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

Court Says Short Barrel Rifles and Shotguns Are NOT Protected by the 2A!

Categories
A Victory! COOL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Every Dad’s Like a Boss Dream

Categories
You have to be kidding, right!?!

British & American T-34 Tanks – A True Story

Categories
A Victory! This great Nation & Its People War

Superforts Bomb Tokyo (1945)

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

Sig has gone off the deep end

Categories
You have to be kidding, right!?!

Gun Folk

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

BACK TO THE FUTURE WHAT IF WE COULD TIME TRAVEL? WRITTEN BY DAVE ANDERSON

The Remington Nylon 66 (left) was made from 1959–1989. The Ruger 10/22
was introduced in 1964 and six million rifles later, is still in production.

 

Generally I don’t record my adventures with time travel as I hate to risk my journalistic integrity and credibility. When I mentioned this to my editor, Brent said “I really doubt it is much of a risk.” Thank goodness! Now on with the story …

Incidentally, any movie you’ve seen about time travel is nonsense. A DeLorean, are you kidding me? Flux capacitors? Naked Terminators? Pathetic. Real time travel is far, far in the future. I can’t go forward, only back. And not on demand. I’m guessing it is when some being eons from now thinks it would be amusing to mess with some schlub.

 

One of the reasons for the unsurpassed reliability and popularity
of the Ruger 10/22 is the detachable rotary magazine.

The Nylon 66 was far ahead of its time, a bold step by Remington. It proved to
be a solid success, earning a sterling reputation for reliability, accuracy and durability.

Time Fades

 

The last time-travel event was in June 2022. I had just picked up another Ruger 10/22, this one a carbine with plastic stock and stainless steel barrel. I figured it would make a great survival rifle. Someday I could trade it for a side of beef. I needed photos, so feeling nostalgic I drove to what in my youth had been a remote pasture with a little glade among shade trees. The trees are still there but today the pasture is a mix of shopping malls and suburban housing.

But the future guy was having fun. As I drove, the paved road reverted to a dirt track and the houses, malls, gas stations, traffic lights were gone. Once again it was the remote pasture of my memory. I made the long walk to my favorite spot and there in the shade of the trees, sitting on a stump, was a freckle-faced boy of 12 or 13. He was holding a rifle I recognized as a Remington Nylon 66, Apache Black version.

“Hey kid, how are you? Nice looking rifle.”

“Yeah, so what? Move along old-timer, I was here first.” That’s what I expected to hear. But what he actually said was, “Thank you, sir. Am I intruding on your territory? ’Cause if so I can leave.”

I was taken aback. Did he actually say sir? And show deference to an adult?

“No, you’re fine. I’ll just take this other stump. Was the .22 a birth-day present?

“No,” he said, with pride evident. “I bought it myself. During seeding time I helped my uncle after school and on weekends, picking rocks, harrowing fields, fixing fence. He paid me a dollar an hour. Uncle said if you do a man’s work you get a man’s pay.”

“So then your Uncle or your Dad bought the rifle for you?”

“Why would they do that? Mr. Daniels at the gun shop lets us buy .22 rifles when we turn 13. I gave him $55, he gave me the rifle and threw in a soft case and a carton of shells. But he won’t sell me a deer rifle or a handgun until I’m a full grown adult.” He heaved a sigh. “Three more years …”

“What made you choose the Nylon 66? Because it’s the first mass-produced American firearm with a plastic stock?”

“Plastic?” He gave me a look like I had insulted his mother. “Plastic is for model airplanes. This is structural nylon, Zytel they call it. It is tougher than wood and guaranteed not to fade, chip, peel, warp and some other things I forget. The nickel on the metal keeps it from rusting. Do you know Alaskan fishermen keep this rifle on their boats to shoot marauding sea lions?”

 

The straight-line cartridge feeding from the buttstock magazine in the
Nylon 66 was very reliable but a bit slow to reload.

Pondering

 

I added up what I knew. I was pretty sure the Apache Black model came out in 1962. The kid had good manners and a work ethic. His rifle had no serial number. There were no forms to fill out when buying a gun. There was no Marine Mammal protection act. I took a chance: “I think the metal finish is chrome, not nickel. But we’re sure lucky to be living in 1962.”

A teenager today would say, “Well, duh.” The teenager back then said, “Yes sir, we certainly are. Would it be all right to look at your rifle?”

It was pleasant sitting there talking with the kid, trading rifles back and forth to try shots at dirt clods and rocks. Both rifles were reliable and seemed equally accurate. After a time he said, “I think my rifle has a better trigger, better sights and I like the safety location. The only thing I like better about your rifle is the clip — detachable rotary magazine, you call it? Easier to remove for reloading. You could carry extra loaded detachable rotary magazines. With my rifle I have to remove the spring tube thing, set it aside and count 14 shells into the magazine.”

“I have some extra magazines, I’ll give you one. It won’t be much use for a couple of years but one day you might buy a Ruger 10/22.”

The kid laughed heartily. “Who on earth would own two .22s? And to be frank, I prefer my Nylon 66. I can use it with panache.”

“Did you say panache? Do you know what it means?”

“Of course. It means verve, dash, flamboyant confidence, stylish elegance. Everybody knows that.”

“In the future, only gun writers will know. But kid, you got it.”

Categories
War You have to be kidding, right!?!

Cobalt Bombs: The Bombs to End the World

Categories
You have to be kidding, right!?!

Jeez!

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

Heads up, owners of Sig P320 pistols… from Bayou Renaissance Man

… take heed of this development in Washington state.

 

The Washington State Criminal Justice Training Commission has prohibited recruits from training with a popular semiautomatic handgun and has banned the pistol from the commission’s campuses after reports the gun could fire without someone pulling the trigger.

In an order issued Feb. 24, commission Executive Director Monica Alexander made a permanent prohibition of the Sig Sauer P320, one of the most popular handguns on the market, a version of which is used by the U.S. military.

Alexander had temporarily banned anyone from carrying and training with the firearm after an Oct. 9 incident, in which a recruit in a Basic Law Enforcement Academy class in Spokane reported his Sig Sauer “self-discharged” as he drew it to fire on targets at the police range. The round struck the ground behind the recruit and fragmented, striking and injuring an instructor and another recruit.

The recruit insisted his trigger finger was “indexed” — pointed alongside the frame of the handgun, outside of the trigger guard — when he drew the weapon. A firearms instructor confirmed the incident, stating he was watching the recruit’s hand and that the “weapon immediately fired while he was drawing the weapon” while his finger was not on the trigger.

. . .

The work group uncovered a number of lawsuits and video of incidents involving the Sig Sauer P320 firing while in a holster, including 2022 body-camera video of an officer in Milwaukee who was wounded when his partner’s firearm discharged in its holster.

Another body-camera video shows a 2023 incident in Montville, N.J., where an officer’s holstered sidearm goes off in the lobby of the police station.

There also have been a number of lawsuits filed against Sig Sauer over unintended discharges of the P320, including one settled in Tacoma in 2023 after a man suffered a serious leg wound when his gun discharged while he was holstering it. The details of the settlement were not immediately available.

 

There’s more at the link.

There’s no word on whether the prohibition also applies to the Sig-Sauer M17 and M18, military versions of the SiG P320.  However, I’d assume the risk is the same – they’re mechanically identical internally, as far as I know – so I’d be careful with the military pistols too.

I’ve never fired a Sig P320, so I can’t comment from personal experience.  I know it’s become very popular in certain circles, with a number of top competition shooters using it.  This troubling development in Washington state may change that.