Categories
All About Guns

A Smith & Wesson 1006 in caliber 10MM

I kind of like this brushed nickel look on this pistol for some reason.

Smith & Wesson 1006 10MM BRUSHED STAINLESS - Picture 2
Smith & Wesson 1006 10MM BRUSHED STAINLESS - Picture 3
Smith & Wesson 1006 10MM BRUSHED STAINLESS - Picture 4
Smith & Wesson 1006 10MM BRUSHED STAINLESS - Picture 5
Smith & Wesson 1006 10MM BRUSHED STAINLESS - Picture 6
Smith & Wesson 1006 10MM BRUSHED STAINLESS - Picture 7
Smith & Wesson 1006 10MM BRUSHED STAINLESS - Picture 8
Smith & Wesson 1006 10MM BRUSHED STAINLESS - Picture 9
Smith & Wesson 1006 10MM BRUSHED STAINLESS - Picture 10

 

Categories
All About Guns

Top 10 Most Accurate Subcompact 9mm Handguns

Categories
A Victory! All About Guns

COURT FINDS FEDERAL 21 & OVER LAW ON HANDGUNS UNCONSTITUTIONAL by CHRIS EGER

COURT FINDS FEDERAL 21 & OVER LAW ON HANDGUNS UNCONSTITUTIONALFN 509® Compact MRD FDE | FN®
Categories
All About Guns Fieldcraft

10 BEST BEAR-DEFENSE GUNS FOR WHEN YOUR LIFE DEPENDS ON IT Posted by John McAdams

10 Best Bear Defense Guns

It’s usually a good idea to be well armed when out in bear country. These are the best bear-defense guns for the job. 

When you head into bear country, you must accept that you are no longer at the top of the food chain. Luckily, most bears usually do not want any trouble and will leave the area as soon as they detect you. However, this is not always the case and you should be prepared to defend yourself if you get in a tight situation. A good bear gun should be a part of your defense plan.https://bit.ly/2wGAESm

That said, an ounce of prevention is worth more than a pound of cure. By using your brain and taking a few basic precautions out in the woods, you can dramatically reduce your odds of being attacked by a bear.

Give any bear that you encounter (especially a sow with cubs) plenty of space. Make lots of noise so that any bears in the area know that you are there and carry bear spray. Firearms should only be used as a last resort to defend yourself from a bear.

A charging bear can move extremely fast and only a hit on the bear’s central nervous system (brain or spine) is guaranteed to stop a bear in its tracks. Even on the biggest bears, the central nervous system is not a large target, so stopping a charging bear with a gun makes for some very challenging shooting.

Because of this, you should practice shooting your chosen gun extensively. If you use a handgun, then buy a good quality holster and practice drawing it.

Remember: even the biggest and most powerful bear-defense guns aren’t guaranteed to stop a charging bear if you don’t make a good shot. By the same token, even a smaller handgun will get the job done with good shot placements, good bullets, and a little luck.

Categories
All About Guns

The CZ 75 Compact

No photo description available.
The only thing that I do not like about the CZ 75 is a minor thing. Which is that compared to the Sigs or the Berretta’s . For me at least is that its a pain in the rectum for me to field strip this fine gun to clean it.
Seeing that is kinda like the 1911, where you have to fiddle with the toggle and the slide release to line it up. When you try to put it back together. But as I said before its a minor thing in the span of the universe. Since they shoot a great pattern for me! Grumpy

Categories
All About Guns

Shooting the Uberti 1873 Winchester Short Rifle

Categories
All About Guns

When a Rifle stops being a Gun and become Art

A Brace Of Superb Hartmann & Weiss Bolt Action Rifles / Westley Richards

A Brace Of Superb Hartmann & Weiss Bolt Action Rifles / Westley Richards

A Brace Of Superb Hartmann & Weiss Bolt Action Rifles / Westley Richards

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Categories
All About Guns War

War Trophy: A Treasure from the National Firearms Museum by NRA Staff

War Trophy: A Treasure from the National Firearms Museum | American  Rifleman | Official Journal Of The NRA

War Trophy: A Treasure from the National Firearms Museum

This remarkable 12-gauge Merkel Model 303 over-under shotgun is thought to have been a gift from Generalissimo Francisco Franco of Spain to Reichmarschall Hermann Göring (1893-1946). The gun, in its French gray leather case, was presented to Göring In Dankbarkeit (In Gratitude) at his famed hunting lodge Carinhall in July 1937.

Göring had been an ace fighter pilot during World War I, having flown with Manfred von Richtofen’s “Flying Circus,” and he was a recipient of the Pour le Merite, better known as the “Blue Max.” Credited with up to 22 aerial victories, Göring was in command of the “Flying Circus” by war’s end. He was an early supporter of Adolph Hitler’s Nazi party and eventually became head of the Luftwaffe and Hitler’s designated successor. Captured in Bavaria in 1945, he was convicted of war crimes during the Nuremburg trials but committed suicide before he could be executed.

This exceptional shotgun includes cased accessories, such as Göring’s field marshal epaulettes, a medallion with Göring’s profile, a sharpshooter’s badge and an embossed cigar case. One of hundreds of firearms “liberated” from various Göring estates at war’s end, this stunning Merkel was presented as a gift from General of the Army Dwight D. Eisenhower to General of the Armies John J. Pershing in June 1945.

Purchased at auction by Robert E. Petersen, the Merkel is now a part of the Robert E. Petersen Gallery at NRA’s National Firearms Museum in Fairfax, Va. The museum is open seven days a week from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., but is closed Christmas Day.

For more information, go to nramuseum.org.

 

 

 

 

Categories
All About Guns

A Garaysar Fear 103 AK Style shotgun, chambered in 12Ga.

Image may contain: outdoor

Categories
All About Guns This great Nation & Its People

Back when the Navy had some REALLY Scary looking Men of War! The New Mexico class battleship USS Idaho, 1943