough to engage the sear. The fix for this problem involved cutting a locking slot in the front of the receiver and replacing the bolt with an improved version. The new charging handle could be snapped in place to secure the bolt in the forward position. Until the fix could be updated the Germans issued a special leather strap that would lock the bolt in place externally.

The Nazis serialized everything on their weapons to include the firing pin and these early Bakelite grip plates.

Despite the streamlined nature of the MP40 the Germans just couldn’t bring themselves to let go of their compulsive gunmaking proclivities. As a result, the MP40 is simply festooned with waffenamt acceptance stamps and every part big enough to accept one sports a serial number, to include the firing pin. This does indeed make for an elegant firearm that likely inspired confidence in its users, but did not lend itself to mass production by an industry threatened both day and night by Allied bombing. The MP40 has been encountered in action as recently as the Syrian Civil War.

The American Buzzgun

The American M3A1 Grease Gun was as utilitarian as we could make it. Sporting stamped steel for most of its components, the Grease Gun was ultimately a remarkably effective service weapon.

World War II was a come-as-you-are affair for the United States, and we found ourselves woefully unprepared when Pearl Harbor finally dragged us kicking and screaming into war. Our issue submachine gun of the day was the 1928A1 Thompson, but it was obsolete before the first bomb fell on that fateful Sunday morning. However, we Americans are a hearty lot and we responded by doing what we do best. We banded together, rolled up our sleeves, and built stuff.

The Grease Gun’s rear sight included a riveted insert to cut down on glare.

The M1928 morphed into the somewhat simplified M1A1 Thompson that was a bit easier and cheaper to build. Around 1.5 million Tommy guns rolled off the lines during the war to equip Allied forces of all nationalities. Even while we were ramping up to build Thompsons by the hundreds of thousands the War Department was rushing to secure a low-cost replacement.
The Thompson was sinfully heavy. With a loaded 50-round drum in place it weighed nearly what a Browning Automatic Rifle (BAR) might. It was also mechanically complicated and suffered simply dreadful ergonomics. Despite its shortcomings, however, American GIs loved the gun. Many to most of them had cut their teeth on Saturday afternoon crime serials and going to war with a gangster chopper held an allure. The replacement for the Thompson was as unlike this big pre-war gun as might possibly be imagined.

The Grease Gun

The front sight on the Grease Gun was nothing more than a folded bit of steel.

The M3 Grease Gun was first adopted for service just over a year after the Pearl Harbor attack. In stark contrast to the Thompson, the M3 was simple, ugly, and utilitarian. The receiver was comprised of two halves of sheet steel welded together to form a shell. The bolt rode loosely within this assembly on a pair of guide rods. This allowed the gun to function in the face of modest damage. The sliding stock was formed from heavy gauge steel wire. In the original M3 version a ratcheting lever on the right side of the gun actuated the bolt. Everything that could be produced via industrial stampings was produced via industrial stampings. When compared to the elegant and meticulously built Thompson the M3 was positively homely.
The charging handle of the M3 was found to be unduly flimsy and the unfenced magazine release allowed the magazine to be dropped inadvertently. As a result, the improved M3A1 added a raised steel fence around the magazine release and dispensed with the ratcheting charging handle entirely. In its place was a simple divot in the bolt that allowed the operator to retract the bolt with a standard finger.
The Grease Gun weighed around 8 pounds and fed from the same sort of double column, single feed magazine that drove the MP40. In the M3A1 version the wire stock incorporated a useful and effective magazine loading tool. A large stamped steel dust cover folded in place to occlude battlefield grunge. A steel tab on this appendage locked the bolt and served as the gun’s sole safety. The gun’s heavy bolt and long travel conspired to yield a rate of fire of around 450 rounds per minute.

The trigger and receiver-cum-pistol grip were all formed from stamped steel. The trigger guard was a simple length of spring steel.

The Grease Gun cost $15 to make in 1943 (around $215 today) and was quite literally disposable. The Army supply system did not stock spare parts. When a Grease Gun went down it was discarded. There was a field modification of early M3 models that involved milling a slot in the receiver for a steel charging handle that reciprocated with the bolt for use when the ratchet system failed.

Both the MP40 and the M3A1 Grease Gun were quite controllable in trained hands.

The first recorded combat use of the Grease Gun was on the Airborne drop in support of D-Day. While GIs distrusted the Greaser early on for its crude appearance, most ultimately expressed grudging admiration for the design. The gun was profoundly robust and thoroughly reliable. The improved M3A1 version briefly saw action in the closing weeks of the war. The Grease Gun was used through the Korean War and Vietnam War all the way up to the Gulf War. I encountered high mileage World War II-vintage M3A1 Grease Guns in the hands of U.S. Army tankers while I was on active duty in the 1990s.

Face Off

Both these guns are bulky. The left-sided nature of the charging handle on the MP40 means the sling must be arranged on the right. This makes the gun a bit more awkward to tote. The Grease Gun uses a standard canvas M1 Carbine sling, while the MP40 employs an adjustable leather version. The MP40 sights are flip adjustable for 100 and 200 meters while the Grease Gun’s are simply fixed, but they are comparably effective.
The two guns sport very different personalities, but I found that I could keep my rounds on target with a comparable facility with both guns. The big .45ACP bullets are fully twice as heavy as the 9mm rounds the MP40 fires, so they bring markedly more horsepower. Both weapons enjoy a sedate rate of fire so singles and doubles are easy with a disciplined trigger finger.
The MP40 and the M3A1 Grease Gun were birthed under utterly different circumstances. One nation wanted to enslave the world. The other wanted to free it. That these guns share so many similar morphological characteristics is intriguing. These days rifle-caliber carbines have displaced the submachine gun in the arsenals of most developed countries. However, for a time, these two stamped steel submachine guns slugged it out to determine the mastery of the world.
For more information about period gear used as support in this article, click here.

To purchase a military firearms on GunsAmerica, click here.

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All About Guns

Fight Brewing in New Hampshire Over State vs. Local Control of Gun Laws by JORDAN MICHAELS on JANUARY 16, 2018

Local communities in New Hampshire are trying to buck state law and further regulate firearms. (Photo: New York Times)

It’s a perennial question: do cities have the right to pass gun control laws that contradict those of the state?
A growing number of state legislatures are saying, “No,” and adding hefty penalties for those that do. Now it looks like New Hampshire is set to join them.
new bill would allow fines of up to $5,000 to be levied against town or city officials who try to push local ordinances that oppose state laws, according to the Boston Herald.
The bill mentions two instances, though proponents say there are many more. In the first, the town of Milford banned target shooting on a 270-acre piece of town-owned land that residents had been using to practice their marksmanship. Despite the fact that no one had ever been injured on the land, city officials deemed it too dangerous for residents to continue shooting there.
In the second instance, the Lebanon School Board prohibited firearms on school property or at school events on non-school property.
Both actions are clear violations of the law, proponents of the bill say, because New Hampshire is not a “home rule” state, meaning that state law always preempts local law.
One of those proponents and the bill’s sponsor, Republican state Rep. J.R. Hoell, says an increasing number of local officials are thumbing their nose at state policies.
“It seems to be getting worse,” Hoell told the Boston Herald, adding, “How would you feel if all of a sudden Lebanon said the First Amendment doesn’t apply? We don’t do this with any other Constitutional right.”

SEE ALSO: New Hampshire Goes Constitutional Carry!

“We have elected officials breaking the law because there are no penalties. This bill corrects that by adding penalties, like we would for any other law,” Hoell continued. “If we’re going to put laws on the books, we expect them to be obeyed. If there are penalties for citizens, there should be penalties for elected officials.”
The New Hampshire legislature is controlled by Republicans, so Hoell’s measure has a good chance of passing. But that hasn’t stopped anti-gun legislators from pursuing their own agenda.
Democratic state Rep. Delmar Burridge is pushing for more gun restrictions at the state level, dismissing his Republican colleagues as “Pistol Pete” vigilantes and “goofy knuckleheads” who think the other side is always out to take their guns away.
“They think they’re better shots than the cops are. I call these guys ‘Walter Mitty’ iterations — they think they’re heroes,” Burridge told the Herald.
He’s got his work cut out for him. New Hampshire has some of the least restrictive gun laws in the nation, most recently becoming a “constitutional carry” state by removing all restrictions on carrying a concealed firearm.

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Anti Civil Rights ideas & "Friends"

6.5 Billion Dollars

Gun Control Fail: ‘Gun Violence’ Costs New York over $5.6 Billion Each Year

New York has an “assault weapons” ban, a “high capacity” magazine ban, universal background checks, and “gun violence” costs of over $5.6 billion a year.

In other words, gun control is not working in New York, just as it has not worked in Chicago or Baltimore.
The annual cost of “gun violence” was put forth via a study by Gabby Giffords’ gun control group and published by New York Daily News.
Kelly Drane is an associate of Giffords’ gun control group and she commented on NY’s raging gun violence, saying, “The costs are massive—the human and moral costs and also the fiscal costs we share as taxpayers and society at large. New York State is actually a national leader (in gun control), but even so, the cost of gun violence, even in one of our safest states, is enormous.”
Following the heinous December 14, 2012, attack on Sandy Hook Elementary School, NY Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) pushed through a gun control package called the SAFE Act. It contained the “assault weapons” ban, “high capacity” magazine ban, expanded background checks, registration database, and more. Cuomo signed it into law in January 2013.
On March 3, 2015, Breitbart News reported that New York City witnessed a sharp increase in shootings and murders during the first two months of 2015, when compared to the first two months of 2014.  NY1 reported the increase in shootings was “20 percent” and the increase in murders was “20 percent” as well. Month’s later, on September 7, 2015, four shootings and a stabbing marred  Brooklyn’s J’Ouvert festival and Cuomo claimed the failure was not with his gun control but with a lack of gun control in southern states.
Now Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence, a central voice in the gun control lobby, shows that Cuomo’s gun control is not working. Of course, they do not come right out and say that gun control is failing. Rather, they suggest gun control must be complimented by laws in other areas in order to work.
For example, Robin Lloyd, director of government affairs for Giffords’ gun control group, said, “Part of the story we want to tell is that even with the strong gun laws (in New York), there’s still other things that can be done to address the gun violence and the impacts it has.”
AWR Hawkins is an award-winning Second Amendment columnist for Breitbart News, the host of the Breitbart podcast Bullets, and the writer/curator of Down Range with AWR Hawkinsa weekly newsletter focused on all things Second Amendment, also for Breitbart News. He is the political analyst for Armed American Radio. Follow him on Twitter: @AWRHawkins. Reach him directly at awrhawkins@breitbart.com. Sign up to get Down Range at breitbart.com/downrange.

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Well I thought it was funny!

Not one of my Former Students at Camp Holton HS !

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All About Guns

Colt Officers Model Heavy Barrel 6 Inch King Custom .38 Special

Colts Patents Arms Manufacturing Company - OFFICERS MODEL HEAVY BARREL 6 INCH KING CUSTOM - Picture 1
Colts Patents Arms Manufacturing Company - OFFICERS MODEL HEAVY BARREL 6 INCH KING CUSTOM - Picture 2
Colts Patents Arms Manufacturing Company - OFFICERS MODEL HEAVY BARREL 6 INCH KING CUSTOM - Picture 3
Colts Patents Arms Manufacturing Company - OFFICERS MODEL HEAVY BARREL 6 INCH KING CUSTOM - Picture 4
Colts Patents Arms Manufacturing Company - OFFICERS MODEL HEAVY BARREL 6 INCH KING CUSTOM - Picture 5
Colts Patents Arms Manufacturing Company - OFFICERS MODEL HEAVY BARREL 6 INCH KING CUSTOM - Picture 6
Colts Patents Arms Manufacturing Company - OFFICERS MODEL HEAVY BARREL 6 INCH KING CUSTOM - Picture 7
Colts Patents Arms Manufacturing Company - OFFICERS MODEL HEAVY BARREL 6 INCH KING CUSTOM - Picture 8
Colts Patents Arms Manufacturing Company - OFFICERS MODEL HEAVY BARREL 6 INCH KING CUSTOM - Picture 9
Colts Patents Arms Manufacturing Company - OFFICERS MODEL HEAVY BARREL 6 INCH KING CUSTOM - Picture 10
Back in the Day, Kings had a Gunsmith that could do absolute magic with the Old School Colt Pistols.
If you get a chance and the gun has not been rode hard and put away wet. You should seriously think about buying one if one becomes available for sale.

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Lucky Bastards!

Not Really! But these videos do show what can be found out there. If one is willing to make the effort!
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All About Guns

COLT CUSTOM GOVERNMENT MODEL in .45 ACP

COLT MFG CO INC - CUSTOM GOVERNMENT MODEL 5-INCH BARREL HOGUE GRIPS
COLT MFG CO INC - CUSTOM GOVERNMENT MODEL 5-INCH BARREL HOGUE GRIPS - Picture 2
COLT MFG CO INC - CUSTOM GOVERNMENT MODEL 5-INCH BARREL HOGUE GRIPS - Picture 3
COLT MFG CO INC - CUSTOM GOVERNMENT MODEL 5-INCH BARREL HOGUE GRIPS - Picture 4
COLT MFG CO INC - CUSTOM GOVERNMENT MODEL 5-INCH BARREL HOGUE GRIPS - Picture 5
COLT MFG CO INC - CUSTOM GOVERNMENT MODEL 5-INCH BARREL HOGUE GRIPS - Picture 6
COLT MFG CO INC - CUSTOM GOVERNMENT MODEL 5-INCH BARREL HOGUE GRIPS - Picture 7
COLT MFG CO INC - CUSTOM GOVERNMENT MODEL 5-INCH BARREL HOGUE GRIPS - Picture 8
 

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Well I thought it was funny!

Not my Brand of Ammo

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Even if I won the Lottery Big Time

12 ABSURDLY EXPENSIVE GUNS SURE TO MAKE YOU DROOL

Guns can get expensive very quickly and there are quite a few guns out there than can cost more than a new car, or even a house. Though many of these ridiculously expensive guns are rare or custom made, there are quite a few off the shelf guns out there that can quite literally “break the bank.”
Some of the choices on this list of expensive guns are difficult to accurately price because they are so rare. In these cases, I did my best to estimate the cost using the commonly available resources and I attempted to provide a price range for a firearm in “new” or “like new” condition when possible.

It isn’t necessary to spend a ton of money and buy a really expensive gun, but it sure is fun sometimes.

Check out our choices for the 12 most ridiculously expensive guns you’ll never afford, and let us know what other firearms are out there that we should have included.

1. Pre-1964 Winchester Model 70 in .458 Winchester Magnum, .35 Remington, or .300 Savage

Image Courtesy of Rock Island Auction Company
$3,000 – $6,000
It really says something about the high price of the guns on this list when a Pre-64 Winchester model 70 is least expensive gun on it.
In 1964, Winchester made a number of modifications to their iconic Model 70 rifle to made it cheaper and easier to manufacture. Though they made many changes, the primary difference was that rifles produced after 1964 no longer had a Mauser style “controlled round feed” bolt. At the time, many American shooters judged the new model 70 to be of inferior quality compared to the pre-64 Model 70.
As a result, all pre-64 Model 70s are in high demand among collectors and shooters all over the world. However, Model 70s chambered in .458 Winchester Magnum, .35 Remington, and .300 Savage, which were the least common calibers in pre-64 Model 70s, command an especially high premium.

2. Howdah Pistol

ridiculously expensive guns howdah pistol
Image courtesy of Davide Pedersoli
$3,500+
A Howdah is a large platform placed on the back of an Indian Elephant. During the time of the British rule in India, it was very stylish for well-to-do Englishmen to hunt tigers and other types of big game from a howdah. However, the British quickly realized that a tiger is very capable of leaping up on the back of an elephant and attacking the hunter at close range.
Hunters then started carrying large caliber, multi-barreled pistols with them on their hunts for close range protection from angry tigers. Though they were originally developed for use in India, Howdah Pistols were used by hunters all over the British Empire.
Most Howdah Pistols were custom made in the same caliber as the rifle that the hunter carried, though this was not always the case. Unfortunately, most Howdah Pistols were chambered for black powder cartridges (which are prone to corrosion), so finding a Howdah Pistol in pristine condition today is difficult and an original Howdah Pistol in excellent condition will command a high price.

3. Titanium Gold Desert Eagle in .440 Cor-Bon

Image Courtesy of Magnum Research
$5,000 – $7,500
A staple of action movies and video games, the Desert Eagle is characterized by its large frame and powerful recoil. Designed by Magnum Research and Israeli Military Industries, the Desert Eagle is a gas operated pistol currently manufactured in .357 Magnum, .44 Magnum, and .50 Action Express.
However, a few hundred Desert Eagles with titanium gold finishes were manufactured chambered in the rare .440 Cor-Bon cartridge. Developed by necking down a .50 AE cartridge to .44 caliber, the .440 Cor-Bon is more powerful than both the .50 AE and .44 Magnum, while producing less recoil than the .50 AE. However, the .440 Cor-Bon never really caught on with shooters so very few Desert Eagles were produced in that caliber. As a result, those pistols are very rare and highly sought after by gun collectors all over the world.

4. Barrett M82A1 in .50 BMG

ridiculously expensive guns m82 barret
Image courtesy of Wikimedia
$8,000 – $9,000
The poster child of gun control advocates all over the world, the semi-automatic Barret M82A1 was designed by Ronnie Barrett in the 1980s as a long range sniper rifle that takes advantage of the awesome power of the .50 BMG (12.7x99mm) round.
The United States military adopted the M82A1 under the designation M107 and Army and Marine snipers have used them very successfully in Iraq and Afghanistan. Using the M82A1, a highly skilled shooter can successfully engage targets at ranges in excess of 2,000m.
Surprisingly, the recoil generated when shooting the M82A1 is quite manageable due to its heavy weight (in excess of 29 pounds) and the rifle’s muzzle break. Though the M82A1 is still currently being produced, they are still quite expensive and somewhat difficult to purchase. That hasn’t stopped people from using them on the occasional hog hunt though.

5. Krieghoff Trumph Drilling

ridiculously expensive guns trumpf drilling
Image Courtesy of Krieghoff
$10,000 – $15,000
Derived from the German word “drei” for the number three, drillings are break action, three barreled firearms that usually consist of two shotgun barrels and one rifle barrel (though this may vary).
Carrying a firearm designed in such a manner allows a hunter to be properly equipped to hunt everything from birds to big game without having to purchase or carry multiple firearms. Many different gun manufacturers have produced drillings over the years and there are literally dozens of variations out there.
That being said, the most common variation has TWO shotgun barrels (typically 12 or 16 gauge) on top with the rifle barrel (most often in 6x57mm, 7x57mm, .30-06 Springfield, or 9.3x74mm) on bottom. However, this may vary and it’s not uncommon to encounter drillings with two rifle barrels (often one rimfire and one centerfire) and one shogun barrel.
In addition to their high quality craftsmanship and beautiful appearance, Krieghoff firearms are also accurate and reliable. Not surprisingly, there is a premium attached to these rifles and Krieghoff drillings are correspondingly expensive.

6. Sharps Model 1874 Creedmore

ridiculously expensive guns sharps creedmore
Image Courtesy of Rock Island Auctions

$12,000 – $15,000

The Sharps Rifle Company produced a line of extremely accurate rifles chambered in large bore cartridges during the heyday of buffalo hunting in the 1870s. The long barreled, single shot, breech-loading Sharps rifles were capable of hits at very long range in the hands of a capable marksman and gained a reputation as excellent long distance rifles.

Popularized by the movie Quigley Down Under, the Sharps rifle has made quite a comeback in popularity in recent years and companies such as Shiloh Rifle Manufacturing Company have started to produce replicas of the legendary Sharps Model 1874 Creedmore. As a result, an original Creedmore in good condition will fetch an incredible sum.

7. Pederson Self-Loading Rifle in .276 Pederson

ridiculously expensive guns pederson self loading rifle
Image Courtesy of Rock Island Auctions
$20,000 – $25,000
When the United States Army was considering a replacement for the 1903 Springfield in the late 1920s, John Pederson developed a revolutionary new semi-automatic rifle design along with an accompanying cartridge.
Though neither the rifle or the cartridge ended up being adopted for use by the United States Army, they significantly influenced the design of the M-1 Garand, which Army and Marine Corps eventually adopted. Indeed, the Garand was originally chambered in .276 Pederson, and nearly adopted by the Army until it was decided to modify the design to shoot the .30-06 Springfield cartridge, which was then the standard cartridge in use by the Army and Marine Corps.

8. 1903 Springfield in .30-03 Springfield

ridiculously expensive guns 1903 springfield
Image Courtesy of Rock Island Auctions
$25,000+
That’s right: a 1903 Springfield rifle chambered in .30-03, not .30-06. Have you ever wondered why the 1903 Springfield shoots the .30-06 Springfield cartridge (which was not introduced until three years after the rifle)? Well, here’s your answer.
The 1903 Springfield was originally designed to shoot the .30-03 Springfield round, which fired a 220gr round nosed bullet at 2,200 feet per second. However, US Army officials quickly realized that the .30-03 was far outclassed by other cartridges in Europe firing new high velocity, “spitzer” (pointed) bullets (like the 7mm Mauser). So they designed a new cartridge firing a high velocity, 150gr pointed bullet: the .30-06 Springfield. After the adoption of the new round, virtually all of the 1903 Springfield rifles then in existence were modified to shoot the new .30-06 Springfield cartridge and only a handful chambered in .30-03 still remain.

9. Chapuis Savana Double Rifle in .416 Rigby

ridiculously expensive guns chap savana
Image Courtesy of the Double Gun Shop
$28,000 – $30,000
Developed in the 1800s for use by European hunters on dangerous game in Asia and Africa, a double rifle was considered an essential element of any dangerous game hunter’s equipment. It gives the hunter the ability to fire a follow up shot without having to work the action, thus saving valuable time during an encounter with dangerous game.
Double rifles are difficult and expensive to produce since both barrels are aligned to hit at precisely the same spot at a given range. This, plus the elaborate engraving that they usually have, ensured that wealthy hunters were by far the most common users of double rifles.
Over the years, the development of smokeless powder has allowed ammunition manufacturers the ability to produce ammunition that is both more compact and more powerful than the old large bore “express” cartridges of the late 1800s and early 1900s. As a result, gun makers can produce magazine fed rifles that give hunters the ability to fire a third, fourth, or even fifth shot without having to reload, a clear advantage over a two shot double rifle. However, the double rifle has hung on as a stylish throwback to the golden age of African hunters in the hands of wealthy hunters.

10. Winchester 1886 in .50-110 Winchester

ridiculously expensive guns Winchester 1886
Image Courtesy of Rock Island Auction Company
$50,000 – $80,000
Like the Winchester Model 70, the Winchester 1886 is quite popular with collectors. When Winchester released the Model 1886 rifle in the late 1800s, the rifle quickly caught on with the shooting and hunting communities. In addition to being an exceptionally beautiful rifle, the 1886 also had an incredibly strong action that was capable of safely shooting many of the most powerful cartridges of the day, like the .50-110 Winchester, and was the first true American “express rifle.”
Though the .50-110 Winchester was the most powerful American cartridge in existence when it was designed, it was introduced after the peak of American Bison hunting in the 1870s and 1880s. As a result, the cartridge was not practical for most hunting and was not very popular.
Though Winchester 1886s chambered in any caliber are in high demand, rifles chambered in .50-110 Winchester are extremely rare. Unfortunately, since the rifle was originally introduced to fire black powder cartridges, many 1886s on the market today are in pretty rough shape. An 1886 in good condition, especially one in .50-110 Winchester, will demand a high premium indeed.

11. Beretta Imperiale Montecarlo Shotgun

ridiculously expensive guns Beretta Imperiale Montecarlo
Image Courtesy of Beretta
 
$106,800
Yes, you read that right: a shotgun that costs over $100,000. Beretta is probably best known for making extremely high quality shotguns. Beretta shotguns, double barreled and otherwise, are renowned for being the best in the world and are often used by Olympic champions in skeet and trap.
As with anything else, you’re paying for the name as much as for the quality of the actual product. The bottom line is that since so many of the top dogs of the shotgunning world often use Bretta shotguns, lots of other people do as well. The Imperiale Montecarlo is the top of the line side by side shotgun that Beretta produces, featuring amazing engraving and craftsmanship as well as outstanding performance, and is priced appropriately.

12. Holland & Holland “Royal” Deluxe Double Rifle

Image Courtesy of Holland & Holland
$228,000+
It’s true that money can’t buy happiness. However, money can buy you a Holland & Holland Royal Deluxe Double Rifle and I don’t know about you, but I’ve never seen a sad person shooting an H&H double.
Only an incredibly wealthy person could afford to purchase a rifle that costs nearly twice as much as my first house did, but apparently there are enough of them out there that Holland & Holland produces a special line of ridiculously expensive rifles just for them.
Are these rifles overrated? Maybe, but all Holland & Holland firearms are made by hand by master gun makers and they advertise that 850 man hours of work go into making one of their Royal Side by Side Shotguns to ensure that they are the finest guns that money can buy.
It’s true that H&H firearms are extremely reliable and accurate. However, just like Beretta (and many other companies), Holland & Holland firearms are among the most expensive guns in the world due to their reputation and exclusive clientele. They count the British Royal Family among their many happy clients, in addition to other famous hunters such as Theodore Roosevelt and Frederick Courtney Selous.

Bonus: TrackingPoint Precision-Guided Bolt-Action .338 TP

Tracking-Point.com

$15,000+
The TrackingPoint Precision Guided Firearm system combines several advanced technology features that allow shooters to make long range shots with ease regardless of whether you’re hunting antelope in Africa or ISIS terrorists in Syria.
The scope contains a computer that tracks the target and computes a ballistic solution from data obtained from an integrated laser rangefinder. The trigger is wired into the scope and is designed to eliminate error from improper trigger squeeze. This particular model rifle is designed to hit targets moving as fast as 20 miles per hour at ranges out to 1 mile (1,760 yards). The system also contains an integrated camera that captures still photographs and video from the scope, which can then be transferred to a tablet, smartphone, or even a proprietary set of space age shooting glasses.
Like what you see here? You can read more great articles by John McAdams on his hunting blog. Follow him on Twitter @TheBigGameHunt or check out one of his Alberta bear hunts
NEXT: THESE ARE THE 6 BEST HANDGUNS FOR HUNTING

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