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Best beginner rifle (Vanity)
Vanity ^ | 10-18-03 | Me

Posted on 10/18/2003 11:37:40 AM PDT by dogbyte12

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To: FreedomMan_CA
I'm good friends with someone who owns a SS Totenkopf Honor Ring. The real thing, not a replica..

I am good friends with someone who wears one.

It was her father's.

-archy-/-

381 posted on 10/18/2003 11:50:40 PM PDT by archy (Angiloj! Mia kusenveturilo estas plena da angiloj!)
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To: PoorMuttly
Our Poster may not know (YET!) that the .30-30 is the first really successful smokeless powder round...I think first offered with a lead bullet (a beautiful thing)...and "has killed more deer than any other cartridge"...which always hungry Muttlys really appreciate. Under-powered by today's standards...but the sweetest and most useful package that there is...and fast-shooting when the chips are down. I'd just hate to face a southern wild boar with one...but it beats not making it up the tree while shouting last words. May buy a second or two. Muttly grateful for small favors. Which brings us to "the venerable and oh-so-proven .45-70," with which boar can be HUNTED...and deer dropped handily. A short barrelled Marlin is amazingly handy in the deep, thick woods, and with 300gr. bullets, flat shooting enough, certainly. It has a wonderful reputation, can use lighter "Cowboy" rounds, and should generally keep you out of the swamps chasing wounded whatever-it-is, since it doesn't need expansion to do the work.

And the .30-30 is also a particularly sweet little number in a couple of the bolt action and single shot rifles that have been chambered for it. Since they do not share the tubular-feed magazine of most of the .30-30 lever rifles, their ammunition can be crafted with pointed bullets unsuitable in the leverguns for safety reasons, and some .30-30 rifles so loaded are capable of some accuracy feats that would be fairly amazing to those used to the cowboy saddle carbines.

One backburner I've long considered is reworking a .410 double shotgun into a double .30-30 instead. One of these days when I have a couple of nearly matched barrels and the right shotgun to work with, I'll build that neat little .30-30 double gun.

-archy-/-


382 posted on 10/19/2003 12:01:37 AM PDT by archy (Angiloj! Mia kusenveturilo estas plena da angiloj!)
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To: vortigern
Season?
383 posted on 10/19/2003 12:07:01 AM PDT by SevenDaysInMay (Federal judges and justices serve for periods of good behavior, not life. Article III sec. 1)
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Comment #384 Removed by Moderator

To: archy
...or a double-barrelled .30-30.

A drilling would be nice, wouldn't it. A 20 or 12ga. underneath would be a sweet package...very handy.

Oh Santa.....!
385 posted on 10/19/2003 12:09:44 AM PDT by PoorMuttly (Operation Infinite Muttly)
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Comment #386 Removed by Moderator

To: FreedomMan_CA
Oh...that's not my site. It was just the only picture of the Belgian Revolver I had that was on the net. I don't have a digital camera so I can't take pictures of my own stuff yet.
387 posted on 10/19/2003 12:13:00 AM PDT by I got the rope
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To: SevenDaysInMay
Mine was made in 1979. It came with a matching lever action .22 mag.
388 posted on 10/19/2003 12:14:16 AM PDT by I got the rope
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To: TexasCowboy
"It's good for killing dirt bikes at 500 yards"

Picture in my last issue of the .50 caliber mag of a woman who killed a deer at 895 yards.
Didn't say how much meat was edible.

If you turn the boattailed Browning .50 M33 bullet around and seat it backward, it can serve as a neat little hollowpoint bullet for hunting with the .50 cartridges, perhaps not needed for reasons of terminal ballistics [most 6mm and 6.5mm shooters would be very pleased with bullets in their pet load that reliably expand to .50 caliber; .50 shooters don't have tro worry about such distractions] though needed for game law reasons.

But though the long-range target shooters are more enthusiast users of the .50 rifles than those afield for the hunt, there's also the shorter .50x77 cartridge of the M8A1 spotter rifle as used for rangefinding with the 106mm M40A1 recoilless rifle. It's a little easier on the shooter, there are a couple of short actions that can accomodate the shorter cartridge, and still has plenty of power for heavy meaty targets at 500 yards or more.

I had less than satisfactory results with the .338 Lapua Magnum I assembled on a shoestring budget with leftover parts, but I could have solved most of the deficiencies given some time and a more generous budget, I believe. But I think I can put together a Big Fifty for around $500 or so, and it ought to be great for plinking at concrete blocks the way others shoot discarded soda pop cans.

But not from a quarter-mile. And it would do for dirt bikes too. Do youy have any good recipies; I'd think they'd be a little stringy and gamey.

-archy-/-

389 posted on 10/19/2003 12:16:47 AM PDT by archy (Angiloj! Mia kusenveturilo estas plena da angiloj!)
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To: Squantos
That's the reason most EOD shop doors remain "locked".......Note the small sandbagged bunker near the door also in many "smart" EOD units. Too many troops and kooks would walk up with a 66mm LAW rocket or Frag grenade they "found" and slap it down on the NCOIC's desk. Asswhuppin was too late to help then .....in some cases........:o) When they knocked on the door we made em show us their hands or drop what they had in the bunker.

Stay Safe !

Someday I'll have to tell you the doghouse story. Thankfully, no canines were killed during the making of this yarn.

But one got pritear deafened!

-archy-/-

390 posted on 10/19/2003 12:20:24 AM PDT by archy (Angiloj! Mia kusenveturilo estas plena da angiloj!)
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To: ghostcat
My best group with a rest and my 30-30 was 3.75" at 100 yards. I was using the 30-30 accelerator rounds. I have tried lots of ammo and they all seem inconsistent. Most of my groups were nearly 5". I just don't get it.
391 posted on 10/19/2003 12:20:40 AM PDT by I got the rope
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To: FreedomMan_CA
Amazing how much fear the mere presence of firearms and anything remotely resembling conservative politics scares some people, ain't it?

You should have seen the look I got from my new son-in-law's father, (from New Jersey!) when I showed him the .45 Witness Compact I'd had in the trunk of my car all the way from Central Kansas, where he started riding with me, to Lincoln Nebraska where the wedding was held, back down to Ft. Worth and an overnight stay in their apartment, and on to Waco (the lot of the Ranger Museum) where I showed it to him, while we were waiting for his wife and my daughter to pick him up for their trip back to Ft. Worth, while I came on to San Antonio. You've heard the expression, "eyes like saucers"?

Next month I'll be teaching his son to shoot, probably start with a .22 S&W or a 10/22, depending on which way he want's to go. Then in December, we'll (son-in-law and I) be attending a legal continuing education course entitled "Guns, Money and Lawyers. He's the lawyer, as is my daughter, I'll just be tagging along so to speak, and I might accidently learn something along the way. :)

392 posted on 10/19/2003 12:20:46 AM PDT by El Gato (Federal Judges can twist the Constitution into anything.. Or so they think.)
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To: All
I have a question for all of you gun nuts. I have an old flintlock pistol that was alleged to have come from Kieser, Wilhelm's gun collection. I even have a photo of the pistol being brandished by two members of the 94th Aero Squadron (fooling around, dressed as Huns) in front of a Spad in about 1918. I would love to track down the history of this pistol. Any ideas?
393 posted on 10/19/2003 12:23:06 AM PDT by Colorado Doug
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To: humblegunner
Oh, yeah, that's a real good beginner's gun...

For beginning a war maybe. ;-)

Not bad. But if it's a war that is to be, I say: Lat on, MacDuff, and cursed be him that first cries *hold; enough!*


394 posted on 10/19/2003 12:27:27 AM PDT by archy (Angiloj! Mia kusenveturilo estas plena da angiloj!)
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To: Colorado Doug
...I know the Kaiser chased my great-great-great...grandfather out of the beer-wagon with one, if that helps.

He was only looking! There could have been a thief...or something. Trust me.
395 posted on 10/19/2003 12:30:46 AM PDT by PoorMuttly ("Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy"-B.Franklin)
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To: PoorMuttly
You know Paco Kelly !?!?!?!?!?!??! Damn that man is my Hero !! His lil Accurizer tools for 22's and such are awesome . I can take trash milk cartons of bargin basement 22 ammo and make it dance like Eley thanks to his ideas.

Give that man a slap on the back from me please......Stay Safe !

396 posted on 10/19/2003 12:32:53 AM PDT by Squantos ("Ubi non accusator, ibi non judex.")
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To: Colorado Doug
If it belonged to the kaiser you should have a crown marking followed by a W. If there is a number following the W, then that is the year it was made.

Try writing these guys. Post a pic too. My curiosity is WAY UP!

http://www.germanguns.com/technical.html
397 posted on 10/19/2003 12:35:41 AM PDT by I got the rope
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To: patton
Well, I have a redheaded daughter. Maybe it is a good omen.

Mine are both blonde, but both have more red in their hair than their mother, who is also blonde. Enough difference that I could always tell who "borrowed" my comb, or clogged up the drain. They get it from their grandmother who was well past "strawberry blonde" towards the direction of Ann Margret type redhead

398 posted on 10/19/2003 12:48:51 AM PDT by El Gato (Federal Judges can twist the Constitution into anything.. Or so they think.)
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To: Squantos
He wrote me some very nice and thoughtful emails a little while ago...and gave me some VERY helpful advice...which has proven sound, and helped me a lot.

As it turned out...I ended up in some different situations then we had discussed...but his guidance proved incredibly useful, and is helping me a LOT in the circumstances I presently find myself in, and may have to deal with soon.

He REALLY knows what he's talking about...and the more I think about it and live with it...the more sound and wise it becomes to me. I am very grateful to the man for taking the time to thoughtfully converse with me.

BTW...you tuned me up too...and quite a lot. There are somewhat potentially formidable criters where I now reside, and work...some with four legs, some with two...some with none. All bite in one way or another, and Muttly's school of life continues...with the help of some very interesting friends.
399 posted on 10/19/2003 12:54:54 AM PDT by PoorMuttly (Muttly hunts what hunts him !)
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To: patton
I hope I have time to teach my daughter to shoot. Please, God.

Been there, done that. Their maternal grandfather helped too. Neither is an enthusist, but they know which end the round exits from and are pretty fair shots with a .22 pistol. They get that from their mother's side too. You don't want to get into a gunfight with any of them. Grandpa (wife grandfather that is) might be the best, but he's gone to the range in the great beyond, where I imagine he's shooting flying walnuts out of the air, which I'm told he was quite good at, although I never saw him do it.

400 posted on 10/19/2003 12:57:16 AM PDT by El Gato (Federal Judges can twist the Constitution into anything.. Or so they think.)
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