Categories
All About Guns

Remington Nylon 76

Remington Nylon 76Image result for Remington Nylon 76

Now back in the So called “Good Old days”. The major Gun Companies had some serious problems facing them. The price of labor was going up, good quality wood for rifle stocks was becoming harder and harder to find.Related image
So Remington turned to plastic that was dyed to look like wood. All things considered, Not a bad idea to tell the truth. Little to say that at the time. I am willing to bet. That the Big Boys had no idea of the Genie that was let out of the barrel.

Image result for Barbara Eden

Since it seems that all new rifles have incorporated plastic one way or another in the production of firearms.
Image result for plastic rifle stocks
Image result for plastic rifle stocks
Related image
Anyways, It turned out alright as this rifle supposedly is the fastest Lever Action 22 LR out there. Pity that I can never find one for sale! I guess that tells you something about it qualities.

Here is some more information from my Great Readers!
https://youtu.be/mIVaHtYhZdE
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Remington Nylon 76 “Trailrider” is the only lever actionrifleknown to have been made by Remington Arms and was billed as the world’s fastest lever action rifle.

Design

This gun has a locked-breech lever action, with a short stroke of only about thirty degrees. It was introduced by Remington Arms in 1962 and discontinued in 1965.
Approximately 26,927 of these rifles were made, and they originally retailed for $59.95.
Two grades of this rifle were available: The Nylon 76AB Apache Black (approximately 1600 were made of this type), and the Nylon 76MB Mohawk Brown.[1] The Remington website states that there was a “standard” grade, but through correspondence with Remington, it was determined that this was a typo.[citation needed]
This rifle is chambered for a .22LR and has a tubular magazine that opens at the rear of the stock and holds 14 rounds.

Categories
All About Guns

Confederate Morse Carbine: Centerfire Cartridges Ahead of Their Time

Related image
Image result for Confederate Morse Carbine
Image result for Confederate Morse Carbine
Related image
Related image
 
This is one of the few surviving 50 caliber rounds look like
Related image
All in all, it’s a pretty cleverly designed gun considering the conditions it was built under. Here below is a video about it!
Grumpy

Attachments area
Preview YouTube video Confederate Morse Carbine: Centerfire Cartridges Ahead of Their Time

Categories
All About Guns

Smith & Wesson Model 1 Second Issue Mfg 1860 1868

.
Smith & Wesson - MODEL 1 SECOND ISSUE MFG 1860 1868 INVESTMENT GR. - Picture 1

Smith & Wesson - MODEL 1 SECOND ISSUE MFG 1860 1868 INVESTMENT GR. - Picture 2
Smith & Wesson - MODEL 1 SECOND ISSUE MFG 1860 1868 INVESTMENT GR. - Picture 3
Smith & Wesson - MODEL 1 SECOND ISSUE MFG 1860 1868 INVESTMENT GR. - Picture 4
Smith & Wesson - MODEL 1 SECOND ISSUE MFG 1860 1868 INVESTMENT GR. - Picture 5
Smith & Wesson - MODEL 1 SECOND ISSUE MFG 1860 1868 INVESTMENT GR. - Picture 6
Smith & Wesson - MODEL 1 SECOND ISSUE MFG 1860 1868 INVESTMENT GR. - Picture 7
Smith & Wesson - MODEL 1 SECOND ISSUE MFG 1860 1868 INVESTMENT GR. - Picture 8
Smith & Wesson - MODEL 1 SECOND ISSUE MFG 1860 1868 INVESTMENT GR. - Picture 9
Smith & Wesson - MODEL 1 SECOND ISSUE MFG 1860 1868 INVESTMENT GR. - Picture 10

Categories
All About Guns

Browning Fn Safari in a Butt kicking 458 Win Mag

BROWNING - FN SAFARI USED GUN INV 202903 - Picture 4

BROWNING - FN SAFARI USED GUN INV 202903 - Picture 2
BROWNING - FN SAFARI USED GUN INV 202903 - Picture 3
BROWNING - FN SAFARI USED GUN INV 202903 - Picture 4
BROWNING - FN SAFARI USED GUN INV 202903 - Picture 5
BROWNING - FN SAFARI USED GUN INV 202903 - Picture 6
BROWNING - FN SAFARI USED GUN INV 202903 - Picture 7
BROWNING - FN SAFARI USED GUN INV 202903 - Picture 8

 

Categories
All About Guns

Shotgun Ribs: Why They Matter Vent vs. solid ribs, and how to use them to improve your shooting BY PHIL BOURJAILY

Murrays vent rib tool, brownells, shotgun tool
Use Murray’s Vent Rib Tool to fix a dent.
If all of our focus is supposed to be on the target, why does the style of rib on our shotgun, or even whether the gun has a rib or not, matter at all? It matters because the gun is always there in your peripheral vision, and a rib is part of the “sight picture,” whether you believe you look at it or not.
That line to the target helps you keep the bird-barrel relationship straight. Add to that the fact that many self-taught shooters aim their shotguns by squinting down the rib, and it’s no surprise that almost all modern shotguns have ribs.
Vent ribs are almost universal these days, and they are supposed to help dissipate heat and dampen mirage. In reality, a solid rib makes more sense for most field shooting, where we rarely shoot enough to heat our barrels.
Solid ribs are hollow, if made right, and they don’t weigh more than a vent rib. Some old Superposeds had solid ribs.
The only ones I can think of off the top of my head these days on production guns come on some Caesar Guerini guns. They look good and have the advantage of being, well, solid, so they don’t snag grass and seeds and things.
They’re easier to keep clean, too, because you no longer have to scrub the underside of the rib and the posts with an old toothbrush.
It is a both a strength and a curse of mine that I can shoot about any gun equally well or badly, so I have no strong opinions on rib width, rib height, or rib design in general. I have ribs of all widths save for the double-wide Browning Broadway, and I couldn’t pick a favorite.
I do like target guns stocked so I can see a bit of rib, allowing me to “float” targets, while most of my field guns give me a fairly flat view, so I am hardly aware of the rib at all.
The higher the rib, the straighter your stock can be, allowing heads-up shooting and theoretically putting the gun lower on your shoulder so you can better absorb recoil.
And, if you have a stock that’s too straight for you, you can find various aftermarket rib makers who can work with you to add height to a rib, or even add an angled extension to raise or lower point of impact.
If you dent a vent rib, as we all do from time to time, resist the temptation to stick a big flat screwdriver underneath and pry it up. Invest in a rib straightener.
Brownells sells one that clamps on the rib. You tighten a screw on the top and draws the rib back into line. It costs $50, which is a small price to pay to become the one among your friends who owns the rib straightener they all need to borrow. Or rent, for that matter.
Categories
All About Guns

Carl Gustaf PRE -86 M45, SWEDISH K 9mm Luger

Someday I will be able to shoot one of these at the Range! Someday. Let alone own one. Oh well!
Image result for SWEDISH K 9mm
Related image
Carl Gustaf - PRE -86 DEALER SAMPLE CARL GUSTAF M45, SWEDISH K - Picture 2
Carl Gustaf - PRE -86 DEALER SAMPLE CARL GUSTAF M45, SWEDISH K - Picture 4
Carl Gustaf - PRE -86 DEALER SAMPLE CARL GUSTAF M45, SWEDISH K - Picture 6
Carl Gustaf - PRE -86 DEALER SAMPLE CARL GUSTAF M45, SWEDISH K - Picture 7
Carl Gustaf - PRE -86 DEALER SAMPLE CARL GUSTAF M45, SWEDISH K - Picture 8
Carl Gustaf - PRE -86 DEALER SAMPLE CARL GUSTAF M45, SWEDISH K - Picture 9
Carl Gustaf - PRE -86 DEALER SAMPLE CARL GUSTAF M45, SWEDISH K - Picture 10
Carl Gustaf - PRE -86 DEALER SAMPLE CARL GUSTAF M45, SWEDISH K

Attachments area
Categories
All About Guns

Colt 1911 WW I. 45 Acp With Original Holster .45 ACP

Note the Old School “Dipped” Magazine!

COLT 1911 - COLT 1911 WW1 45 ACP WITH ORIGINAL HOLSTER - Picture 1
COLT 1911 - COLT 1911 WW1 45 ACP WITH ORIGINAL HOLSTER - Picture 2
COLT 1911 - COLT 1911 WW1 45 ACP WITH ORIGINAL HOLSTER - Picture 3
COLT 1911 - COLT 1911 WW1 45 ACP WITH ORIGINAL HOLSTER - Picture 4
COLT 1911 - COLT 1911 WW1 45 ACP WITH ORIGINAL HOLSTER - Picture 5
COLT 1911 - COLT 1911 WW1 45 ACP WITH ORIGINAL HOLSTER - Picture 6
COLT 1911 - COLT 1911 WW1 45 ACP WITH ORIGINAL HOLSTER - Picture 7
COLT 1911 - COLT 1911 WW1 45 ACP WITH ORIGINAL HOLSTER - Picture 8
COLT 1911 - COLT 1911 WW1 45 ACP WITH ORIGINAL HOLSTER - Picture 9
COLT 1911 - COLT 1911 WW1 45 ACP WITH ORIGINAL HOLSTER - Picture 10

 

Categories
All About Guns California

See the Ways Californians Are Circumventing Gun Control Set to Roll Out in 2018 by S.H. BLANNELBERRY

Rich Howell shows off a California-compliant rifle.  Proof that Californians will not be denied their 2A rights. (Photo: Reno Gazette Journal).

Necessity is the mother of invention, right?  No one knows that better than Californians.
Over the years the state has passed law after law infringing on their right to keep and bear arms.  But with every turn of the screw, Californians have fought back, finding new workarounds that allow them to maintain some semblance of their 2A rights while vexing anti-gunners in the process.
With 2018 around the corner.  Here are some examples of what Californians are doing to stick it to their overlords in Sacramento.
Law: No more Online Ammo Sales (2018), Background Checks for All Ammo Sales (2019)
 Workaround: Buy ammo out of state.  Simple as that.  For Californians who live along border states like Arizona, Nevada, and Oregon it’ll be relatively easy.  For everyone else, it might be a long car ride.  Still, go for a road trip.  Buy in bulk.  And be done with it. Don’t give them the satisfaction or the tax revenue from purchasing from California vendors. Sorry California ammo sellers, you’ll have to take one for the team on this.
Law: Bullet Button Ban (2018)
Workaround: The Bullet Button was a workaround against the state’s initial ban on black rifles with detachable magazines, telescoping stocks, flash hiders, and pistol grips. It’s a simple device that secures a magazine to a rifle so that it cannot detach without the use of a tool (or tip of a bullet) to disengage it.
Lawmakers caught on to the Bullet Button and banned it.  As part of that legislation, they are requiring current owners with a bullet button on their rifle to register it with the state.  Heck no!  To escape this nonsense, just remove the Bullet Button and add a Patriot Pin.
A Patriot Pin circumvents the law because with the device installed a user cannot detach a magazine without opening the action.  The beauty of the Patriot Pin is that it’s a rapid way to open the action and, thus, release the mag.  Basically, with the push of a button.

SEE ALSO: Meet FN’s New California-Compliant Rifles

Law: Black Rifle Ban 
Workaround: Suppose you don’t want to go the route of the Patriot Pin or the Bullet Button. There is a way to have a rifle with a detachable magazine.  The tradeoff is you can’t have any features.  No collapsing stock, no flash hider, no pistol grip.
The solution is a featureless rifle.  An AR with a funky-looking non-pistol grip, a fixed stock and no flash hider.  They’re ugly.  Hideous compared to standard ARs.  But they’ll get the job done.  What’s more, it is yet another way to flip off the powers that be.
Law: Ban on Carrying Long Guns in Unincorporated Areas (2018)
Workaround: While the state legislature passed this law, the decision on whether it applies to various areas is actually up to the local counties.  Convince the board members in your county not to enact the new rule and it won’t take effect.  Easier said than done if you live outside of counties like Los Angeles or San Diego.  Nevertheless, give it a go.

Conclusion

Rich Howell (see video below) made an astute observation in an interview with the Reno Gazette-Journal.
“They can pass all the laws they want, and I can guarantee you we are going to find a way around them,” said Howell, the general manager of Olde West Gun & Loan in Redding, CA.
Ain’t that the truth.

Categories
All About Guns

How ammo is made at Lake City! Video

Attachments area
Preview YouTube video How the Bullets / WEAPONS are made in USA factories- FULL DOCUMENTARY 2017

Categories
All About Guns Anti Civil Rights ideas & "Friends"

Arkansas Governor to State Police: Open Carry ‘Protected and Allowed’

Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson (R) sent a letter to Arkansas State Police (ASP) directing them to recognize that the open carry of handguns is “protected and allowed.”

He addressed his letter to ASP director Col. Bill Bryant and said Act 746 of 2013 allows a “person to open carry a handgun so long as there is no intent to unlawfully employ the handgun.”
Hutchinson added:

Further, consistent with Act 486 of 2017, the sole legal act of open carrying a handgun in and of itself will not in revocation of an an individual’s concealed carry license. A concealed carry license or enhanced carry license continues to be required in order to carry a concealed handgun.

He asked Bryant to share the directive with “all appropriate ASP personnel” and “monitor all agency materials for consistency.”
Arkansas Matters reports that Hutchinson’s directive “carries no force of law” but “will have the effect of guiding state troopers” as they interact with armed law-abiding citizens.
ASP director Bryant responded to Hutchinson’s letter by issuing a memo to troop commanders, reminding them that “openly carrying a handgun does not alone provide probable cause for arrest.”
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.