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I found these on You Tube about Tanks & thought you might like them!

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N.S.F.W.

Maybe this will help before you go to "The Meeting From Hell" NSFW

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All About Guns

Fox A Grade Shotgun: New Take On A Classic by CLAY MARTIN

This week, I got my hands on a new Fox A Grade shotgun, presented by Savage Arms. This was not my usual fair, in fact, I felt remarkably underdressed when I started my review. Opening the non-descript outer case, complete with a briefcase style numerical lock, revealing a beautiful red lined felt interior. As I removed the tissue paper surrounding the guns parts, I wished Savage had included white linen gloves in the package. The shotgun was so beautiful, I didn’t want to risk covering it with fingerprints. A pretty far bridge for a guy famous for spear chucking his Benelli into a barrel to save a quarter second.
Any discussion of the current Fox A grade would be incomplete without some background of Fox Shotguns in general. Ansley H. Fox founded the A.H Fox Gun Co. in 1906, based out of Philadelphia. An excellent shotgun shooter himself, Ansley used his success in competition as a platform to launch his new products. High-quality double barrel guns were produced in a variety of grades, which Mr. Fox proclaimed were the finest in the world. The Fox boasted new mechanisms, separating itself from similar box locks of the time, and proved to be a sturdy, well built gun. A variety of grades were offered, ranging in price from $50 to a staggering (at the time) $500 for an F grade gun.
Probably the greatest endorsement of the A.H Fox shotgun comes from President Theodore Roosevelt, who had one made specially for this 1909 Safari in Africa. After receiving the gun, Roosevelt wrote to Fox “ the double-barreled shotgun has come, and I really think it is the most beautiful gun I have ever seen. I am exceedingly proud of it. I am almost ashamed to take it to Africa and expose it to the rough usage it will receive. But now that I have it, I could not possibly make up my mind to leave it behind. I am greatly obliged to you, and I am extremely proud that I am to have such a beautiful bit of American workmanship with me.”  And later, during his Safari, he said: I had a Fox No. 12 shotgun; no better gun was ever made.”
That is quite an endorsement, from a man that new plenty about the weapons of his day. Teddy’s Fox shotgun eventually sold at auction in 2010 for $862,500, a new record.
A seemingly recurring theme in great weapons designers, Ansley Fox lacked the skills to make the business a success. He was forced out of the company he founded by investors in 1912. The Fox shotgun company continued to roll out new products, including 16 and 20 gauge models. Previously, only 12 gauge had been available. In 1929, Savage purchased the company and moved production from Philadelphia to Utica, NY. Savage continued to make Fox shotguns up until WW2, which pretty much spelled the end. A few more guns would trickle out from existing stock and leftover parts, but the era of the Fox was largely over.
Fox still had name brand recognition, so it the late 40’s Savage introduced the Fox Model B, basically a fancy version of the Stevens Model 311. Savage had purchased Stevens in the 20’s as well. The model B enjoyed a very long run as an offering, all the way up until 1988. Eventually, cheaper imports and the reorganization of Savage Industries to the Savage Arms Company that we know today dropped it from the lineup.
Through means unknown, the Connecticut Shotgun Manufacturing Company began producing an A.H Fox side by side shotgun in about 1991. These guns stay true to the original design and have a starting price of about $19,500.
This year, Savage has returned the Fox A Grade shotgun to the lineup, and it is a stunning piece. The base MSRP is $4999, not cheap, but a far cry from $19,500. I am happy to report that you get a lot for your money. The Fox sample I had in for review was absolutely stunning.
The steel barrels feature a solid game rib and a brass bead sight. Our pre-production sample model had a matte finish, though production guns will be blued. They are available in either 26 or 28-inch configurations, and production guns will also be Trulock choke compatible. The splinter fore end makes for a light and agile gun, perfectly balanced on the swing.
The action stays true to the Fox hammerless design of old. It is an Anderson Deeley style boxlock action, with Holland & Holland style extractors. The double triggers are set in a case hardened color receiver. This was my first time with double triggers, but I grew to like being able to selectively fire either barrel. I may have had a few shenanigans during my skeet adventure figuring out which barrel was which trigger, but that is beside the point. In a hunting situation, it would be very nice to have different chokes and loads in each barrel.
The stock is American Black Walnut with an oil finish. Truly spectacular in every detail, it comes out of the box with a 14.5 inch length of pull. The checkering on the stock and forend is beautiful and feels perfect in the hand.

In use, I came away very impressed with the Fox. I am not going to pretend to be an expert on shotgunning or sporting clays. But it is also not my first day at the rodeo. The outstanding balance of the Fox, combined with its light weight, had me busting clays much better than normal. This, with a 20 gauge instead of a 12. Most certainly a lesson learned, real skeet shooters use tools like this for a reason. The gun might be new, but it is full of old world charm, from the engraved receiver to the brass bead. If you have the means, I recommend you snag one. Your great grandchildren will thank you.

Specs

  • Series: Fox
  • Magazine: N/A
  • Stock Material: Wood
  • Barrel Material: Carbon Steel
  • Barrel Finish: Matte
  • Barrel Color: Black
  • AccuTrigger: No
  • AccuStock: No
  • Sights: Front Brass Bead Sight
  • MSRP: $4,999

Learn more about the Savage Fox A Grade shotgun by clicking here.

***Check out GunsAmerica for your next Fox A Grade Shotgun***

 






 

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All About Guns

Colt Lightning .22 Short Slide Action Octagon Barrel Manufactured 1901 .22 Short

It would never leave my gun safe if it was mine!

Colt - Lightning .22 Short Slide Action Octagon barrel manufactured 1901 - Picture 1
Colt - Lightning .22 Short Slide Action Octagon barrel manufactured 1901 - Picture 2
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Colt - Lightning .22 Short Slide Action Octagon barrel manufactured 1901 - Picture 4
Colt - Lightning .22 Short Slide Action Octagon barrel manufactured 1901 - Picture 5
Colt - Lightning .22 Short Slide Action Octagon barrel manufactured 1901 - Picture 6
Colt - Lightning .22 Short Slide Action Octagon barrel manufactured 1901 - Picture 7
Colt - Lightning .22 Short Slide Action Octagon barrel manufactured 1901 - Picture 8
Colt - Lightning .22 Short Slide Action Octagon barrel manufactured 1901 - Picture 9
Colt - Lightning .22 Short Slide Action Octagon barrel manufactured 1901 - Picture 10

 

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Dear Grumpy Advice on Teaching in Today's Classroom The Green Machine

Daily life at the Royal School of Military Engineering (UK)

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Anti Civil Rights ideas & "Friends"

Poor England & her war on sanity

British Politicians Declare War on Knives

Having failed to thwart crime with gun bans, British officials now want to restrict what may be the most useful tool ever invented.


It turns out that when you pass laws disarming people in an attempt to prevent violence, criminals who habitually disregard all laws don’t make exceptions for the new rules. In London, crime still thrives despite the U.K.’s tight gun controls and the British political class is now desperately turning its attention to restricting knives.
A flurry of recent headlines reveal that London now has a higher murder rate than New York City, a metropolis of nearly identical population and one long considered more vulnerable to crime. “London police investigated more murders than their New York counterparts did over the last two months,” Reuters reported earlier this month. “In the latest bloodshed, a 17-year-old girl died on Monday after she was found with gunshot wounds in Tottenham, north London, a day after a man was fatally stabbed in south London.”
Commentators note that this may be a blip and that New York City’s murder rate for 2017 stood at more than double that for London. In fact, London’s murder rate really hasn’t risen much—instead, New York’s has dropped dramatically.
But that still represents a big shift. In her 2002 Guns and Violence: The English Experience, historian Joyce Lee Malcolm noted that “New York City’s homicide rate has been at least five times higher than London’s for two hundred years. For most of that time, there were no serious firearm restrictions in either city.”

New Yorkers didn’t need firearms to exceed the bloodlust of their trans-Atlantic rivals. Even if you removed crimes committed with guns from the comparison, “New Yorkers still managed to outstab and outkick Liverpudlians by a multiple of 3 and Londoners by a multiple of 5.6″ over those two centuries,” wrote the late Eric H. Monkkonen in Murder in New York City, published in 2000.
The mayhem that’s closed London’s homicide gap with its trans-Atlantic rival appears to be largely the result of violent criminal gangs. Firearms are strictly restricted in the U.K., including a near-total ban on handguns.
Nevertheless, “[i]n the 12 months to October 2017, there were 2,500 offences involving guns: a 16 per cent increase on the previous year and a 44 per cent increase on 2014,” the London Assembly’s Police and Crime Committee noted in January. Criminals, it seems, are not averse to committing crimes—including the illegal acquisition of tools that help them commit more crimes.
Besides illegal guns, British criminals also use edged weapons, which have been a favorite tool for mayhem since the dawn of civilization.
Having failed to disarm criminals with gun controls that they defy, British politicians are now turning their attention to implementing something new and different: knife control. Because criminals will be much more respectful of knife laws than of those targeted at firearms, I guess.
“No excuses: there is never a reason to carry a knife. Anyone who does will be caught, and they will feel the full force of the law,” London’s Mayor Sadiq Khan tweeted on April 8.
Not to be outdone, his predecessor, Boris Johnson, currently Foreign Secretary, called for increased use of stop-and-search powers by police. “You have got to stop them, you have got to search them and you have got to take the knives out of their possession.”
Poundland (the British equivalent of a dollar store) announced last week that it will no longer sell kitchen knives in any of its 850 stores. Similar stores are being slapped with fines for selling knives to minors.
British politicians propose banning home delivery of knives and police promote street-corner bins for the surrender of knives while also conducting stings against knife vendors. Their goal is to “target not only those who carry and use knives, but also the supply, access and importation of weapons.”
It all sounds all so familiar, doesn’t it? And yet so utterly pointless. If British authorities have been unable to block criminals’ access to firearms—mechanical devices that require some basic mechanical skill to manufacture, or at least a 3D printer—how are they going to cut off the flow of knives, which require nothing more than a piece of hard material that can take an edge?
There are also practical downsides to discouraging the public from possessing knives—one of the oldest and most useful tools ever invented. Poundland, after all, isn’t dropping the sale of combat blades; the company’s move applies specifically to the tools people use to make their meals. The law looks much more likely to inconvenience peaceful people planning to carve a roast than to put off thugs who, push comes to shove, can find a way to sharpen a piece of rebar against a rock.
And remember, if guns and knives can be used offensively by criminals, they can be used defensively by would-be victims—especially if they’re permitted to do so. In her 2002 book, Malcolm noted that “English law now prohibits civilians from carrying any article” for private defense. Seventy-eight year-old Richard Osborn-Brooks was recently arrested on suspicion of murder for fatally stabbing a burglar who attacked him in his own home; only under public pressure did police released him without charges. Current British law actually enhances the advantage criminals who ignore the law have over their law-abiding prey.
Rather than a race to ban dangerous objects that can only end with the criminalization of rocks and pointed sticks, it’s time politicians stopped pushing laws that are ignored by criminals and annoying and inconvenient to the rest of us.

Photo Credit: Marc Soler/agefotostock/Newscom

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All About Guns

The Siamese / Thai Mauser

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Now I have seen a few of these over the years at the range. All of them had been recalibrated into a 45-70 mode. I even got to shoot one once. It being totally done over as a type 45 sporter.Inline image 4 It looked a lot like this one by the way.
All things considered. It was not a bad gun to shoot from the bench. As I got the round on the black at 100 yards, which for me is not bad work.
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So if you are into the big and so called “obsolete rounds” like me. Then maybe you should think about it. When you are out gun shopping.
Here is some more information about these good old style rifles:

Type 45 Siamese Mauser

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Type 45 Siamese Mauser
Thai-Mauser-Type-46-sides.jpg
Type Bolt-action rifle
Place of origin Siam
Service history
In service 1903-1923
Used by Siam/Thailand
Wars World War I World War II
Production history
Designed 1903
Manufacturer Koishikawa arsenal
Variants Type 45, Type 47, Type 66, Type 45/66, Type 47/66
Specifications
Cartridge 8x50mmR8x52mmR
Caliber 8 mm
Action Bolt action
Feed system 5-round magazine
Sights Iron

The Type 45 Siamese Mauser was a service rifle adopted by the government of Siam (now Thailand) in 1903.

Description[edit]

It was a bolt-action rifle based on the Mauser action, originally chambered for the 8×50mmR rimmed centrefire cartridge (not to be confused with the dimensionally similar Austrian 8×50mmR Mannlicher or French 8×50mmR Lebel cartridges). It was later upgraded as the Type 66 rifle and chambered to fire the 8x52mmR cartridge with a spitzer bullet.[1]
The Type 45 refers to the year 2445 in the Thai calendar, which corresponds with 1903 on the Gregorian calendar.

Variants[edit]

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Anti Civil Rights ideas & "Friends"

Another fair Weather "Friend"

Yeti Coolers, a go-to for sportsmen around the country, is cutting ties with the NRA Foundation without explanation or prior notice.

The NRA Foundation is a charitable organization.
The separation comes although Yeti products have long been a staple at Friends of NRA Foundation Banquets and functions.

NRA-ILA quoted NRA past president and USF executive director Marion Hammer saying, “Suddenly, without prior notice, YETI has declined to do business with The NRA Foundation saying they no longer wish to be an NRA vendor, and refused to say why.  They will only say they will no longer sell products to The NRA Foundation.”
Hammer pointed out that the NRA Foundation raises money “to support youth programs and educational programs nationwide” and says Yeti “should be ashamed.”

AWR Hawkins is an award-winning Second Amendment columnist for Breitbart News, the host of the Breitbart podcast Bullets with AWR Hawkins, and the writer/curator of Down Range with AWR Hawkins, a 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 Range at breitbart.com/downrange.
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