Advertisement

Trail Cams Create FOMO

The fourth camera - laid out on my hotel bed prior to installation on the property.

Show of hands – who else here uses trail cams to watch for game? Now, who else uses trail cams that are cellular so that you can see the photos even when you are 2.5 hours away?

Yeah me.

This year in my push to try much harder than I ever have before in my deer hunting, I purchased three new cams to add to the single one I’ve had for three or four years. I stuck with Bushnell, because I think they’ve finally got it right with the Cellucore line, and they upgraded their site/app which supports the cams. I also got a good discount code.

I ended up aiming the oldest cam at the property gate because of security/trespasser issues. Also because the oldest cam has signal issues and the signal is strongest at the gate. Two of the new cameras I placed in areas adjacent to where my blind is. The fourth one is the newest and I just placed that last week in a completely different area of the property.

I have been seriously tickled with what I have been capturing. Except this remote imaging also produces FOMO – Fear Of Missing Out.  Why? Because I can see what is happening when I am stuck at home on-call or otherwise can’t be in the blind and it can make me crazy.

For instance, I am serving grocery store turkey for Thanksgiving, because the flock of wild ones that populate the property only seem to show up in front of my blind when either a) it is deer season instead of turkey season, or b) I am at home cleaning out my garage on a call weekend.

Not on the menu this year.
Ten yards in front of my blind – except I wasn’t there.

Not that everything that I have seen is something I want to actually hunt – at least me personally. I did send the police to “hunt” a particularly obnoxious trespasser who showed his face on cam, and he got a talking to. But other species were just interesting to know they were there.

Here is just a sampling of the wildlife I’ve had the pleasure of monitoring:

I’m glad I didn’t stick around my blind after dark that day. This bear was there 40 minutes after me.
I needed to download a higher res image and zoom in, but yep – that’s a Bobcat.
NOT a doggo.

It is a source of continual entertainment and fascination watching the wide variety of species which populate this property. At least it’s not all FOMO, sometimes it’s entertainment and education … But I still have an empty freezer. *sniff*

When seconds count…

Quick actions and proper tools save lives.

When Darrell Brooks, aka Mathboi Fly (I’m not kidding) took his red SUV on a murderous pass through the holiday parade, there was little anyone could do to stop him. But there was a tremendous amount people could do to help the victims, the could and they did.

Trauma control saves lives. Stopping bleeding is one of the most critical elements of triage and care having both the ability by having proper equipment. With that equipment comes the additional requirement to effectively move casualties who can be to higher care. Getting the 48 injured to hospitals quickly undoubtedly saved lives from Brooks heedless pass through the parade.

We could get into Brooks, we might later as we look at mass casualty events, but this is about the citizen response.

The response was tremendous out of Waukesha. The amount of high responders or collective high responders who moved to aid the injured was something the brings back images of the immediate aftermath of the Boston Marathon bombing. The motivations for the casualties are, likely, very different, but a mass casualty event is a mass casualty event.

Boston was Terror, Waukesha appears to be simple heedless flight from law enforcement. A total disregard for human life by a career criminal. The result is a casualty figure liken to most other mass casualty events. Mass shootings, mass stabbings, arsons, and even bombings.

A vehicle is a potent weapon, thousands of pounds of steel, aluminum, and polymer with a powerful driver (engine, not operator) capable of smashing it through various intermediaries. A motivated driver (operator, not engine) in a vehicle with any sort of access to a concentration of people can make someone with a rifle look like a joke. It is another, and very easy method, to generate a lethal disparity in force and unlike someone with a rifle there is nothing you can physically do to the operator of an enclosed vehicle to go hands on and physically control them. You can’t practically rush a car in motion and with locked doors, your options become extremely limited for applying countervailing force.

You could shoot through the windows/windshield if you are armed, there is a whole other science involved in that decision however, you can also shoot through the paneling and hope deflection doesn’t offset hits. An officer on scene fired on Brooks, but didn’t hit him. The car doesn’t care if its shot so…

Quick decisions saved lives.

The two decisions that have kept the death count as low as it has been were bleeding control and quick transportation.

When the legs are broken, the bones become large, sharp, and jagged laceration injury methods that are sitting right next to a major artery. Keeping legs, limbs, and other broken items from moving and causing additional tissue damage is a priority, but it is one to weigh against the current injuries and level of blood loss.

Simplest priorities of first aid are:

  1. Stop any bleeding.
  2. Keep them breathing.
  3. Transport or pass to higher medical authority as soon as possible.

Buy emergency medical equipment. Keep it close at hand. Know how to use what you have, most of it isn’t difficult.

MantisX – Ultimate Dry Fire Stocking Stuffers

I’ve just been playing with these long enough to form an opinion worth sharing, in my opinion.

And.. if you are anything like myself, then whenever you get asked what to be gifted your mind immediately blanks and you stare at your friends, family, or co-workers like you have never heard the concept of a gift before in your life.

Your brain immediately dumps its memory of anything and everything you’ve ever considered useful or fun and you stand there, reaching for an answer you no longer possess.

So this article is for those people who, when they see you, a person who likes shooting, standing there going through a hard reset on the concept of stuff. Here is an answer you’ll very likely appreciate.

MantisX

If you’ve been around a minute you may recognize the name of one of the most successful motion training applications on the market. The MantisX 10 Elite and the associated training programs are an excellent set of dry fire aids for those looking for more informative feedback. MantisX is a feedback driven company seeking to help shooters understand their movements during presentation, trigger press, and follow through. These most critical moments of the shot process make or break a difficult shot.

MantisX could (and can) be used for live fire too, it tracks your muzzle movement live rounds or otherwise. It can sit on a handgun, rifle, shotgun, or bow.

But the mad scientists over at Mantis aren’t done, they have a couple new toys in the mix.

1. Laser Academy

Smartphones make for smart ways to train, with the proper app. Laser Academy uses the nice, shiny, modern phone camera and the QR code tech on smart targets to give you a trackable dry fire range just about anywhere.

A tripod and phone clamp, a laser cartridge of your caliber choice, and a code for the smart application sets you up. It comes with the packs of smart targets and some backer to put them up anywhere you’d like.

What’s the dowel for? The cartridges are rimless to make dry fire cycles easier and not wear on your extractor, they’ll stay in the chamber until you pop it out with the dowel.

Easy to use?

Open the app after getting it via your code from the appropriate app store.

Point camera at the smart targets.

Pick a training program, including the tutorials.

Put the laser cartridge in an appropriate firearm.

Enjoy.

Perhaps the coolest aspect from a data standpoint is that, with a 2nd smart device, you can run MantisX too. This gives you both motion and target feedback to work on making efficient all those micro inputs we tend to disregard while shooting. Keeping the gun still takes muscle discipline, that gets built through repetitions, if these help you put in those repetitions (and the app even reminds you and subtly shames you for being lazy) you are set.

2. Blackbeard

As a rifle enthusiast, Blackbeard hits all the right buttons.

Namely resetting the trigger in my AR’s while I gleefully point the laser everywhere (sometimes even at the target while Laser Academy is running).

The Blackbeard replaces the bolt carrier, charging handle, and magazine with a laser and battery pack. The module lines up above the hammer and will reset the hammer when you pull the trigger allowing you to do a full cycle pull and reset instead of having to manually charge between shots.

You can use it for stand alone dry fire, or link it to Laser Academy and the smart targets. Either way it allows for rapid reps on the trigger of your AR with a point of impact feedback.

2 Notes:

  1. Fitment with non DI AR’s may be problematic as pistons do not always take up the same internal location as the gas tube. Best with DI AR’s.
  2. Fitment/use in the Radian AX556 (due to the special magazine release/bolt catch linkage) can prevent the battery-mag from releasing because the bolt catch does not have free movement with the Blackbeard in place above it. It will work with any regular lower receiver that does not have a similar linkage. I know this because I didn’t consider it when I threw it in my BCM/Radian M4gery, the system works but you have to crack open the upper and lower to remove it instead of just pressing the magazine release. So Radian owners note you must shotgun open the receivers to emplace and remove the system.

This is the most fun I’ve had with presentations and dry fire in a long time. The available feedback data is fantastic.

Fine Tuning

Laser Academy, like MantisX, has a delightful degree of adjustability available to account for things like sight offset. It can be calibrated for your specific settings with a little time and patience. The settings are also firearm and user specific, so your P320, 92X, SBR, and DMR settings can all be kept seperate.

It’s a feature that makes me enjoy the whole system more as it helps with organizing data if I should want it. It’s the little things, the attention to detail, that make it clear the whole product line has been focused on the end user.

Hands free controls on the individual targets are also another fine touch, not having to walk back to the screen until you are done with a session brings in big convenience points.

We understand, and so do they, that convenience is crucial in how useful people find these tools. MantisX has done a superb job in this regard.

Final Note: Light

The smart targets need contrast to work with cameras properly, when selecting a place for Laser Academy targets use a darker wall and lights on that minimize glare for best results. The app will tell you what it is sensing and if it is properly picking up the hit zones and control locations.

When it doubt, just play with the Blackbeard until the battery runs out, then plug it into the nearest USB charger and repeat.

The AEMS – Holosun’s Micro Red Dot

Red dots, red dots, red dots, who doesn’t love a good red dot sight? A reflex sight makes close-quarters shooting easy, instinctive, and most importantly fast.

As of 2021, you certainly have plenty of choices in red dots at this point. Holosun aims to offer you one more in the form of the AEMS. The Advanced Enclosed Micro Sight is a long gun red dot designed to be as efficient as possible.

The AEMS sits in that micro red dot category where you see optics like the Aimpoint T1/T2 but offers a much more efficient design in terms of window size. The AEMS uses a squared lens instead of a round lens, and the window is 1.1 x .87 inches in size. This big window is a bit of a shock for an optic that is only 2.2 inches long, 1.4 inches wide, and 2.59 inches tall.

The height is actually impressive. Most optics that tall only offer an absolute co-witness with AR height sights, but Holosun found a way to keep the optic low and the screen free from a blocked absolute co-witness view. Currently, the mount is proprietary and is only available at one height. That is a downside, but Holosun plans to offer various height mounts for the AEMS. Aftermarket companies are also seeking to introduce mounts of various heights.

Why the AEMS?

Besides the size efficiency, the optic is featured filled. Holosun has led the charge in innovating optics and filling them with features. The AEMS comes with a solar panel on top of the optic that acts as an awesome backup to your standard battery. The panel can power the optic extremely well, and even on overcast days, it tends to work very well.

The AEMS also comes with a multi reticle system that provides a 2 MOA dot, a 65 MOA circle, and a combination of the 2 MOA dot and 65 MOA circle. I used the latter reticle almost exclusively. It seems to catch my eye very well and provides a multi-use reticle for range finding, holdover, and mechanical offset.

We also get full night vision compatibility with the AEMS, and the big square optic is easier to use with night vision. The shake awake technology allows the optic to automatically shut off when it fails to sense movement. Then, as soon as you pick your gun up, the optic springs to life. You can adjust the time it takes for the shake awake to kick in and consult your manual to do so.

And We’re Live

Zeroing the AEMS is fairly simple with the .5 MOA adjustments. These quasi-broad adjustments make it easy to ‘dial’ it in and get your rounds hitting right where you want them. After a quick zero on my JP5 9mm PCC, I was hitting targets from 7 to 100 yards with ease.

At 7 yards, I could use the bottom of the 65 MOA circle to land shots perfectly at close ranges. The bottom of the dot compensated for mechanical offset without issue and made it easy to ensure my super close range shots were accurate and precise.

Moving back to 100 yards with a 9mm the range should provide some challenge. However, the big reticle makes it easy to compensate for ballistic drop. I know that as long as I place the dot at head height, the bottom of the stadia sits roughly on the stomach area of man-sized targets. I used a steel IPSC target to test my theory and landed ding after ding at 100 yards, with the rounds dropping into the chest of the target.

The view through the AEMS is crystal clear. There is a very slight blue tint, but not much. The AEMS comes with two lens covers that are transparent and ultimately disposable. Holosun offers replacements. I found both of these lenses superbly clear and never bothered to pop them down for shooting. They offer outstanding protection and are a great feature.

The reticles all appear crisp and easy to see. They don’t blur or starburst. When moving rapidly from target to target, I can clearly see the reticle without any blurring or disruption. That’s great for shot tracking and provides an excellent means to follow the reticle between multiple targets.

Aiming the AEMS

The Holosun AEMS provides a very capable little red dot that’s highly efficient for its size. The Window is impressive and provides a clear view with a crisp reticle. Holosun has finally departed from random numbers for their optics, and the AEMS was a great one to do it with. The AEMS works well for rifles, shotguns, and PCCs. I hope Holosun keeps its promise of providing new mounts, which will make this a very capable and multi-use red dot optic for a variety of weapons.

Happy Birthday Eugene Stoner

For your viewing pleasure, Eugene and Mikhail discussing their rifles in the most civil AR and AK discussion ever. Pre-internet obviously, something this civil and wholesome could not exist in the modern age of comment sections.

Perhaps my favorite aspect of the whole thing is the genuine respect the two have for each other’s designs. Both were and continue to be the pinnacle examples of auto-loading rifle designs. The other example that continues to thrive, the AR-18 action, is also Stoner’s team from Fairchild Armalite.

These two defined modern fighting rifles, almost everything that has come since has their design elements in them. They rifles that have come since borrowed from the best. The rest is history.

Risk Compensation Theory and Guns…

What is Risk Compensation Theory (RCT) and why does it matter to us?

Well, RCT is…

Risk compensation is a theory which suggests that people typically adjust their behavior in response to perceived levels of risk, becoming more careful where they sense greater risk and less careful if they feel more protected.[2] Although usually small in comparison to the fundamental benefits of safety interventions, it may result in a lower net benefit than expected.[n 1]

It is then used to say, well if we allow this, or install that, or make this medicine widely available, then X, Y, or Z negative effect will result.

EXAMPLES!

Installing seat belts in vehicles will just encourage people to drive more recklessly!

Making birth control available will make people more promiscuous and make STD’s spike!

Legalizing _______ will make everyone lazy and unproductive addicts! (I can be lazy on my own, thank you very much!)

Oh

Annnnd

Allowing guns in ____________ location will turn it into the Wild West!

All of these examples come from a distorted sense of risk management. This is the risk compensation theory, that an advancement in safety or capability will have an equal and opposite

The nuance of reality

Humans (and all animals) manage risk to ourselves (and our family groups) on a continuous basis. We use our judgement, experience

Risk compensation generally assumes that if we implement a change or precaution humanity will just adjust the risky behavior up to offset the safety gain. It feels logical on the surface, but it fails to taken into account that people like simple ways to manage risks and while some offset and increase in dangerous behaviors may occur it will generally never rise to offset a well designed safety feature or policy properly implemented.

Car safety belts are an excellent example of this. Certain theories held that with the increase in survivability provided by the belt, speeding and reckless driving would increase. Speed has increased, but this is largely a product of both vehicle and road design being able to handle faster vehicles, not a compensation of perceived safety offsetting reckless behavior.

…and Guns

The most prominent example of Risk Compensation we see is in College Campus arguments, they are the nominally ‘Gun Free Zone’ that is often the most easily removed as it is difficult to argue that adults who are allowed to carry most other public venues would somehow turn into raving murderous lunatics upon collegiate soil…

Yeah, it doesn’t make much sense when you dig into it.

But the theory goes that if guns are allowed, ‘accidents’ will increase on campus with firearms because students do things like drink. The other oft pushed argument is that professor who are covering ‘controversial’ subjects are no longer free to express themselves as they would otherwise because an angry student might gun them down for their challenging opinion.

Leaving aside the thought that if your opinion is throwing students into a sudden murderous rage you probably suck at conveying your opinion to provoke thought, what precisely is stopping a triggered student from murdering said professor?

Seriously, what? The rule? The rule against murder they are willing to ignore but they would somehow respect the rule of prohibition against firearms on campus? We know this isn’t true. We’ve seen example after example of campus prohibitions violated and we also have ongoing examples of campus which allow legal firearms in conjunction with the rules the state allows for other public venues and don’t see controversial professors being shot in job lots.

Weird… It’s almost like the risk compensatory arguments are utterly ridiculous, given additional rational input factors such a students being more or less reasonable persons on and off campus equally, and a true lack of meaningful protection behind the written prohibition against arms.

If a rule lacks an enforcement method, the rule is solely voluntary in nature. If the enforcement method is not one that can back the seriousness of the rule, the rule is solely voluntary in nature. The most likely person(s) to break the prohibition are those that the rule seeks to prohibit from breaking it and no enforcement method will be available at hand. It is ultimately a terrible miscarriage of your responsibilities to prohibit something, lack the resources to reasonably enforce the prohibition, and lack the responsive resources to deal with a violation of your prohibition.

This is especially true where civil rights are restricted for no more coherent reason than the ruling faculty do not like that right.

Single Action Defense – Don’t Try It

You can count on a story about the single action revolver for self defense on an annual basis in those magazines written by old graybeards for old graybeards. These magazines have the single action army on the cover often enough and still feel that polymer frame guns are beneath them.

They need to stop encouraging such tactical misapplication.

Don’t get me wrong the SAA is a great recreational firearm with much history behind it. But there are much, much better choices for personal defense. That new fangled double action revolver is among them! 

A point in fact to study. In 1858 Starr firearms introduced a quality solid frame revolver with good sights, a relatively smooth action, a safety notch making carrying the revolver fully loaded viable, and excellent accuracy to 100  yards per period testing. The Starr was perhaps the Les Baer of its day. Starr went out of business because it could not sell its revolver as cheaply as Colt! The Starr made all single action revolvers obsolete. This was a long time ago—  

The single action requires the hammer be cocked before it is fired.

This is a set of problems. As the revolver is drawn the thumb rears the hammer to the rear. You don’t do this in the holster, but you begin cocking the hammer as the handgun is getting on target. Once cocked, you have a nice short trigger press. (Leg shots are not humorous and the reason that fast draw shooters use blanks.) Then fire the piece until empty, once it is empty you will resort to tactics used during Cro Magnon times as the revolver cannot be quickly loaded.

The loading gate must be opened and the cartridges knocked out with an ejector rod one at a time. Hopefully you will have chosen a modern revolver of good steel and one with a transfer bar system that allows carrying the piece fully loaded. No matter how good you are- and many who engage in single action shooting in Cowboy Action Shooting are pretty smart with the old single action- a less well trained individual with a double action revolver is faster.

I understand the revolver has many applications, particularly in outdoors use. As an example the big cats and bears typically attack suddenly and go for the upper body. Those who have saved themselves from these attacks have done so by jamming the handgun into the beast’s body and firing repeatedly. A self loader would jam. It is difficult to work the single action hammer when the wrist is bent around in this manner. 

I like the balance of the SAA and once carried a real Colt when hiking and on the trail. I like the way it sets and hangs on the hip. A 4 ¾ inch barrel SAA is no more difficult to carry than a 4 inch barrel .38. But a quality .357 Magnum totally outclasses the SAA .45 for field use and concealed carry. A few minutes on the range solidly confirms this.

Nostalgia is great, don’t get me wrong, but the pundit actually advocating for this handgun isn’t doing the reader any favors. Slow to load, unload, fire and handle, the SAA has seen its day and was obsolete by 1907 for any practical use. The Mexican Revolution kept the SAA going twenty years past its prime! Don’t get caught up in this hardware. Take the time and ammunition you would expend mastering this old beast and apply to more modern technology. You will be glad you did! 

         

Lever action cowboy rifles are a different matter. While they are far inferior to the AR rifle for personal defense, they still have mechanical merit. Sometimes called the Brooklyn Special they are available and acceptable in places handguns and AR type rifles are not, due to laws and mores. The lever action is flat and easy to store and snag free coming into action. The piece is reliable, accurate, hits hard and offers good handling. The cowboy ‘assault rifle’ has much merit in many situations. Affordability was once an advantage, but today a good quality lever gun is more expensive than ever.

The AR is starting to look even better. 

Gunday Brunch #28: Title: The Second Best US Service Rifle

The absolute best service rifle the US military has ever fielded is the M16 family of weapons. This is a fact that really isn’t debatable unless you’re a contrarian, so today the boys are trying to figure out what rifle is the “best of the rest.” Is the M14 the second best service rifle? Or perhaps the M1 Garand?

BREAKING: Rittenhouse Cleared on All Charges

The court in Wisconsin has found Not Guilty verdict on all charges against Kyle Rittenhouse.The Illinois teen who lives just south of Kenosha was charged with multiple felony crimes associated with the shooting of Rosenbaum, Huber, and Grosskreutz, the former two were killed, and the use of an AR-15 at 17 years of age.

The jury, after 4 days of deliberations and the closing arguments has freed the now 18 year old.

Kenosha Wisconsin is prepared for more chaos as there are some who likely will not accept the jury’s judgement. These people likely hadn’t followed the trial closely either and have had their minds made up since the incident occured.

Make no mistake, this is a win for self defense law as much as it is a win for Kyle.

‘You lose the right to self-defense when you’re the one who brought the gun,’

Binger, the Rittenhouse prosecutor, demonstrating that he currently does not have the right of self defense

Thank everything you can possibly thank that the laws surrounding self defense are not this vapidly dumb.

This is the uno reverse dark mirror variant of Magic Talisman syndrome.

What is Magic Talisman syndrome?

It is the belief that owning a device changes your circumstance, not the proper use of the device.

Owning a car, a violin, a fire extinguisher, a first aid kit, or even a gun, only makes you one thing. An owner.

Risk compensation effects come into play, more on that soon, but the short of it is that ‘buying a gun makes you safer’. False.

The title concept, espoused by Binger most recently, is the bizarro opposing view variant of magic talisman syndrome, the idea that bringing a firearm into a dangerous or contentious situation makes you liable for any and all chaos that comes post arrival or a specific negative outcome by mere possession.

It is a degrading vein of thought that removes the human behavior equations and the communicative equations of threat perception and response. It instead replaces that nuance with a giant game of, ‘He started it!’

It most egregiously commits one sin above all though,

It seeks to codify that someone with a firearm has nothing to fear, physically, from anyone without a firearm. It’s utter nonsense but it is the crux of one of the arguments Binger used to try and illustrate that Rosenbaum was not a threat to Rittenhouse.

You have just as much physically to fear from another human being if you are armed as if you are unarmed, their ability to cause harm to you or to others is not altered in any way by you being armed. You are simply in possession of an effective response to stop immediate harm. That response is in no way limited to being harmed only by other firearms, it is the degree of harm that you are under threat of.

In addition, they are trying to use the ‘Why’d you shoot X many rounds’ when the first shot to the pelvis could have been disabling. This, again, completely disregards the human elements of the equation. The perception and processing speed of what Rittenhouse (or anyone else) could understand between the time they began firing because they felt they must and then choosing to stop because they’ve perceived an effect on the threat source.

All the shots Rittenhouse fired at Rosenbaum were in quick succession, they stopped when Rosenbaum was down. It wasn’t shoot, pause, shoot, pause, shoot, and it shouldn’t be. That isn’t how any modern defense is taught, because to do so would be dangerous to the defender. It would put the defender’s life in more danger than it already is (life threatening) by mandating that they take an action that extends the length of time they are at risk to ‘check’ the threat and see if they are reasonably disabled between shots.

It is a nonsense defense, it relies on third party knowledge that nobody can possibly observe in the time frames involved in a fight. The reason defensive shooting emphasizes multiple effective shots and watching for a positive reaction is just that you are already in a situation where seconds count.

You wouldn’t be asked to use a fire extinguisher this way. It isn’t use one little spritz into the very dangerous flames and see if that takes care of the fire, you fire the extinguisher at the base of the flames until the fire is out. You use it until you observe a positive effect on the problem.

You wouldn’t use a tourniquet this way either. You wouldn’t wrap up a bleeding limp (or where a limb once was) and then click it or twist it one turn at a time and wait to see the exact pressure you have a positive effect, you crank it down and stop the bleeding.

We are talking about emergency situations where we have already left behind the possibility of a measured response. The response we need to utilize instead is one that has immediate or near immediate desired effect on the problem. The possibility that we use more force against the problem than was strictly necessary is nearly certain, conservation of resource is not the concern until an immediate positive effect on the problem is observed. At that time people can switch gears back to measured responses.

Why I changed my home defense gun

I have always been a big believer that your mission should drive the gear you select. Your mission could be a specialized military or law enforcement mission, it could be deep concealment in a non-permissive environment, or it could be something as “simple” as home defense.

When you’re looking at the mission of home defense, on the surface it seems simple, right? Defend your home. But what does that mean? Does that mean detecting and deterring intruders before they can make entry? Do you have children that you’ll need to collect up and move to a safe location? For me, a recent examination of my home defense plan caused me to make a big change and switch up the guns I was using for home protection.

It’s worth taking a look at your home defense plan every six months to make sure you don’t need to make any changes!

Roller Delayed Beyond HK – 5 Other Roller Delayed Platforms

HK has long been the Roller Delayed company. The famed G3 series rifles and the MP5 all use the famed roller delayed blowback system. Roller Delayed blowback mixes the traditional reliability of a blowback weapon with a refined delay system. A delay ensures the breach doesn’t open too early. A simple blowback creates a delay using a heavy bolt, or a heavy recoil spring, or a bit of both. This often makes the weapon much heavier than necessary, makes it stiff to charge, and ensures you experience every little bit of recoil the caliber creates.

Why Roller Delayed Rules

A refined delay system is necessary for more powerful calibers, like the G3’s 7.62 mm NATO round. This system works to ensure the round can be safely cycled and fired. Additionally, roller delayed systems can also make weapons in pistol calibers lighter and help reduce recoil.

The first roller delayed system showed up in 1945. A roller delayed firearm is very simple and doesn’t require a gas piston, and often creates a simple to produce design that’s robust and reliable. Different guns utilize different methods of roller delay, but the most common configuration is a set of rollers that are part of the bolt. This roller creates friction and keeps the breech closed until the bullet has left the barrel, and ensures the weapon remains reliable and safe.

I could list 5 HK-only firearms, but I wanted to challenge myself and find you fine folks 5 Non-HK firearms that utilize a roller delayed blowback system.

JP Enterprises JP5

The JP5 is an AR-style 9mm rifle that utilizes a roller-delayed blowback system. This 9mm carbine dominates competition shooting due to its roller delayed design. Most 9mm ARs are straight blowback rifles, and they suffer from heavy buffers and buffer springs along with snappy recoil. The JP5 doesn’t require such devices and has hardly any recoil.

The gun barely moves between shots and ensures it’s a smooth shooter that allows for rapid and accurate fire. I love the JP5, and the roller delayed system is ingeniously implemented with two rollers built into the bolt of the gun. Other than that, it’s all AR 15.

Well, actually, it’s beyond the standard AR 15 and features some awesome ergonomics that are completely ambidextrous, and it’s insanely accurate. The JP5 costs over three grand, but holy crap, is it worth it.

The Garrow Arms Roller AR17

Garrow Arms brought a unique blowback system to the AR17 upper receiver. Instead of having a potent or necessarily powerful round, the Garrow Arms AR17 addresses the 17 HMR. This powerful, bottlenecked, rimfire round doesn’t do well with straight blowback like a 22LR or 22 Magnum. In fact, it’s simply not safe. The chance of an out of battery detonation is higher and can be extremely dangerous with the amped-up little .17 HMR.

Courtesy PewPew Tactical

The Garrow Arms combines a roller delayed system with a gas-operated design. It’s unlike any other roller-delayed firearm on the market. In fact, it uses a healthy amount of the HK G3’s principle of operations and works incredibly reliably. The two rollers are ball bearings that are fit into the bolt and then the upper receiver.

The AR17 upper is extremely reliable, soft shooting, and highly accurate. If I need to land a headshot on a squirrel, I can do it with the Garrow Arms upper.

SRM 1216

As far I can tell, the SRM 1216 is the only roller delayed operated shotgun…like ever. The SRM 1216 utilizes two rollers on the bolt, and this allows for a quasi bullpup configuration. That’s not even the weirdest thing about the SRM 1216. It feeds from a removable magazine…that’s also a series of four tubular magazine that the shooter rotates when one runs dry.

With the non-NFA model, you get 16 rounds of 12 gauge in a compact package. It’s smaller than a Mossberg 500 with an 18.5-inch barrel but packs more than three times the ammunition. The roller delayed gun helps keep recoil low, keeps the gun light, and doesn’t require a heavy gas system or finicky inertia system to function.

The SRM 1216 also looks like it came out of the future, even though the operating system came out in 1945.

SIG 510

The SIG 510 is a contemporary of the FN FAL and the G3 battle rifles of the Cold War. Like the G3, it’s powered by a roller delayed system. The roller delayed system allows the SIG 510 to fire the powerful 7.62 NATO round. The SIG 510 proved to be robust, accurate, and surprisingly easy to control for a selective fire 7.62 NATO load.

The SIG 510 used an inline design, much like the AR 15. This helped reduce recoil and make the weapon a fair bit more controllable. The rifle looks somewhat goofy, but it served well for 33 years before being replaced by a 5.56 caliber rifle.

The SIG 510 served beyond 1990 in the hands of reservists and lasted so long because it embraced modularity as part of its design.

STG 45

Finally, we get to the first-ever roller-delayed blowback weapon. Unsurprisingly it’s a German design called the STG 45. I know what you’re thinking. Do I mean STG 44, the world’s first assault rifle? No, I mean the STG 45. The STG 45 was designed to provide the same firepower of the STG 44 without being mechanically complicated. The roller delayed design meant safe and reliable operation without the need for the long-stroke gas piston system.

The STG 45 would be cheaper and easier to produce. This meant the potential to equip every German with an assault rifle existed. However, it was also 1945, and the war was ending. Mauser’s projects would come to a close before they could ever become a reality. They produced working models and proved the concept could work.

The STG 45 is directly responsible for the creation of the CETME rifles, and therefore directly responsible for the HK series of G3 and MP5 weapons. This is the granddaddy of roller delayed firearms, and its spawn is aplenty these days.

The Future of Roller Delayed Firearms?

That’s a good question. What’s next for the roller delayed operating system? It’s a fair question and one I can’t fully answer. It seems like most modern firearms use a short-stroke gas piston system. I think the future of roller delayed firearms will be submachine guns and PCCs. The roller delay system offers a ton of advantages over simple blowback and makes very controllable and reliable pistol-caliber long guns.

“oNLy De COpZ ShooD HaZ GuNZ!”

It’s an old… tired… and terrible argument. See the above example.

A. If we are trying to tie competency to ownership for safety we should really, and I do mean really, take a look at cars first. Vehicle accidents and a demonstrated driving standard (and maintained standard) could further curb deaths and injuries.

B. This argument/opinion was extensively used by the prosecution in the Kyle Rittenhouse trial. It is the obvious opinion of the prosecutor, Binger, who said “You lose the right to selfdefense when you‘re the one who brought the gun,” which becomes problematic for police officers.

“You lose the right to selfdefense when you‘re the one who brought the gun,”

So, what about the cops?

What about law enforcement?

We can prove that their firearm competency, both in use and in practical and technical knowledge, is something of a nebulous standard. It varies widely from officer to officer. Look up any LEO firearm qualification for patrol officers and they’re usually very very easy to train to that standard. Officers who are still on the road routinely fail these simple qualifications and have to retest.

If you can’t pass a test cold (without practice and ‘warming up’) then you cannot be expected to perform at that level on demand. There is no warmup in a sudden or unexpected confrontation that goes to guns. Cold tests produce authentic results.

Why are those officers still on the road? Why are those who cannot perform to an on demand emergency standard

Simple. Departments can’t afford to bench them. Period. The other non-critical and non-emergency services they provide by being something between a warm uniformed body and a source for general information, or non-critical and non-threatening control (event traffic, parade, school function, community outreach, so on, so forth, etc.) are more likely uses of any qualified or unqualified officers time than an emergency is.

The dire emergencies are rare (thankfully), so using less than prepared officers is a safe gamble that routinely pays off, until the moment it does not. Then someone gets shot who should have been tased, a cop gets hurt who shouldn’t have, a citizen gets hurt who shouldn’t have, or any other mishandling mishap when conflict reaches primal levels.

But, in the grand calculous, using these under prepared officers pays off for routine functions, and the more times a seriously negative outcome does not occur (even though the situation made the chances high) the more it becomes okay that higher risk officers who are under prepared mentally and physically for emergencies stay on for the day-to-day.

The Act of Aggression

Self defense law, in most instances, favors the defendant so long as the defendant responded to a reasonable assumption of lethal force.

There are two very prominent shooting cases in court right now, Rittenhouse’s and the McMichael’s. They have surface similarities and both defendants are claiming self defense, however both incidents have video evidence showing the moments of contact and moments prior.

The two situations are very different from the ‘aggressor’ stand point. Both defendants in both cases are claiming that when the deceased reached for their weapon to take it, they felt their life was in danger.

That statement, in a vacuum, is reasonable. Someone without consent in a confrontation is attempting to take your weapon, your life is at risk under those circumstances. That is a reasonable point of view.

What separates the two is the prior immediate circumstances. In the McMichaels case of pursuing Ahmed Aubrey, they were the first lethal threat. They escalated to lethal first, as being pursued by armed men in a vehicle who have no legal authority to stop you would reasonably make you fear for your life. Add to that the fact that he is a lone young black man in Georgia being pursued by three armed white men in pickups.

Poor decisions were made. The McMichaels and their friend/neighbor took on an extrajudicial authority that was not theirs to take in a likely emotive reaction to prior thefts and reports read online. This is basically how to go to prison as a dumb vigilante 101.

How was Rittenhouse different?

Very simple, in each instance he was the pursued and not the pursuer. The McMichaels were the pursuers, not the pursued. Even giving the supposition Rittenhouse muzzled or raised the rifle at Rosenbaum, when Rosenbaum ran after Rittenhouse and Rittenhouse ran off, the dynamic changed. Rosenbaum continued the pursuit, cornered Rittenhouse, and grabbed for the rifle. Rittenhouse was in lawful possession of the gun, Rosenbaum assuredly was not and would not have been as a felon and a mentally disturbed individual.

Granted, there would be no reasonable way to know that Rosenbaum, and Huber, who would both have been illegally in possession of the AR-15, were prohibited possessors and the law would make exception for the exigent circumstance that a felon, in fear their life, would take actions including disarming and individual.

But possession of a firearm is not an implicit threat from one person to another, see law enforcement and armed security. Self defense law further sustains (and this was used against Rittenhouse) that when a threat ends it is no longer permissible to engage in lethal force defense. Rosenbaum making Rittenhouse run off may have qualified, Rosenbaum pursuing Rittenhouse is much more suspect. Rosenbaum’s other behavior during the day continue to support the fact that a fear of Rosenbaum killing Rittenhouse would have been reasonable, but the mere fact that one adult can kill or seriously injure another with their bare hands and Rosenbaum’s actions certainly indicated that likely.

So, you can’t have it both ways. You cannot have a nebulous standard of what a threat looks like. You cannot have it so that the presence of a firearm is an implied threat when brandishing and menacing laws cover the overt act. If Rittenhouse bringing a firearm was a threat, then law enforcement or security bring firearms is a threat.

Instead the standard is overtly indicating use, brandishing. If Rittenhouse had deliberately aimed in at anyone without a probably threat to himself, he would be brandishing and he would be the aggressor.

This is being used in the McMichael case by the defense as the younger McMichael served in the Coast Guard and had some training in this regard. Where this falls apart is that, in that capacity under the Coast Guard McMichael had LE and Arrest authority backing the threatened use of force with the firearm. When he and his father pursued Aubrey they had no such backing authority, nor would there be any reasonable expectation on Aubrey’s part that they have that authority.

There’s thoughts of the day while we watch these two trials involving contentious events and self defense claims continue.

And the idea that only our variably knowledgeable officers, with a wide range of proficiencies, and a documented history of errors, should be armed instead of the general public because they are so much better and safer at being armed?

No.

Children and Firearms Safety

(from justiceforgunowners.ca)

[Ed: Dr. Mauser first published this on his site, JusticeforGunOwners.ca, on October 25.]

Can firearms be kept safely at homes with young children? Yes, with proper precautions. Millions of North Americans have guns at home and do so safely. Around one-half of homes in the US possess guns as do about one-third of homes in Canada. Thanks to a widespread culture of safety, in Canada and the United States, firearms can be owned safely by anyone willing to take responsibility and learn appropriate safety procedures. The risks of firearm ownership have been exaggeratedAgain and again.

Young children should be taught not to touch firearms, and when they are old enough to accept more responsibility, they should be taught how to handle firearms safely. Statistics show that children face minimal risk from firearms in the home with responsible parents. The five leading threats to children under 10 years of age are drowning, suffocation, poisoning, house fires, and of course traffic accidents.

Accidental deaths, Canada (2000-2019)

    Age        
0 to 9 10 to 14 15 to 19 20 to 24 25 to 29 30 and older Annual average
Firearm 0 1 2 1 1 11 17
Pedal cycling 3 5 6 4 4 48 69
Drowning 28 8 19 22 17 178 272
Traffic accidents 37 24 144 169 117 952 1,443
Poisoning 3 3 38 116 173 1,503 1,834
Falls 5 2 9 16 13 3,528 3,573

Source: Statistics Canada, Cause of Death (ICD-10) Total, all ages, both sexes. www150.statcan.gc.ca/t1/tb11/en/tv.action?pid=1710000501

Children and firearms safety

Firearm ownership imposes serious safety challenges so that owners must act responsibly to ensure their own safety as well as the safety of their family, neighbors, and community. The evidence shows that both American and Canadian firearms owners are responsible and safety conscious. This may be surprising given the horrific news stories about children wounded or killed by guns in the home. Such sensationalism attract “eyeballs,” but official records show that firearms accidents are infrequent and have continued to fall over the past decades.

Accidental deaths, United States (1999-2019)

0 to 9 years 10 to 14 years 15 to 19 years 20 to 29 years 30 and older Total
Firearms 0.09 0.13 0.36 0.33 0.19 0.20
Pedal cycling 0.09 0.27 0.27 0.21 0.36 0.29
Residential fires 0.71 0.28 0.23 0.36 1.09 0.82
Drowning 1.57 0.58 1.31 1.21 1.10 1.16
Suffocation 2.60 0.24 0.26 0.37 2.69 2.02
Falls 0.15 0.09 0.35 0.68 13.72 8.28
Poisoning 0.15 0.16 2.95 14.10 15.40 11.32
Traffic accidents 2.45 2.92 17.42 19.77 13.95 12.74

Crude rates, Both sexes, All races
Source: Centers for Disease Control, https://wisqars.cdc.gov/fatal-reports

Education, not legislation

Anti-gun activists exaggerate the risks of firearm ownership in order to evoke public support for additional legal restrictions on civilian firearms. Their mantra is that firearms in the home increases the risk of unintentional shootings, suicide, and homicide. Such claims are based on irrational fears bolstered by pseudo-science. Methodologically sound research does not support claims that access to firearms is linked to suicidecriminal violence, or homicide. The key to safety is accepting responsibility. There is no undue risk as long as owners act responsibly.

Very few children are killed in firearms accidents as is shown in the tables above. Rather than teach children to fear firearms and thereby instil learned helplessness, responsible parents teach their children how to handle firearms safely. Perhaps surprisingly, firearms instruction teaches how to be good citizens. Research shows that adolescents who were introduced to firearms by their parents are less likely to become delinquent than adolescents who have no experience with firearms. (See Figure 13 and the discussion on page 18).

Hunters were the first conservationists

Motivated to protect wildlife and wilderness, hunting organizations were instrumental in encouraging American states and Canadian provinces to regulate hunting and require hunting licences. US President Teddy Roosevelt and Canadian Prime Minister Wilfrid Laurier laid the foundation for international cooperation in protecting endangered species prior to World War I with the passage of the international Migratory Bird Treaty. Hunting organizations in both countries lobbied state and provincial governments to create the North American Model of Wildlife Conservation which has been exceptionally successful in conserving and protecting a wide variety of wildlife species in North America.

The North American Model of Wildlife Conservation depends upon a few key principles:

  1. Wildlife is a public resource;
  2. No game markets;
  3. Wildlife is allocated by law;
  4. Wildlife can only be killed for legitimate purposes;
  5. Wildlife management policy is based on scientific principles;
  6. Broad public access to hunting.

Firearms organizations advocate firearms safety

The key to broad public access to hunting is widespread firearms ownership by civilians – which in turn requires a strong public commitment to handling firearms safely.

Hunting organizations were instrumental in encouraging American states and Canadian provinces to require safety instruction for hunting licences.

Currently, hunting organizations in every state in the United States and in every province in Canada support teaching firearms safety as part of hunter education — BCOntario, and New Brunswick, for example. The International Hunter Education Association coordinates state and provincial hunting safety classes. 

The National Rifle Association has the Eddie Eagle Program to teach young children what to do if they discover a firearm. 

The National Shooting Sports Foundation has a number of firearms safety programs, including Project ChildSafe. 

.

.

GAM_sml

— Gary Mauser, PhD is professor emeritus in the Institute for Canadian Urban Research Studies and the Beedie School of Business, Simon Fraser University, British Columbia. He specializes in criminology and economics, has published extensively on firearms legislation, firearms and violence, and has provided expert testimony on criminal justice issues to the Canadian government.

All DRGO articles by Gary Mauser, PhD

#ShowMeYourFeet – GAT, Flanders Fields, and Task Force ARGO team up to continue helping our Afghan allies get out.

Southfield Michigan, November 16, 2021 — GAT Marketing is a full-service creative, content-creation, traditional, and digital marketing agency that was created for the firearms community by firearms professionals. We are competitive shooters, instructors, and enthusiasts with deep roots in the community, which allows GAT to keep its finger on the pulse of the market. Our team members come from backgrounds in advertising, fine arts, brand and digital management, business development, venture capital, and data analysis. Together, we specialize in digital advertising and marketing strategies for the highest ROI and extreme brand exposure.

Flanders Fields is a 501(c)(3) made up of Army and Marine veterans on a mission to help other veterans in any way possible. As veterans, we understand the true problems and situations our soldiers deal with when coming home. We intend to make sure no veteran is ever denied a bed, addiction treatment placement or support because of inadequate financial resources. Many veterans experience delays of days to months waiting for the Veterans Administration to fully cover needed services, often to their detriment. On August 15, 2021, this mission was extended to Afghans who served the United States military and their families.

Task Force ARGO is a group of private citizens working to evacuate Americans and Afghan partners stranded in Afghanistan. Their mission is to bring home from Afghanistan every US Citizen and Legal Permanent Resident (LPR), the immediate and extended family members of US citizen and LPRs, and Afghan allies and partners who served the United States Armed Services faithfully as Afghan special operations, interpreters, security specialists, and intelligence analysts.

GAT Marketing is proud to be partnering with Task Force ARGO and Flanders Fields to assist in bringing an end to the Afghanistan refugee crisis. Our campaign starts with the story of two sisters. They executed missions alongside US forces on female engagement teams.

They fled Afghanistan with a single pair of shoes, which they took turns wearing on their way out of the country. While America’s media outlets may have moved on, Afghanistan’s refugee crisis continues to devastate families.

You can help by posting your feet with the #ShowMeYourFeet hashtag and go barefoot for a day, or post the receipt of your donation. GAT Marketing CEO Charles Anderson had this to say about meeting this moment.

“GAT Marketing is honored to donate to such an amazing and noble cause. Our support goes out to those that still remain in Afghanistan to this day. Our participation with Flanders Fields and Task Force ARGO is in the hope of spreading awareness of the many brave people who are still in harm’s way. We are proud to join in the work on their swift and safe movement away from the danger in Afghanistan.”

GAT Marketing is prepared to match $5,000 in donations mad this month to the #ShowMeYourFeet campaign. We need your help in raising the funds in order to accomplish this important goal. Donations will be highly appreciated as every single cent counts toward the refugees’ safe rescue and recovery.

The link to donate is https://lnkd.in/e4iFQmK2 or check out more information here: https://www.linkedin.com/…/urn:li:activity…/

Check out the link in the Flanders Fields’ bio to donate as well.

#feetorreceipt#showmeyourfeet#challenge#veteransday#flandersfields#taskforceargo#afghanevac

Contact give@flandersfields.org for further information.