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All About Guns

JOHN KING CUSTOM – KILA, MONTANA REM. ROLLING BLOCK STYLE HEAVY OCTAGON 28 INCH BL .45-70 Govt.

JOHN KING CUSTOM - KILA, MONTANA - REM. ROLLING BLOCK STYLE HEAVY OCTAGON 28 INCH BL
This is an absolutely gorgeous example of a John King Custom .45-70 Remington Rolling Block style rifle built by John King out of Kila, Montana.
JOHN KING CUSTOM - KILA, MONTANA - REM. ROLLING BLOCK STYLE HEAVY OCTAGON 28 INCH BL - Picture 2
It has a spirit level tunnel front sight but the rear sight has been removed. Nice clean bore with crisp clear rifling. The color case hardening on the receiver and butt plate are excellently finished and look great.
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The bluing on the barrel is a very nice high gloss and is probably about 95% and looks beautiful.
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JOHN KING CUSTOM - KILA, MONTANA - REM. ROLLING BLOCK STYLE HEAVY OCTAGON 28 INCH BL - Picture 5
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JOHN KING CUSTOM - KILA, MONTANA - REM. ROLLING BLOCK STYLE HEAVY OCTAGON 28 INCH BL - Picture 10
 

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Well I thought it was funny!

Some Ideas for the Xmas Menu

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Now let us say that you either do not have any ideas on what to make for the Great Day Tomorrow. Or if say you were cleaning your gun and it went off accidentally.  After some hoofed vandal trashes your roof.
I  say that a 300 H&H would do a right proper job. That is if someone were to ask me on this matter.
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Here is something for you to consider.

Cooking Reindeer – Reindeer Fillet With Savoy Cabbage & Potato Cake

Reindeer Fillet
In this country we tend to think it rather unsporting to eat the earthly representatives of Santa’s crew, but in Scandinavia it’s farmed and tucked into with relish. It’s tasty, cooks quickly, holds a wine sauce to perfection and deserves your best reds to accompany it.
The most straight forward approach to reindeer is to pretend it’s prime fillet of venison or beef and either fry it as steaks or medallions or roast it quickly in one piece. An optional overnight bath in a combination of wine, juniper berries and winter herbs adds a luxurious touch to the dark leanness of the meat and forms the basis of a good red wine sauce.
Alternatively, the authentic Swedish recipe below dispenses with the marinade and involves a good, hot searing followed by ten minutes in a lowish oven and results in rare, juicy meat which can be adapted to all kinds of sauces and garnishes. As it stands it’s a sophisticated, restaurant-quality dish with a big wow-factor, but it can easily be simplified for a quieter occasion.
You might, for instance, use red wine instead of port, sprouts instead of cabbage and instead of the potato cake, roasties or indulgent Janssons Temptation (see Scandi Noir, the November Food For Thought piece). And why not look to the nearer North for a starter of Yorkshire pudding, suffused with some of the sauce?
Note: If Rudolf really is out of bounds, rare-breed farmer and ace winemaker David Hohnen of Margaret River winery McHenry Hohnen makes the excellent suggestion that Scottish-farmed roe or red deer is an excellent alternative, grazing, as he says on much the same ‘sub Arctic fodder’ that makes reindeer meat taste so wild and aromatic. Either way, you’ll find his Rocky Road Zinfandel a terrific match.
Janet Wynne Evans

REINDEER FILLET WITH SAVOY CABBAGE AND POTATO CAKE

serves 4
The source of this recipe is Det Svenska Matåret (The Swedish Food Year),compiled by Sweden’s National Chef Team, in collaboration with Tore Wretman, a leading authority on Swedish cuisine. Swedish speakers can order a copy online here.

Ingredients

  • 800g outer fillet of reindeer trimmed of any sinew or fat (reserve the trimmings)
  • 2 tbsp butter
  • ½ tsp salt
  • 1 pinch of freshly ground black pepper

For the sauce

  • 10 button mushrooms – about 100g
  • 1 garlic clove
  • 1 tbsp oil
  • 25g cubed carrot
  • 25g cubed celeriac
  • 25g chopped onion
  • 25g chopped leek
  • 3 tbsp port
  • 1 tsp tomato purée
  • 500 ml good beef stock
  • 1 sprig thyme or a pinch dried thyme
  • Salt and pepper
  • 1 tsp arrowroot (you may not need it)

Vegetables

  • 1 small Savoy cabbage
  • 2 large carrots – about 200g
  • 1 daikon/large white radish – about

For the potato cake

  • 400g potatoes
  • 3 tbsp clarified butter
  • ½ tsp salt
  • 1 pinch pepper
  • 200ml gruyere cheese

Method

The Sauce

  • Chop the mushrooms roughly and the garlic finely.
  • Brown both in the oil with the reserved sinew and fat from the reindeer, celeriac, carrot, onion and leek.
  • Add the port and reduce until nearly completely dry.
  • Stir in the tomato puree and the stock. Let it boil and skim off the top
  • Add the herbs and season.
  • Simmer gently until reduced to about 300ml.
  • Strain, and if it feels too thin, thicken with the arrowroot, dissolved in a little water. Season again, to taste.

The Potato Cake

  • Heat the oven to 175°C/350°F/Gas 4
  • Peel the potatoes and cut into 1mm slices. Turn and coat them in the clarified butter and season them. Butter a round ovenproof dish and lay the potato slices in the dish overlapping each other. Cover each layer with some of the cheese. Finish with a layer of cheese. Bake for 50 minutes.
  • Reduce the oven temperature to 150°C/300°F/Gas 2
  • Loosen the cake by running a palette knife around the circumference and turn it out by inverting a serving plate over the dish and flipping the whole thing upside-down. Cut into slices and keep warm.

The Vegetables

  • Detach 12 nice looking savoy leaves and blanch them. Cool immediately in iced water to stop the cooking and fix the colour.
  • Peel the carrots and daikon and cut into long thin strips, about 1cm wide, to resemble pasta ribbons. Boil in lightly salted water until soft, and drain.

The Meat

  • Heat the butter in an ovenproof pan, and brown the fillet really well on all sides. Season well with salt and pepper.
  • Transfer the reindeer fillet to the oven and roast for 10 minutes. Cover it with foil and let it rest.
  • In a shallow pan, melt the butter and cook the prepared savoy cabbage, then the carrot and daikon ribbons until just tender-crisp.
  • Let the reindeer rest a few minutes before carving on the diagonal into thick medallions.
  • Place the reindeer on the savoy cabbage and pour over the sauce. Add a slice of potato cake to each plate and garnish with the vegetable ribbons.

Recipe to go with Red Nose Day – Food for Thought: SocietyNews December 2013

Members’ Comments (1)

“A very good recipe. The meat was extremely tender.
For the sauce, I used half red wine and half stock and the result was fantastic.
Potato cakes were very rich and went well with the meat.
If you can find reindeer meet this is well worth the effort. We bought ours frozen and vacuum packed on a short trip to Oslo.
Have not found a UK supplier for reindeer filet so far.”

Mr David Barr (29-Sep-2016)

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Well I thought it was funny!

This explains a lot to me!

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Well I thought it was funny!

To my EX !

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Sure enough!

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All About Guns

Some Ruger 10/22 Stuff

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Not your big brothers 10/22 for sure!
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All it takes is some time and a fair amount of time! Then you can have your own one of a kind!
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Ruger 10/22

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ruger 10/22
Ruger-1022.jpg

10/22 Carbine
Type Rimfire semi-automatic rifle
Place of origin United States
Production history
Designer William B. RugerHarry H. Sefried II[1]
Manufacturer Sturm, Ruger
Produced 1964–present
No. built over 5 million
Specifications (Standard 10/22 carbine)
Weight 5 lb (2.3 kg)
Length 37 in (940 mm)
Barrel length 18.5 in (470 mm)

Cartridge .22 Long Rifle
Action Semi-automatic
Feed system 10-round rotary magazine or 25 and 15-round box magazine

The Ruger 10/22 is a semi-automatic rimfire rifle chambered in .22 Long Rifle cartridges, produced by American firearm manufacturer Sturm, Ruger & Co..
It has a removable 10-round rotary magazinewhich allows the magazine to fit flush with the bottom of the stock. Higher capacity magazines are also available.
A magnum version, chambered for the .22 WMR cartridge, was made from 1998 to 2006, and a .17 HMR version, the 10/17 was announced in 2004,[2] but was only listed in the catalog for two years.[3]
The standard version has been in production continuously since 1964.[4]

Uses and customization[edit]

Ruger 10/22 highly customized by Clark Custom Guns. Clear/red magazines are 40th anniversary edition.

 
The 10/22 was immediately popular upon its release. It was designed as a quality adult gun (with adult ergonomics) and not a cheap “youth rifle“.
However, its easy handling characteristics, negligible recoil and inexpensive ammunition nonetheless make it ideal for young or inexperienced shooters.
It is very popular for small-game hunters and those who want an inexpensive rifle firing inexpensive ammunition for target and plinking use.[5]
This popularity has led to many after-market modifications being available to improve performance, augment the rifle’s looks, or increase its magazine capacity, leading the 10/22 to be one of the most customizable firearms made.[6][7]
Custom manufacturers also make “clones” of the 10/22, which are similar in design (most parts will interchange) but built to much higher specifications and costs.
The 10/22 barrel uses a unique two-screw, V-block system to attach the barrel to the receiver, making removal and replacement of the barrel (which would require a gunsmith’s work with most other rifles) very easy.
This, when combined with the simple construction of the rest of the components, means that the average person can easily replace any part in the gun with nothing more than a screwdriver, a hex key and simple punches.

Ruger 10/22 “Stainless” With an aftermarket Butler Creek Folding Stock and a TRUGLO Red Dot Sight

Variations[edit]

Ruger 10/22 International model, which comes with a full-length Mannlicher style stock

 
The 10/22 is available in a wide variety of configurations. In 2015, the Ruger 10/22 came in 11 different models, not counting distributor exclusives.
The Carbine came in 3 models, the Tactical, Takedown and Target each had 2 models, the Sporter and Compact each had 1 model.
The discontinued 10/22 Internationalmodel was fitted with a Mannlicher stock. Standard barrel lengths are 20″ in the 10/22 Rifle, 1812” in the 10/22 Carbine, and 1618” in the 10/22 Compact Rifle which is also fitted with a shorter stock.
All .22 Long Rifle versions use an aluminum receiver, while the discontinued .22 Magnum version used a steel receiver with integral scope bases.

10/22 Carbine

Standard model with 18.5″ barrel. Offered with hardwood or black synthetic stocks, black alloy or stainless steel receivers and a model fitted with LaserMax laser sight.

10/22 Takedown

On March 28, 2012 Ruger introduced the 10/22 Takedown model.[8]
This model disassembles into barrel and action/buttstock components easily. It is shipped in a backpack style case that has room for the rifle, ammunition, and accessories. The MSRP is higher than the basic carbine models.[9][10]
The standard Takedown model has a brushed aluminum receiver made to resemble stainless steel and 18.5″ barrel with a black synthetic stock.
Also offered in a black alloy receiver and 16.12″ threaded barrel with flash suppressor or with a threaded, fluted target barrel.

10/22 Target

Target shooting model with heavy 20″ bull barrel with no iron sights.[11]

10/22 Compact

Compact rifle with 16.12″ barrel.

10/22 Sporter

Model with 18.5″, alternatively 20″ or 22″, barrel and checkered walnut stock with sling swivels.

10/22 Tactical

Model with 16.12″ fitted with flash suppressor. Also offered with 16.12″ heavy target barrel with Hogue OverMolded stock fitted with bipod.

SR-22 Rifle

In 2009, Ruger released the SR-22 Rifle model, a 10/22 receiver embedded in a chassis that mimics the dimensions of an AR-15 style rifle such as their own SR-556.
The SR-22 Rifle uses standard 10/22 rotary magazines, in addition to most aftermarket 10/22 magazines.[12]
The positions of the magazine release, the safety and the charging handle are all more similar to a standard 10/22 than an AR-15.
The SR-22 Rifle competes directly with other AR-15 style rimfire rifles such as those made by Colt and Smith & Wesson.
The SR-22 rifle boasts an aluminium handguard, adjustable six position stock, and a top receiver rail. Threaded holes on the handguard provide the customization of optional attachment rails.

22 Charger Pistol

Ruger Charger. Comes with bipod. Shown with aftermarket TruGlow multi-color reflexive dot scope and Ruger BX-25 extended magazine.

 
The 22 Charger pistol, first introduced in late 2007, is a pistol based on the 10/22 action.
The 22 Charger originally came with a black laminated wood pistol stock with forend, a 10-inch (254 mm) matte blued heavy barrel, a bipod, and a Weaverstyle scope base in lieu of iron sights. Overall length is just under 20 inches (510 mm), making it quite large for a handgun.
As it has an included bipod it is likely to be used from a shooting bench or table. The bipod attaches to a sling swivel on the stock fore-end, and is easily removable.
Due to technical features, such as the magazine being outside the pistol grip, the Charger is not legally available in some U.S. states.
The 22 Charger was later discontinued.[13][14] It was reintroduced in December 2014, with a brown laminate stock with a M16A2 style pistol grip, 10-inch threaded barrel, picatinny rail, 15-round magazine and adjustable bipod.
At the same time a “Takedown” model was introduced with a green laminate stock. Both models were later offered from September 2015 with black polymer stocks.
3D printed copy of the Ruger 10/22 Charger’s receiver was demonstrated in July 2014.[15]

50th Anniversary Rifle

In 2014 to mark the 50th anniversary of the Ruger 10/22 a contest was held to design an anniversary model.
The winning design by public vote has stainless steel receiver and 18.5″ threaded barrel with flash suppressor, a lightweight black synthetic stock with interchangeable stock modules, a picatinny rail and ghost-ring adjustable rear sight.

Collector’s Series

A limited edition 50th Anniversary Collector’s Series carbine model was offered in 2014. It had a black alloy receiver with “1964-2014″ special markings, 18.5” barrel, fiber optic sights and a 25-round magazine.

Collector’s Series Second Edition[edit]

In June 2015, Ruger announced a limited Second Edition of the Collector’s Series 10/22 carbine.
It features a dark grey version of Ruger’s Modular Stock System found on the Ruger American Rimfire rifle, a protected non-glare blade front sight, ghost ring adjustable rear aperture sight, and a Picatinny rail.[16]

VLEH Target Tactical Rifle

In 2009 Ruger also announced the Target Tactical Rifle model, a hybrid of the 10/22T and Ruger M77 Hawkeye Tactical rifle.[17]

  • V – Varmint barrel, L – Law + E – Enforcement model, H – Hogue stock.

AWC Ultra II[edit]

The integrally-suppressed AWC Ultra II

The AWC Ultra II version of the Ruger 10/22 is integrally-suppressed and features a shortened barrel.
The sound suppressor encloses a ported stainless barrel and is made of 300 series stainless steel having a 1″ diameter which closely resembles a bull barrel.
The barrel length is 16.5″ with an overall weapon length of 3412” and the weight is 6 lbs. Due to the integral suppressor, this model is a Title II weapon in the U.S.[18]

AT 10/22 QD[edit]

The AT 10/22 QD is a short-barreled version of the 10/22 made by Arms Tech Limited.
It features a six-inch barrel, a folding stock, and is designed to accept Arms Tech’s own QD-223 suppressor. It comes in at a mere 5 pounds without the suppressor.
Due to its extremely short barrel, it is considered a Title II weapon in the U.S.[19]

Modifications

Standard Ruger 10/22 Carbine, and a highly modified Ruger 10/22

The image on the bottom right shows two 10/22 carbines, the top one in issued form (with a 4-power magnification scope added, using the factory supplied scope base) and the bottom one in highly modified form.
The modified target version includes an 18 inch bull barrel, a muzzle brake, a laminated wood silhouette style stock, and a scope with an illuminated reticle, in addition to internal modifications of the trigger group to improve the firing characteristics.
See the entry on accurizing for more information on the reasons for these modifications.
A wide variety of aftermarket modification kits are offered for the 10/22, including conversions to bullpup configuration and cosmetic alterations to replicate the appearance of weapons like the M1 CarbineThompson submachine gunAR-15, and AK-47.

Magazines

 

The “40th anniversary edition” BX-1 rotary magazine for Ruger 10/22.

The clear body of the 40th anniversary magazines shows the unusual rotary operation of the 10-round magazine;[20][21][22] the red part is the magazine follower.

Two aftermarket 25-round magazines attached Jungle style.

There are many types of magazines for the Ruger 10/22.
The standard 10/22 ships with a black 10-round rotary magazine, the BX-1. Ruger has also produced a clear polycarbonate (“40th-anniversary edition”) BX-1CLR magazine, as well as a five-round rotary magazine (for states or countries that restrict magazine capacities).
In 2011-2012 Ruger came out with the Ruger BX-25, a 25-round box magazine with a black composite frame and steel feed lips, as well as the 15-round BX-15 box magazine for states that restrict magazine capacities.
Aftermarket options include 25-, 30-, and 50-round box magazines; 50-round teardrop-shaped rotary magazines, and 50- and 110-round drum magazines.
The standard 10-round 10/22 magazine stores the cartridges in a rotary fashion, rather than stacked, as seen in a box magazine.
This allows the magazine to fit flush into the rifle without protruding from the stock at the natural balance point for one-handed carry.
The action of the rifle strips a cartridge from the magazine with each shot, allowing the next cartridge to feed into place.
Not all Ruger 10/22 magazines are interchangeable. The owner’s manual for the 10/22 Magnum model states.
“Do not attempt to use standard 10/22 magazines in the 10/22 Magnum rifles or load .22 Short, Long, or Long Rifle ammunition into the .22 Magnum. They will not function correctly and are unsafe to use in .22 Magnum rifles.”
It goes on to say, “Never attempt to use .22 Long Rifle ammunition in Ruger 10/22 Magnum rifle magazines.
The cartridges have a smaller case diameter and can split or burst when fired in the larger magnum chamber, releasing hot powder gasses and particle fragments out of the action at high speed, possibly resulting in injury to the shooter or bystanders

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a Youtube on the Winchester model 70

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Well I thought it was funny!

More Evidence that All Pilots are Crazy

funny-jet-plane-close-up-photo

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N.S.F.W. Uncategorized

What did you say Grumpy? It is Friday already! NSFW

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You almost pushed the button didn’t you?
Anyways you made this far & are still plugging away. So Grumpy has a little visual reward for allo for good deeds today!
Enjoy!
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Anti Civil Rights ideas & "Friends"

Gun Store Owners Lose $70,000 in Christmas Sales as FBI Admits ‘Issue’ with NICS Website

 

Gun store owners in Port Allen and Baton Rouge, Louisiana, claim to have lost approximately $70,000 in Christmas sales due to the inaccessibility of the FBI’s National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS).

WBRZ reports that “the FBI acknowledged an issue occurred on its NICS website” but gun store owners throughout Louisiana say the background check system “crashes every year” around Christmastime.
Scott Roe owns Spillway Sportsman in Port Allen and he said the NICS system “shut down completely, nothing worked.”

Baton Rouge firearm dealer Jim McClain added, “The online system went down, and then their phone system went down.” He observed, “When the government can effectively shut you down, it’s scary.”

In January 2016 Breitbart News reported that the FBI “temporarily” halted the appeals process for those who had been denied a gun purchase via the NICS system. USA Today reported that FBI Assistant Director Stephen Morris said the halt in processing appeals became necessary because the number of Americans buying guns has overwhelmed FBI background check examiners.
But Roe and McClain have trouble accepting such an explanation for the Christmastime NICS crash. After all, the system worked fine on Black Friday 2017, when more background checks were performed in a single day than in any day in history.
Black Friday 2017 witnessed 203,086 background checks for gun purchases.

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 Ran