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Penguin

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Everything posted by Penguin

  1. Bring him to me. I'll be happy to shoot him if you people won't. He bites people for no good reason. He's a huge legal liability. Put him down.
  2. If I had to have a short rifle caliber firearm a bullpup makes quite a bit of sense. Buy a Tavor put a Geissele trigger in it, put a can on the end of it, and an optic. Done. Same length as an SBR but better in every way.
  3. Sorry but a pistol length barrel on a .308 is stupid and pointless. Trying to burn a 45.0-47.0gr powder charge in a pistol length barrel isn't going to work well. I'll go one further and outright call most SBR's a total fad that tactical operator wannabe's are obsessed with because they're ******* stupid. If you clear dwellings and do CQB for a living you get good use out of one, and an SBR is a useful tool for that. For everything else they suck. Compared to a regular carbine or rifle they are way more finicky to properly gas. They are far harder on parts. They produce extremely mediocre ballistics. They're super loud without a suppressor. Why would you put up with all that bullshit just to have a shorter long gun for something 99.99999999% of users will never do? It's ******* pants on head retarded. At my Pat McNamara class last year one of the students asked Pat about SBR's. for those who don't know who Pat McNamara is he retired out of 1st SFOD-D as a Sgt.Maj. He's shot a lot of bad people in the face in CQB. His response to the SBR question was that as soon as he didn't have to put up with carrying a shorty for work, he strongly preferred the regular carbine.
  4. Sorry but a pistol length barrel on a .308 is stupid and pointless. Trying to burn a 45.0-47.0gr powder charge in a pistol length barrel isn't going to work well. I'll go one further and outright call most SBR's a total fad that tactical operator wannabe's are obsessed with because they're ******* stupid. If you clear dwellings and do CQB for a living you get good use out of one, and an SBR is a useful tool for that. For everything else they suck. Compared to a regular carbine or rifle they are way more finicky to properly gas. They are far harder on parts. They produce extremely mediocre ballistics. They're super loud without a suppressor. Why would you put up with all that bullshit just to have a shorter long gun for something 99.99999999% of users will never do? It's ******* pants on head retarded. At my Pat McNamara class last year one of the students asked Pat about SBR's. for those who don't know who Pat McNamara is he retired out of 1st SFOD-D as a Sgt.Maj. He's shot a lot of bad people in the face in CQB. His response to the SBR question was that as soon as he didn't have to put up with carrying a shorty for work, he strongly preferred the regular carbine.
  5. Kind of want a Colt Combat Unit rail gun in 9x19... so I can have a gunsmith cut the chamber a re throat it for 9x23 Winchester.
  6. Kind of want a Colt Combat Unit rail gun in 9x19... so I can have a gunsmith cut the chamber a re throat it for 9x23 Winchester.
  7. Limp wristing is not the issue. The issue is you have a relatively short stubby little loaded cartridge and you're handling it from a magazine with a body long enough front to rear to handle .45 ACP. The pistol itself has a frame and magazine well made to handle .45 ACP as well. The slide reciprocates enough distance to eject and load a .45 ACP. The 9x19 cartridge in anything but a perfectly executed 1911 finds itself with a less well controlled feeding operation with the extra jump to the feed ramp, and less than ideal feeding geometry when it gets there. Resulting in failures to feed. Then you also get fun failures to eject sometimes because the ejector sits back where it would for a .45 ACP and the extractor has to control the shorter case for even longer after the front of the case clears the breech end of the barrel on extraction. If the case gets discombobulated here it will often hit the ejector in some out of whack manner and stove pipe or do some other undesirable shit like slam into the barrel hood and double feed. All of these issues can a do happen with .45's as well, but less commonly. Well made 1911's won't have these issues, but really well made 1911's are going to cost a lot of $$$.
  8. Yeah, but he put lube on it. Most polymer striker fired pistol owners seem to think their Glock can magically run with no lube ever. They're morons. Chances are if they lubed their pistols, and cleaned them once in awhile they'd have done just fine in that class.
  9. 1911's work best in .45 ACP. Period. Followed by .38 Super or 9x23 Winchester because the cartridges are long enough they don't get out of whack on the feed ramp like a 9x19 often can. The 10mm also works but is hard on the frame. If you want a 1911 that works like Browning intended: buy a 5" barreled version in .45 ACP with no guide rod, a 16.5lb to 18lb recoil spring, and no cast or MIM parts assembled by someone who knows what they're doing. If a medium bore is a must then get the same 5" gun in a .38 Super or 9x23. Any deviation from that cartridge length or barrel length reduces reliability and forgiveness in the system and increases the amount of skill and care required to assemble one that runs correctly. This can still be accomplished reasonably with the 4.25" commander sized guns. Anything shorter and it's a total crap shoot. Any cartridge shorter than .45 ACP/.38 Super and it's also a crap shoot. If you want a 9mm that is single action and a Browning design buy a Hi-Power. Otherwise the SIG P226 SAO is a good alternative particularly the Legion model.
  10. Sorry Bosco, it's never easy to lose a friend.
  11. Nice. Is that one of the commercial KAC lowers and their URX M-Loc rail? What barrel did you go with?
  12. I'd be interested if Trijicon would make the rear notch a bit narrower. A .125" blade with a .169" rear will be tough to shoot accurately.
  13. In other news I have acquired a Dillon RT 1500 case trimmer and size trim die. It is bad ass. Size and trim rifle brass all in one step. Mounted on my Dillon XL650 with a case feeder. I can now process very large amounts of rifle brass very quickly.
  14. Saw a tiny little German Shepherd puppy at PetsMart the other day someone had with them. Already leash training and doing well, couldn't have been more than 6-7 weeks old. I generally don't like puppies, preferring young adults and up... but that little guy was majorly dare I say it.... cute. Really want to get a GSD puppy now. Our now 6 year old female GSD loves other dogs. She needs a puppy to play with. Yeah. That's how I'll sell the wife on it.
  15. While I like revolvers I understand most new shooters will not appreciate them. So I stick by my suggestion to acquire a .22LR pistol of good quality before or at the same time you select a centerfire. If you find a centerfire pistol with a .22LR conversion slide, barrel, and magazine you should consider it. The .22LR is cheap to shoot, and you can learn/master the basics on it while having fun and avoiding developing bad habits like anticipating recoil and flinching among other things. CZ and SIG both offer .22 conversions, and there are probably others. Another advantage is you build mechanics skills on running the same pistol since the .22 is an understudy.
  16. I've seen this play out many many times. I have a good idea how it will go.
  17. Maryland has retarded gun laws and many pistols aren't approved for sale in that communist totalitarian shit hole. So good luck. If I were you I'd buy a .22 target pistol so you actually learn trigger control and basic pistol marksmanship. No one listens to this advice because they don't know what try don't know. So enjoy developing a flinch and never hitting your target with the 9mm, .40 S&W, or .45 ACP you will inevitably buy as your first handgun. Then I'd tell you to buy a medium framed 4" barrel .357 Magnum revolver and feed it .38 Special as your intro to center fire handguns. An all steel revolver is simple, durable, accurate, and versatile. Fed .38 Special it will recoil very little. When you're ready for more power you can run .357's in it. Pretty sure you can buy revolvers in shit ass Maryland too which is a bonus. You won't listen to that advice either and you'll buy a polymer framed striker fired pistol instead, and being Maryland the newer pistol with nicer triggers and ergonomics may not be approved so you'll buy a Glock 23 or something like that. It will have garbage sights, and a wretched trigger in addition to snappy recoil because it weighs next to nothing. You will shoot it poorly and be afraid of the recoil flinching at every shot and hitting nothing.
  18. No it does not. The P10c magazines have an additional cut in the mag body that older P07 magazines do not have. All magazines going forward will be able to function in both pistols though.
  19. Cheap, reliable, user configurable, easy to maintain, good ergonomics for virtually any shooter, and very accurate. My guess is Big Army will get a full size 4.7" bbl with 17 or 21 round mags and full size frame. And other units and plain clothes Army investigators will get the compact, as will aviation.
  20. I guess the Army has selected the SIG P320 to replace the M9 Beretta as the standard issue sidearm. Suck it Glock. I have to admit that my Wife's P320 has grown on me although I still lean towards my VP9. The fact the P320 is totally modular is a huge advantage. Maybe I should buy another one and send the firearm part to Bruce Gray for trigger work.
  21. Those idiots might want to give the Olympic style bullseye a chance. It will greatly improve your shooting abilities with a pistol.
  22. He's a lot of fun. You'll enjoy yourself.
  23. His class personality is like the videos just with more profanity, and some good natured ribbing. Plus the benefit of actual personal level instruction and pointers. I hope to take another TAPS class this year or next to gauge my progress. I have the carbine video, but not pistol. Need to buy the pistol TAPS video.
  24. The Python frame is not large enough to accommodate .44 Magnum.
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