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Jeremy Clarkson & Guns

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One of my many Vices is that of watching Top Gear and The Grand Tour by the Guys. I also think that Clarkson is my kind of guy as he punched out Piers Morgan.
Anyways he did some really good Videos about Guns and War. So I hope you might like them!

http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x194p8_top-gear-prius-test-shooting-by-gu_auto

 
 

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Sako Av in the Caliber of 300 Win Mag

SAKO AV IN 300 WIN MAG  IN GREAT SHAPE NO RESERVE - Picture 5
So far I have had a lot of good luck with Sako. Having either owned or shot about a dozen of their rifles. My only complaints are that they are hard to find to buy and are costly too! Oh well.SAKO AV IN 300 WIN MAG  IN GREAT SHAPE NO RESERVE - Picture 6
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Winchester 490 in 22LR

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Just another reason on why Ruger beat the pants off of Winchester in the 22 Semi Auto market. I.E. Too little & too late! Nonetheless it’s a nice little gun in its way!
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 - WINCHESTER 490 IN 22 CALIBER LIKE NEW - Picture 1
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Image result for ruger 10/22
As you can see the rotary magazine of the 10/22. Helps preserve the clean lines that this gun does not have with the extended magazine. Also it will not snag on things either when carrying it.
 - WINCHESTER 490 IN 22 CALIBER LIKE NEW - Picture 2
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C. Sharps Arms .40/65 Custom Rifle .40-65 Winchester

C. Sharps Arms - C. Sharps Arms

C. Sharps Arms - C. Sharps Arms
C. Sharps Arms - C. Sharps Arms
C. Sharps Arms - C. Sharps Arms
C. Sharps Arms - C. Sharps Arms
C. Sharps Arms - C. Sharps Arms
C. Sharps Arms - C. Sharps Arms
C. Sharps Arms - C. Sharps Arms
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Image result for .40-65 Winchester

.40-65 Winchester

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
.40-65 Winchester
Type Rifle
Place of origin USA
Specifications
Bullet diameter .406 in (10.3 mm)
Neck diameter .423 in (10.7 mm)
Shoulder diameter .560 in (14.2 mm)
Base diameter .504 in (12.8 mm)
Rim diameter .604 in (15.3 mm)
Case length 2.1 in (53 mm)
Overall length 2.48 in (63 mm)
Rifling twist 1:20 to 1:26
Primer type large rifle
Ballistic performance
Bullet mass/type Velocity Energy
260 gr (17 g) 1,500 ft/s (460 m/s) 1,308 ft·lbf (1,773 J)
260 gr (17 g) 1,720 ft/s (520 m/s) 1,708 ft·lbf (2,316 J)
260 gr (17 g) 1,420 ft/s (430 m/s) 1,165 ft·lbf (1,580 J)
Source(s): Barnes & Amber

The .40-65 Winchester (also called the .40-65 Winchester and Marlin)[1] was an American rifle cartridge.
Introduced in 1887 for the Winchester Model 1886, and available in Winchester single shots and in the Marlin Model 1895, it was “a further effort to put more steam” in repeating rifle cartridges.[2]
In the modern era, the cartridge has gained favor for metallic silhouette shooting and Black Powder Cartridge Rifle matches where is serves as a low-recoil alternative to the common 45-70.[3][4]
It was commercially available in black and smokeless varieties until around 1935, and can be handloaded by reforming .45-70 brass.[2]

Nomenclature

The nomenclature of the period was based on several properties of the cartridge:

  • .40: nominal caliber in inches: 0.40 inches (10.2 mm); actual caliber was .406 in ( mm)[5]
  • 65 : weight of propellant (black powder) charge, in grains: 65 grains (4.2 g)
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AMT AUTO MAGNUM II .22 RIMFIRE MAGNUM CALIBER PISTOL. 6"





 
 
 
 

AMT AutoMag II
Type Semi-automatic pistol
Place of origin United States
Production history
Manufacturer Arcadia Machine and Tool
Unit cost $406 MSRP
Produced 1987
Specifications
Weight 32 oz (910 g)
Barrel length 6 in (150 mm),
4.5 in (110 mm),
3.375 in (85.7 mm) (Compact Model)

Cartridge .22 Winchester Magnum Rimfire
Barrels 1
6 grooves, right hand twist
Feed system 9 round detachable magazine
7 round detachable magazine (Compact Model)
Sights White outline Millet adjustable sights (until late 1993)
Adjustable 3 dot system (since late 1993)[1]

The AMT AutoMag II is a semiautomatic handgun chambered in .22 WMR, that was manufactured by Arcadia Machine and Tool from 1987 until 1999[2] It is currently manufactured by High Standard.[3]

Design

There were a number of engineering challenges to overcome in designing an autoloading .22 WMR handgun such as extraction problems.
The extraction problems stem from the fact that the slow burning rifle powder of the .22 WMR cartridge develops a late peak pressure.
This can cause the case mouth to expand and jam in the chamber when fired from a handgun. AMT overcame this issue by drilling 18 holes at 90 degrees to the chamber.
A sleeve was then welded over the chamber; providing a tiny amount of clearance for the excess gas to escape from the first set of holes on back to the second set, thereby relieving the pressure enough to prevent the case from sticking.[4]
The stainless steel slide has a large cutout over the barrel, similar to the Beretta M9, to facilitate better cooling and ejection of the spent brass casing.
(More likely it is simply to reduce the moving mass of the slide to allow for the blow-back operation).
The stainless steel construction throughout makes rust a non-issue.

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Colt Woodsman Match Target 22 Long Rifle 1st Series

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This just goes to show me that on the subject of guns. That it is almost impossible for me to know “everything” about guns. Since this is the 1st I have heard of this Colt Pistol!
Grumpy
COLT - COLT WOODSMAN MATCHED TARGET BULLSEYE INVESTMENT - Picture 1
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Colt WoodsmanFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Colt Woodsman
An early First Series Colt Woodsman and magazine.

An early first series Colt Woodsman pistol and magazine.
Type Semi-automatic pistol
Place of origin United States
Production history
Designer John Browning
Manufacturer Colt’s Manufacturing Company
Produced 1915–1977
No. built More than 690,000 [1]
Specifications
Weight Approx: 1.875 Lbs
Barrel length 4.5, 6, or 6.625 inches.

Cartridge .22 Long Rifle
Action Semi-automatic

The Colt Woodsman is a semi-automatic sporting pistol manufactured by the American Colt’s Manufacturing Company from 1915 to 1977. It was designed by John Moses Browning.[2]
The frame design changed over time, in three distinct series: series one being 1915–1941, series two 1947–1955, and series three being 1955–1977.

Design

The Colt Woodsman sprang from a design by John Moses Browning and was refined by gunsmiths and designers at Colt’s before its introduction in 1915.[3]
Without the constraints of the US Government interfering with his design, Browning developed the Woodsman with a short slide, no grip safety and no hammer.
These features were in place on his Model 1903 and 1911 designs, but a handgun for the civilian market did not require them.[4]

Variants and versions

There are three series of the Colt Woodsman and each series had three models: Target, Sport and Match Target.[3]

First Series 1915-1941

The Target Model was the base model of the Woodsman and featured a 6″ barrel with adjustable front and rear sights.[3]
The Sport Model was designed as a field sidearm for hiking and camping in 1933 and had a 4.5″ barrel. Original versions were made with a fixed front sight in the first series, but by the latter half of production, an adjustable sight was available.[3]
The Match Target Model debuted in 1938 and featured a heavier barrel with a one piece wrap-around grip known as the “elephant ear.”[5] A “Bullseye” Icon was rollmarked into the slide lending the nickname “Bullseye Match Target.”[3]
In 1941 as the US entered World War II, Colt ceased civilian production of the Woodsman but delivered 4000 Match Target models to the US Government as late as 1945.[6] These pistols had a plastic one piece grip and were marked “Property US Government,” but appeared on the surplus market after the war.[4]

Second Series 1947-1955

Colt resumed production of the Woodsman in 1947. The three Models remained the same, but were built on a longer heavier frame and had a magazine safety, automatic slide stop and magazine release located at the rear of the trigger guard.[3]
Special versions were made for the United States Marine Corps (100 Match Target Models and 2500 Sport Models); United States Air Force (925 Target Models) and 75 Match Target Models for the United States Coast Guard.
The Air Force models had no special markings and most were sold as surplus through the Director of Civilian Marksmanship Program. The bulk of the Marine and Coast Guard versions were destroyed and sold as scrap metal.[3]

Colt Woodsman Match Target

Third Series 1955-1977

Colt changed the design of the Woodsman in 1955. The three Models remained the same, but the markings, grips and sights underwent slight changes.
The most significant was relocating the magazine release from the rear of the trigger guard to the heel of the grip as on the first series.[3]
Colt also introduced new models, such as the less expensive Challenger and Huntsman Models equipped with fixed sights. From 1960 walnut stocks with a thumb rest were optional, in place of the standard black plastic stocks.[1]

Literary references to the Colt Woodsman

Screenwriter and pulp fiction author Raymond Chandler:
“They came out at me, almost side by side, from the dressing room beside the wall bed – two of them – with guns. The tall one was grinning. He had his hat low on his forehead and he had a wedge-shaped face that ended in a point, like the bottom of the ace of diamonds. He had moist eyes and a nose so bloodless that it might have been made of white wax. His gun was a Colt Woodsman with a long barrel and the front sight filed off. That meant he thought he was good.”[7] (emphasis added)

Novelist Ernest Hemingway:
The rifle and the pistol are still the equalizer when one man is more of a man than another, and if…he is really smart…he will get a permit to carry one and then drop around to Abercrombie and Fitch and buy himself a .22 caliber Colt automatic pistol, Woodsman model, with a five-inch barrel and a box of shells. I advise him to get lubricated hollow points to avoid jams and to ensure a nice expansion on the bullet. He might even get several boxes and practice a little…
Now standing in one corner of a boxing ring with a .22 caliber Colt automatic pistol, shooting a bullet weighing only 40 grains and with a striking energy of 51 foot pounds at 25 feet from the muzzle, I will guarantee to kill either [boxer] Gene [Tunney] or Joe Louis before they get to me from the opposite corner. This is the smallest caliber pistol cartridge made; but it is also one of the most accurate and easy to hit with, since the pistol has no recoil. I have killed many horses with it, cripples and bear baits, with a single shot, and what will kill a horse will kill a man. I have hit six dueling silhouettes in the head with it at regulation distance in five seconds. It was this type of pistol that Millen boys’ colleague, Abe Faber, did all his killings with. Yet this same pistol bullet fired at point blank range will not dent a grizzly’s skull, and to shoot a grizzly with a .22 caliber pistol would simply be one way of committing suicide.” [8] (emphasis added)

Novelist Kyril Bonfiglioli:
“We chattered on in a desultory way but I found it harder to concentrate on the prettier points of fish-frying. Texas businessmen doubtless often carry pistols but I found it hard to believe that they would favour the inconvenient length of a Colt’s Woodsman, which is a small calibre, long-barrelled semi-automatic used only for target shooting and, more rarely, by professional killers who know they can plant its small bullet in just the right place. As a handy weapon of self-defence for the ordinary citizen, it simply doesn’t exist. Moreover, Texas businessmen, I felt sure, would be unlikely to house their pistols in Bryson rapid-release spring-clips.” (emphasis added)

See also

References

  1. Jump up to:a b Hacker, Rick (4 March 2011). “Colt Woodsman Target Model”American Rifleman. National Rifle Association of America. Retrieved 25 March 2015This is yet another classic firearm from John M. Browning, assisted by Colt employees George H. Tansley and F.C. Chadwick.
  2. Jump up^ Campbell, Dave (28 October 2010). “Colt Woodsman”Shooting Illustrated. National Rifle Association. Retrieved 26 March2015.
  3. Jump up to:a b c d e f g h Rayburn, Bob (2007). Rick Sapp, ed. Standard Catalog of Colt Firearms. Iola, Wisconsin: F+W Media, Inc. pp. 171–179. ISBN 0-89689-534-3.
  4. Jump up to:a b Miller, David (2006). The History of Browning Firearms. Lyons Press. pp. 50–52. ISBN 978-1-59228-910-3.
  5. Jump up^ Emanuele, Rasti. “Colt Woodsman”GunsCollecting.com (in Italian). Bernardino Carducci. Retrieved 26 March 2015.
  6. Jump up^ Eger, Chris (22 April 2014). “The Colt Woodsman: A most pined after plinking pistol”Guns.com. Retrieved 26 March 2015.
  7. Jump up^ Chandler, 1939
  8. Jump up^ Hemingway, 1938, p. 189

Cited in footnotes[edit]

  • Chandler, Raymond T. 2002. ‘Trouble is My Business’ originally published in Dime Detective Magazine, August, 1939. Republished in Raymond Chandler: Collected Stories. 2002. Everyman’s Library, Alfred A. Knopf, New York. P. 1009.
  • Hemingway, Ernest. 1938. ‘My Pal the Gorilla Gargantua’ in Hemingway on Hunting ed. Sean Hemingway. The Lyons Press, Connecticut. p. 189 Originally published in Ken Magazine, July 28, 1938

External links[edit]

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COLT MFG CO INC MODEL BISLEY ENGRAVED BY B. MEARS W/IVORY GRIPS .32 Colt

COLT MFG CO INC - MODEL BISLEY ENGRAVED BY B. MEARS W/IVORY GRIPS
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All that I know about this six shooter is that its way out of my league & price range!
Image result for 32 colt ammo
The .32 Long Colt (commonly called the .32 LC or simply .32 Colt) is an American centerfire fire revolver cartridge.

Description[edit]

Introduced by Colt’s with the New Line revolver in 1873, the .32 Colt was inspired by the .320 Revolver.[1] It originally used a .313 in (7.95 mm)-diameter 90 gr (5.8 g) outside-lubricated bullet, which was later changed to inside lubrication, leading to a diameter change to .299 in (7.59 mm), a slight reduction in bullet weight, and a shortening of overall length.[2]
With a case lengthened by .31 in (7.87 mm) over the .32 Short Colt[2](which means the .32 SC will chamber and fire in any weapon designed for the LC), the .32LC is in the same class in power as the .32 Smith & Wesson Long,[3] without comparable accuracy.[2]
More popular in Europe than North America, Colt was the most prominent American manufacturer which chambered any weapons in .32 Long Colt,[2] most notably the Police Positive. The FAMAE revolver produced in Chile is currently offered in .32 Long Colt

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Iver Johnson Arms & Cycle Works MODEL TOP-BREAK ACTION in .38 S&W

Just imagine the stories that this old timer could tell us!Iver Johnson Arms & Cycle Works - MODEL TOP-BREAK ACTION NEEDS REPAIR SOLD AS-IS!
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Iver Johnson Arms & Cycle Works - MODEL TOP-BREAK ACTION NEEDS REPAIR SOLD AS-IS! - Picture 6
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All About Guns Anti Civil Rights ideas & "Friends"

I bet Chicago, New Jersey & California are not a bunch of Happy Campers right now!

National Reciprocity for Concealed Carry Passes, Next Stop House Floor

National reciprocity for concealed carry passed the House Judiciary Committee on Wednesday is expected to receive a floor vote before the end of the year.

The Concealed Carry Reciprocity Act of 2017 was introduced by Rep. Richard Hudson (R-NC) on January 3, 2017. It changes federal law that so concealed carry permits are treated like driver’s licenses, making a permit from one state valid in the other 49.
This would fix the complicated and often confusing patchwork of concealed carry laws currently in effect throughout the country.
To put it simply, Hudson’s bill allows the common man to defend himself and his family as he travels throughout this country.

On November 28 Breitbart News reported that Hudson’s legislation was scheduled for a markup in the House Judiciary Committee and the markup would serve as the last stop before a floor vote.
In fact, the markup demonstrated the committee’s confidence that national reciprocity was headed to the floor.
Hudson released the following statement once national reciprocity passed out of the House Judiciary Committee:

My bill is a simple, common sense solution to the confusing hodgepodge of concealed carry reciprocity agreements between states. It will affirm that law-abiding citizens who are qualified to carry concealed in one state can also carry in other states that allow residents to do so. I am pleased to see such strong support in committee, and I look forward to continuing this momentum and bringing the bill to the House floor as soon as possible.

AWR Hawkins is the Second Amendment columnist for Breitbart News and host of Bullets with AWR Hawkins, a Breitbart News podcast. He is also the political analyst for Armed American Radio. Follow him on Twitter: @AWRHawkins. Reach him directly at awrhawkins@breitbart.com

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Colt 2nd Generation SAA Model, 125th Anniversary, Blue & Gold 7 1/2" Single Action Army Revolver

Colt 2nd Generation SAA Model, 125th Anniversary, Blue & Gold 7 1/2
The 2nd Generation Colts are the favorite of many, and for good reason. They are built as well as the 1st’s, and by the returning WWII soldiers. This one is especially attractive with the deep blue finish and gold accents.
Colt 2nd Generation SAA Model, 125th Anniversary, Blue & Gold 7 1/2
Colt 2nd Generation SAA Model, 125th Anniversary, Blue & Gold 7 1/2
Colt 2nd Generation SAA Model, 125th Anniversary, Blue & Gold 7 1/2
Colt 2nd Generation SAA Model, 125th Anniversary, Blue & Gold 7 1/2
Colt 2nd Generation SAA Model, 125th Anniversary, Blue & Gold 7 1/2
Colt 2nd Generation SAA Model, 125th Anniversary, Blue & Gold 7 1/2