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All About Guns Tax Write off / Review

Guess What I just bought for the Granddaughter, Happy Birthday Bee!


Image result for Walther P22 Pistol Review
Image result for Walther P22
 

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Gear & Stuff

Some very CLEVER INVENTIONS & possible Good Xmas Presents

Wash your hands and then use
the water for your next flush.
Inventions
Traffic lights in
Ukraine
Inventions
This water fountain allows the water
to flow down so dogs can
drink too.
Inventions
An accessibility mat on the beach
for strollers and wheelchairs.
Inventions
This pill bottle lid tells you when
it was last opened.
Inventions
Seniors and handicapped people can
extend cross time for this 8
lane highway.
Inventions
This restaurant has a toe opener for
those who want to avoid
germs on the doorknob.
Inventions
This shopping cart has a calculator
so you know how much you’re
spending.
Inventions
This bar has a frost strip so you can
keep your drink cold.
Inventions
This tire tells you when it’s time to change it.
Inventions
This mirror has a heated part
so it doesn’t steam up after a shower.
Inventions
These tiny model tents give you a
look at what you’re buying .
Inventions 
This elevator shows how close
to capacity it is based on the
weight of the riders.
Inventions
This inflatable mattress turns
the back of your car into a bed .
Inventions 
ï Trash cans in Copenhagen
are angled so that cyclists can
throw their trash while cycling.
Inventions
Analytical Approach to Life. . .
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Well I thought it was funny!

Sure Enough!

Related image

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All About Guns Gun Info for Rookies

How To Store Your Guns (Avoiding Rust and Scratches)

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Hard Nosed Folks Both Good & Bad I am so grateful!! Leadership of the highest kind Soldiering The Green Machine This great Nation & Its People War Well I thought it was neat!

Damn Right, Thanks Guys!

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Well I thought it was neat!

A Milf & a Machine Gun, what could go wrong? (Nuthin)

https://youtu.be/zGiJKRzBG74Image result for Blondie Firing Full Auto M14 EBR 7.62 NATO Rifle

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All About Guns

Kurt Jaeger Custom 1903 Springfield Rifle W/Pecar Scope 3x7x40 in .30-06 Springfield

Pretty Slick! Grumpy

Kurt Jaeger - Custom Rifle w/Pecar Scope 3x7x40 - Picture 3
Kurt Jaeger - Custom Rifle w/Pecar Scope 3x7x40 - Picture 5
Kurt Jaeger - Custom Rifle w/Pecar Scope 3x7x40 - Picture 6
Kurt Jaeger - Custom Rifle w/Pecar Scope 3x7x40 - Picture 7
Kurt Jaeger - Custom Rifle w/Pecar Scope 3x7x40 - Picture 8
Kurt Jaeger - Custom Rifle w/Pecar Scope 3x7x40 - Picture 9
Kurt Jaeger - Custom Rifle w/Pecar Scope 3x7x40 - Picture 10

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All About Guns

A Look Back: Colt New Frontier Scout by Dave Campbell

A Look Back: Colt New Frontier Scout
In the gun industry, this is an old and often repeated tale. A company—in this case, Colt—decides to cease production of one of its iconic products, then finds itself scrambling to reintroduce it after another company takes up manufacturing a clone of the original. Historically, most gun companies have sought to provide their products to governments—so-called military contracts—because they are lucrative and guarantee sales for a period of time. During war time most firearm companies retool and set up to provide arms for the war effort.
So it was in 1941 when we entered World War II that Colt ceased producing its flagship gun, the Single Action Army (SAA). When the war ended, Colt said it would no longer produce the SAA, believing that double-action revolvers and semi-automatic pistols were the guns of the future. That may have been true, but the bosses at Colt did not realize the impact the single-action revolver had on Americans. Bill Ruger, a gifted designer and lover of guns, recognized the needs and desires of the shooting public, especially as the 1950s brought television programming to nearly every household in the country and the popularity of westerns in the social fabric of the public. His Blackhawkrevolvers were an immediate and lucrative success, thus pretty well spanking the pants off Colt.
Colt scrambled to reintroduce its archetypal thumb-buster and did so in 1956. There was also clearly a burgeoning market for a rimfire single action, as evidenced by the success of Ruger’s Single Six introduced in 1953. Just as today, the development of a new product pits the bean counters against the designers in a conflict of quality vis-à-vis cost of production and price point. A year after reintroducing the SAA, Colt brought out the Frontier Scout 22 chambered in the Long Rifle cartridge. It had a decent run, ceasing production in 1970. The biggest complaint against the Frontier Scout was the anodized aluminum frame. Colt’s brass listened to its customers and brought out the New Frontier Scout with a companion .22 WMR cylinder in 1970. The frame was steel and featured Colt’s famous color casehardening. Three barrel lengths were offered, 4 3/4-inch (somewhat rare), 6-inch (most prevalent) and a very few Buntlines with a 7 1/2-inch barrel.
Four years later I had barely turned 21 and had a burning desire to learn how to shoot a handgun. My family was not gun or outdoors people. I knew I was ignorant and read every gun magazine and book I could lay my hands upon. Standing at the handgun counter of a Big 5 Sporting Goods store in Torrance, Calif., I gazed upon two nearly identical single-action .22s—a Ruger Single Six and a Colt New Frontier Scout. Both had an extra cylinder in .22 WMR, a real bargain I thought, and I was right. The Ruger had a price tag of $98; the Colt was $10 more. I mulled over everything I could in my scant knowledge of guns. The clerk behind the counter was of no help. I finally settled on the Colt because I thought it was prettier, and it was only a sawbuck more. This was one of the very few times in my life where making a decision based upon beauty didn’t have unexpected and disagreeable consequences.
The little Colt immediately became my constant companion on the desert and mountain backpacking sojourns. I shot the hell out of it and eventually became fairly proficient at busting bunnies, ground squirrels and snakes. Forty years later it remains with me and is often with me on any varmint shoot.
Colt scaled down the entire revolver to make it handle similarly to the SAA with the rimfire rounds. The New Frontier Scout comes in at about 80 percent the size and weight of a SAA, yet the grip size and profile are identical. At .3 ounce less than 2 pounds, the New Frontier Scout is 10 ounces lighter than a center-fire SAA. This allows the rimfire revolver to handle quicker than its pappy, yet retain enough heft to absorb the already mild recoil of the .22 LR, making it a great small-game pistol. With the .22 WMR cylinder there is certainly more recoil, but not enough to be a distraction. However, the .22 WMR’s report is substantial from a short barrel and can be distracting.
The New Frontier Scout had an initial run from 1970 through 1977 with some 100,000 copies made. Though not particularly rare, it seems that those of us who have bought one tend to want to keep it around. Prices for the revolver I bought for $108 in 1974 are from $450 to $700 today, depending upon condition and barrel length. I checked in with Gunbroker.com and saw but four up for sale, and one was a boxed set of a New Frontier Scout with a Frontier Scout (fixed sight version). One of the other three was a post-’82 manufactured New Frontier Scout. From 1982 to 1986 the New Frontier Scout was reintroduced with a cross-bolt safety added to satisfy product-liability attorneys. Its popularity paled compared to the 1970s revolvers with only 19,000 produced.
All of America’s iconic gun manufacturers have had significant challenges impacting their very existence. Each has been forced to reorganize to one extent or another. Colt has had a part in all of this. The business world has several parallels to the natural world, one being if you cannot or will not adapt to changing environment (markets) you are doomed to failure. Ruger recognized the appeal of a single-action rimfire revolver, and the Single Six has been in constant production for 61 years. One can only hope that Colt will take a close and critical look at its past decisions and operations, and make the necessary changes that will allow it to flourish once again. I would hope one of those decisions would be to bring back the New Frontier Scout as it was made in the 1970s. There is a reason so few of them are found for sale in the used gun section.
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All About Guns

A Christensen Arms Custom W/Remington 700 Action Carbon Fiber Barrel .375 H&H Mag.

Sorry Folks but that is one strange looking Rifle stock!

Christensen Arms - Custom w/Remington 700 Action Carbon Fiber Barrel - Picture 1
Christensen Arms - Custom w/Remington 700 Action Carbon Fiber Barrel - Picture 2
Christensen Arms - Custom w/Remington 700 Action Carbon Fiber Barrel - Picture 3
Christensen Arms - Custom w/Remington 700 Action Carbon Fiber Barrel - Picture 4
Christensen Arms - Custom w/Remington 700 Action Carbon Fiber Barrel - Picture 5
Christensen Arms - Custom w/Remington 700 Action Carbon Fiber Barrel - Picture 6
Christensen Arms - Custom w/Remington 700 Action Carbon Fiber Barrel - Picture 7
Christensen Arms - Custom w/Remington 700 Action Carbon Fiber Barrel - Picture 8
Christensen Arms - Custom w/Remington 700 Action Carbon Fiber Barrel - Picture 9
Christensen Arms - Custom w/Remington 700 Action Carbon Fiber Barrel - Picture 10

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All About Guns

A Classic Winchester Pre-64 Model 70 Super Grade in the great & flat shooting .300 H&H Magnum


Winchester - Pre-64 Model 70 Super Grade, Blue 26
Winchester - Pre-64 Model 70 Super Grade, Blue 26
Winchester - Pre-64 Model 70 Super Grade, Blue 26
Winchester - Pre-64 Model 70 Super Grade, Blue 26
Winchester - Pre-64 Model 70 Super Grade, Blue 26
Winchester - Pre-64 Model 70 Super Grade, Blue 26