Advertisement

The USMC Turns 246

Once again, dear readers, it is 10 November and the US Service branch known for raucously touting the pure awesomeness of its own existence, while consuming the contents of in reach Crayola packages and alcohol around the world, is set to do so again.

Because why wouldn’t we? We’re awesome like that.

The Marines, actively serving and veteran alike, have a unique bond with the Corps and a pride of belonging that is truly in a league of its own. Even Marines who describe the horrible, stupid, boring, ridiculous, or otherwise less than stellar experiences in the Corps will join the rest of us in going absolutely ape shit over the Marine Corps Birthday.

Why?

Because we are Marines.

It is that simple. It doesn’t matter that we had a terrible NCO that one time, especially if we had stellar non-comms in others. It doesn’t matter that 29 Palms, or Okinawa, or [just about anywhere else] sucked as a duty station or school. We were in that together and made the most of it. A negative event or experience doesn’t overshadow the sense of pride in identity, and I don’t think people realize just how astoundingly powerful that is.

It doesn’t matter what path your Marine Corps career took, whether it was 4 years or 24, it was your path as a Marine and it will always be a part of you. It doesn’t matter where the Corps sent you, what mission you got called for, you went and carried the Corps legacy in that place.

For those who aren’t Marines, you don’t get it. FMF Corpsman have a clue. Other veterans of the other branches have varying degrees of an idea.

But only Marines know. Only Marines get it.

Only United States Marines understand what it is to be a Marine, and to be with the whole of the Corps, past and present, celebrating our birthday.

Semper Fi, you delightful bunch of degenerates. Stay safe.

The United States Marine Corps revolvers

Happy birthday to the United States Marine Corps! I’d like to honor my friends in America’s worst funded branch of the military today by taking a look at some of their historical service weapons, specifically the Marine Corps revolvers.

The Blackpowder Era of Revolvers

Because they were founded in the 1700s, the Marines have a long history of revolver use in combat. This started with the 1851 and 1861 Colt Navy revolvers. These percussion revolvers used loose powder and a round or conical projectile. For many years the Marines didn’t have weapons separate from the Navy. They used whatever pistols the Navy acquired. This pattern continued with the Colt 1873 Single Action revolver, commonly called the Peacemaker. This gun was purchased in large quantities by the Navy and Army, and trickled into the Corps. This made it the first cartridge firing Marine Corps revolver.

The First Marine Corps Revolver

The first of several official Marine Corps revolvers was issued in 1905, when they adopted the Colt M1892. The M1892 was the first double action revolver with a swing-out cylinder that was issued to the US military, and was chambered in 38 Long Colt. The M1892 would famously see action in the hands of the US Army during the Philippine Insurrection, which resulted in tens of thousands of people on the internet thinking that it was replaced because the 38 rounds didn’t have enough “stopping power.” It’s telling that despite the Army replacing their M1892s with the Colt New Service, the Marine Corps adopted the 38 Long Colt revolver in 1905.

The M1917 Revolver

The Marines would make do with a hodgepodge of revolvers until they officially adopted the M1911 pistol. However, due to shortages in production, revolvers were still in front line service with the Marines during WW1 and WW2. Most notably the famous M1917 revolvers from Colt and Smith & Wesson.

Despite being made by two different companies, both the Colt and S&W revolvers were called the M1917. These were double action revolvers with 5.5 inch barrels chambered in 45 ACP. They used 3-round half-moon clips to hold the rounds in place, and were issued with a three pocket pouch that could hold 6 additional clips for another 18 shots. Approximately 300,000 of the M1917 revolvers were made. These continued in service in various capacities until after the Vietnam War.

Vietnam to Today

Speaking of the Vietnam War, this is the last place we find Marine Corps revolvers. The S&W Model 66 with a 2.75 inch barrel was a popular choice for aviators across all branches, and many were carried by Marine helicopter and fixed wing pilots. The S&W Model 10 was also issued up until the 1980s to certain military police units. But the era of the Marine Corps revolver eventually came to an end, as the last of the M1917s was retired from inventory and replaced across the board with the M1911.

Today, like all the other branches, the Marines are switching to a variant of the Sig P320 pistol, specifically the M18 that’s been adopted by the USAF and the Navy.

SilencerCo: Dogs Have Ears Too

Dogs of SilencerCo

Anyone who has a dog claims they have “the best dog ever,” and none of them are wrong. Over time, dogs have become some of the closest and best companions; people are truly blessed to share life with them. Dogs serve many roles: helper and protector at home, companion or partner while traveling or working, and life-saver. As a result, dogs have so many job descriptions. One such company that respects those job descriptions is SilencerCo.

SilencerCo Dogs
My Two boys were welcome on the tour and they loved checking it all out.

The Dogs of SilencerCo 

by Sara Liberte

 

“The one absolute, unselfish friend that man can have in this selfish world—the one that never proves ungrateful or treacherous—is his dog.” – George Graham Vest.


As social pack animals, dogs thrive off attention and affection. They are just as happy to provide that same level of attention and love back to people. 

Humans have been living with dogs for over 15,000 years, and the bond is only growing more robust, especially with workplaces that understand and respect that bond and encourage dogs at work.

 

SilencerCo
My two boys hanging proud at SilencerCo headquarters.

I am an avid dog lover who works every day with two dogs by my side. So when I visited SilencerCo’s HQ in Salt Lake City recently to check out the new Hybrid 46M modular Silencer for GunMag Warehouse, I did so with both canines in tow.

SilencerCo Hybrid 46M Modular Silencer
Testing out the new Hybrid 46M.

I was super stoked to see this company not only respected the bond between humans and canines but has adopted a work culture that embraces and welcomes that bond daily. My visit was on a Saturday, so I only met a few of the office pups. Yet, they were putting in the hours and loving every minute of it just like their humans. Both humans and office dogs were incredibly gracious to my two boys, as we were welcomed in with open paws at SilencerCo.

 

Dogs of SilencerCo
Fooling around in the marketing department.

Dogs have proven themselves to be loyal, kind, understanding, and always there to lend an ear. In addition, dogs are always down to greet us with excitement, even on days that have proven to be exceptionally challenging. And for this reason, I know firsthand the benefit of a dog by your side at work. But don’t just take my word for it; according to Life Learn Animal Health, here is a list of the eight advantages of a dog-friendly workplace

1. Office dogs reduce employees stress

2. Dogs boost office morale

3. Dog-friendly workplaces promote productivity.

4. Office dogs help improve communication

5. Dogs encourage a healthier lifestyle 

6. Dog-friendly offices improve employee retention

7. Dog-friendly workplaces appear more attractive to prospective employees.

8. Office dogs get socialized rather than being left home alone. 

Silencer Co is Dog Friendly
Photo by Jayce Leroy.

SilencerCo fully understands the benefits of dogs at work, but they also take it seriously, as they should. SilencerCo went so far as to create a Dog Committee with an employee Dog Guide that explains the SilencerCo Dog Culture. In addition, all employees and pups must meet requirements/criteria and volunteer to help maintain a safe and clean work environment for both humans and dogs.

 

Silencer Co is dog friendly
Greeted by this sign when you first walk in the building.

If this level of respect for dogs wasn’t enough, SilencerCo has even taken its consideration of our canines one step further. They created a campaign titled “Dogs have ears too.” 

SilencerCo Dogs Have Ear Too

The basis of this is that projecting a dog to loud noises daily, such as that of a firearm, can lead to hearing damage in our furry companions.

 

Dogs of SilencerCo
Photo by Jayce Leroy.

Besides being cute, dogs serve duties, and some responsibilities are pretty important. Whether they’re herding cows, hunting birds, or game, acting as a vital part of a home defense plan, supporting people with disabilities, or simply acting as a companion unlike any other, dogs help humans daily. As if those duties aren’t enough, dogs also help prevent possible crimes and save lives, as in Military and Police canines. Some dogs in these roles are exposed to loud noises, including sounds of gunfire, noisy equipment such as helicopters or airplanes, and even loud machinery.

 

Dogs of SilencerCo
Photo by Jayce Leroy

The noise level and damaging effects are significant, especially considering a dog’s acute sense of hearing. Dogs can distinguish sounds and pitches that we as humans cannot. Considering this, it makes perfect sense that SilencerCo is aware that the damage resulting from muzzle blasts might be far more traumatic to the dog’s ears than humans.

Dogs of SilencerCo
Photo by Jayce Leroy.

In the past, protecting a dog’s hearing has been overlooked, but it is now more common in the many fields that dogs work. Of course, SilencerCo is in the business of manufacturing Silencers which allows for a much lower sound decibel when a firearm is fired. Still, nonetheless, they are privy to the ramifications of continuous exposure to loud noises by canines.

Dogs of SilencerCo
Photo by Jayce Leroy.

A Silencer is one way to help protect the working or hunting dog’s hearing, but other options are available.

From Popular Mechanics:

“Military working dogs (MWDs) have become a major part of the U.S. Military. From base security to dogs that accompany special forces on raids, dogs are indispensable assets, capable of running down bad guys on the field. In addition, a new technology known as CAPS (Canine Auditory Protection System) now promises to protect their hearing, ensuring that the rigors of working in the field won’t render an Army working dog deaf.”

I also stumbled across Mutt Muffs

Which are precisely what you would expect them to be, ear pro for dogs. They share on their website that “Noise-induced hearing loss is different from hereditary hearing loss in one fundamental way… It can be reduced or prevented altogether.”

 

Dogs of SilencerCo
Photo by Bucky Lawson

If you work with your dog daily, welcome to the cool club. However, if your canine companion works daily with you, whether hunting or in a professional matter with firearms, we hope you will consider the available hearing protection options.

 

Dogs of SilencerCo
Photo by Jayce Leroy.

Thank you to SilencerCo not only for fully embracing our canine companions in the workspace but for being aware of their sensitivity to hearing complications and helping to provide a friendly environment for working and hunting dogs around the world.

About the Author: Sara Liberte (who clearly won the lottery when it comes to last names) grew up the younger sister to an Army Ranger…she blames that for everything (awesome) in her life. A photographer and videographer of supreme talent and utter disregard for inclement weather, arduous conditions, or little things like the law of averages. Sara is an eleutheromaniac who loves firearms, motorsports, motorcycles, and…well, all vehicles, really, as long as they’re the kind that gets dirty and generates adrenaline. She travels the US in a self-designed “Battle Van” with two dogs aboard. If you need to find her, you’ll have to look outside. Try moto-events, mountain ranges, or firearms classes on the web at saraliberte.com and @van_solo or @saralibertephotograpy on Insta.

How is the Rittenhouse Trial Going?

The Prosecution (no words needed)

In a word… “What?”

The trial of Kyle Rittenhouse is one of the most contentious continuations of the 2020 riots. The Illinois teenager who shot 3 and killed 2 people in Kenosha Wisconsin during the riots, and then made the legal claim of self defense, is having his defense shored up strongly… by the prosecution who brought the charges.

The prosecution in instance after instance seems to be affirming the “Rittenhouse” version of events and not the narrative that they need for a conviction, which would be a finding that any action Rittenhouse took was unlawfully made, out of control, or otherwise completely unreasonable. They certainly aren’t drawing those lines through their narrative and the evidence.

The title image says it all, a shot of the two ADA’s prosecuting Rittenhouse listening to their witness, Gaige Grosskreutz, admit to omitting information to police (the fact he had a gun) and to only being shot by Rittenhouse after he pointed the gun at Rittenhouse.

The fact Grosskreutz had the gun, a glock pistol, was also the only missing critical detail in his otherwise detailed statement to police, which included accurate descriptions like Rittenhouse’s physical appearance, from his hospital interview. This was dragged out and mercilessly shredded by the defense. How did Grosskreutz deliver an otherwise detailed and very accurate statement to police, that omitted the fact he was armed because, in Grosskreutz’s words, he was on pain meds and very traumatized, but that pain, medication, and trauma did not affect any other detail omissions… just the one that drastically changes how Grosskreutz himself would be perceived.

Trials are, ultimately, narratives for the jury to judge. The narrative is shaped by the evidence and the legal representatives of the sides in the case. There are rules surrounding the admission of evidence and good lawyers will use those rules in order to exploit every narrative advantage that they are able to in order to push the story they want the jury to believe in. The jury then compares the story they believe against the relevant charges and renders the verdict(s).

The prosecution in this instance has done an admirable job portraying the pre-trial narrative of a ‘White Supremacist’ looking to shoot some people and get away with it at a riot as… well… inaccurate is the polite term.

They have additionally done an excellent job in stating that in each of the three shootings, Rittenhouse was under threat. If any charge sticks, it may be in relation to Rittenhouse’s possession of the AR in the first place and will certainly avoid his legal and justified (as it appears) use of force in defense of his life.

Rosenbaum’s “victimhood” was shredded into a polite title that amounts to ‘he got shot first’. Provocation and justification were demonstrated to an exemplary level by the defense and the prosecution gave up that Rosenbaum was medicated for mental issues, had a violent history (to put it mildly), and would be a credible threat. Rosenbaum had spent a decade in prison for raping children.

Huber’s portrayal by the prosecution as a ‘hero’ running to stop an active shooter threat was torn apart by the defense as video shows Rittenhouse not shooting at anyone until Huber hits him with the skateboard. Huber’s domestic abuser criminal past is largely irrelevant, but I’ll add it as ‘character context’ since an childhood incident was added for character context by the prosecution to imply Huber would run toward danger for a ‘good cause’ or to save others.

Finally we get to the “survivor” Grosskreutz. The photo shows, quite accurately, what the prosecution thinks of their own witness’ (their key witness’) testimony of the events.

Make no mistake, the whole of the trial hinges on making Grosskreutz look like the victim of the shooting. Grosskreutz made himself look like a fool, a liar, and an ultimately unreliable character. Not the ‘medic’ he alleged himself to be who was going to aid and secure Rittenhouse in some way shape or form. His social media commentary, his omission to police that he was armed (which may have been illegal due to his misdemeanor conviction for drunk while in possession of a firearm in 2016), and his inconsistent narrative on the stand compared to previous statements all did him no favors.

Use of Force experts supported the position that Rosenbaum, Huber, and Grosskreutz would be a threat to Rittenhouse on his own an surrounded as he was.

The Headlines

I’ve found, in my perusal, that several attorney friends of mind are following the case and their comments upon it are… enlightening. Moreover I’m following a few non-attorney types who are just legal nerd enough to want to follow the events too.

From every person following the trial, by actually watching the trial, there is a loose consensus of thought… the prosecution never had a case. It makes the fact a case was brought at all reek of political activism and grandstanding.

Now if people are following the case only through headlines (which most do) you may be understandably confused.

The New York Times: Man Shot by Kyle Rittenhouse Describes the Encounter on a Kenosha Street.

Fox News: Kyle Rittenhouse trial: Shooting victim Gaige Grosskreutz says he was pointing his gun at young man.

Insider: Gaige Grosskreutz says he was ‘never trying to kill’ Kyle Rittenhouse.

NPR: The only person who survived being shot by Kyle Rittenhouse takes the stand.

CNN: Armed paramedic who was shot by Kyle Rittenhouse testifies he thought teen was an active shooter.

Politico: Shooting victim says he was pointing his gun at Rittenhouse.

USA Today: Gaige Grosskreutz, shot by Kyle Rittenhouse, testifies at trial: ‘(I) thought I was going to die’.

The Washington Post: Gaige Grosskreutz says he feared for his life, pointed gun at Kyle Rittenhouse before getting shot.

It’s hard to tell what is going on above taken together.

It is easy to tell who the news agency believes is in the right… and that is disappointing.

I shouldn’t be able to pick out your alignment before the accurate information in a headline. But that is how headlines are used now. The headline is weaponized to the message, even if the narrative inside is objectively fairly accurate. The pacing and selection of when certain information is included in the narrative (and how) is also telling of alignment.

In certain segments of the media Rosenbaum is portrayed rather sympathetically, as a homeless man or as a man with mental health issues (bipolar) and those are individually accurate statements… they casually throw in the decade he spent in prison for criminal sexual conduct with a minor, but even then seem to try to pass that one off like it might have been one of those less serious statutory things maybe between a 16 y/o and an 18 y/o… Other sources called him what he was, a child rapist. He plead to 10 years on two counts on charges that included anal rape of 5 boys age 9 to 11.

Rosenbaum was a piece of shit. Just my opinion. Rosenbaum getting ventilated by trying to assault a teenager and take a rifle from said teenager is no great loss to the world, arguably a gain. Again, just my opinion. They’ll save on not having to prosecute those outstanding domestic abuse charges.

Witness Richie McGinnis described on the stand how Rosenbaum tried to get Rittenhouse’s gun and attempted to provoke Rittenhouse. He describe how Rittenhouse ‘juked’ to disengage and flee, how Rosenbaum chased Rittenhouse and was eventually shot.

The headlines though, the headlines drive you to a narrative assumption that can be completely at odds with how the whole of the trial is proceeding.

The best of the bunch is arguably… the New York Times. It does not project the opinion of the author to the reader base, it does not paint the defense or the prosecution in the light of being the sympathetic character or ‘good guy’ designate.

The prosecution has tried miserably and failed miserably to make Rosenbaum, Huber, or Grosskreutz ‘good guy’ designates. They ended Monday’s trial with a video of the riot chanting they should burn down the city.

So, again, “What?”

Fiocchi Defense Dynamics – Budget Priced Home Defense 00

We have more gun owners than ever and more shotgun owners than ever.

Shotguns, especially the home defense variety, were a hot commodity in 2020 and now 2021. My own FFL sold a lot of firearms online and had a healthy stock of ARs, AKs, and the usual suspects, but Glock pistols and tactical shotguns flew off the shelf, and with them, most shotgun ammo. Tactical buckshot has been tough to find, with Flitecontrol loads going for more than a buck a round. What’s a poor boy to do? Well, Fiocchi Defense Dynamics offers a budget-friendly defensive load, but does it hold up?

Fiocchi ammo has long been considered adequate budget ammunition, but you’ll rarely see purpose-built defensive loadings. However, this new Defense Dynamics line promises to provide defensive shotgun ammunition at a great price. Even in these trying ammo times, I purchased 100 rounds of this ammunition for about 60 cents a round from Guns.Com.

What Makes it A Good Defensive Load?

Besides the name Defense Dynamics, what exactly makes this a proper defensive round? Well, what caught my eye was the eight pellet load. Most 2.75 inch 00 buckshot rounds shove nine pellets into a shell. The problem with nine pellets is the way they stack inside the shell. It’s an odd configuration that often causes a flyer. A flyer is a pellet that strays from the rest of the pattern.

This pellet is unpredictable and can easily wound or worse an innocent person should it overshoot the threat. An eight pellet load sacrifices a single pellet for maximum consistency. IT’s rare to see budget ammo makers care enough to knock the single pellet out of the load.

That’s not all. The shell has a high brass base which helps with reliable ejection and extraction. Most guns work fine with low brass, but a little extra height ensures a hair more reliability, especially with semi-autos.

Lastly, the moderate 1,325 feet per second velocity is a nice touch. It’s not necessarily low recoil, but it’s moderate and completely controllable. Higher velocity loads also tend to create a looser spread. Combine the velocity with the high brass, and the Defense Dynamics shells should function in the pickiest of semi-autos.

Running the Defense Dynamics Shells

I brought my hundred rounds out with my Benelli M4 and Mossberg 590A1 and set up a simple 8.5 x 11-inch piece of blank paper to pattern the load. I patterned at 15 yards. This should encompass about 99% of long shots in houses in the United States.

At that range, the Defense Dynamics shotgun loads delivered a consistent and somewhat impressive pattern. It’s not FliteControl good, but it beats the pants off of Mil-Spec buckshot. It stayed well within the paper, which would represent a rather narrow portion of the human body. I did this patterning with both guns, five rounds each, and they were both consistent. The 590A1 held a slightly tighter pattern, but that’s to be expected.

Recoil wise the loads are a real pussy cat. Maybe it’s because they only have to propel eight pellets at 1,325 FPS. Even in the 590A1, the loads were completely controllable. I used some standard Monarch 9 pellet buckshot that’s a 1,345 FPS load, and the recoil was significantly worse.

With the Defense Dynamics loads, I was able to accomplish two shots on two small targets in under 1.5 seconds.

Not a single round failed to eject and extract from either gun. Obviously, the M4 isn’t a picky semi-auto, but it still chugged through each shell with ease. The shells ejected consistently in one direction and formed an easy to clean up pile. Each round also felt predictable, showing that the loads don’t vary widely in power.

Sometimes a box of cheap shotgun shells will have some underpowered shells, some slightly amped shells, etc. The Defense Dynamics remained consistent.

Color Me Surprised

I think the Defense Dynamic loads from Fiocchi are a fine option for a defensive shotgun. These would be great for a picky semi-auto especially. Fiocchi used to have a great low recoil load, and I wouldn’t mind seeing them lower the velocity to about 1250 FPS and keep the eight pellet load at this price. Either way, I hope this is a good start to a great future.

Shotguns Stocks – Standard Versus Pistol Grip Stocks

When you start accessorizing your home defense shotgun, you will eventually get to the stock. If you change the stock, you’ll have to weigh your options carefully. We have the standard-style shotgun stocks your shotgun likely came with. Your standard stock might be too long, made of wood, lack sling swivels, or whatever, and you want to replace it.

The second choice is the tactical or pistol grip style stock. To be clear, I don’t mean pistol grip only. I mean a stock with a clearly defined, 90ish degree pistol grip sitting below it. Or maybe your gun came with this stock and you hate it.

Like most things, the decision is all yours to make, and there isn’t a clear winner that can objectively measured as better. However, I can present you with the facts regarding the advantages of different shotgun stocks.

Standard Shotgun Stocks

Your standard shotgun stock has a semi-curved pistol grip, with the stock extending from the rear of that pistol grip. This simple setup is the most popular design and has been around since the beginning of dedicated shotguns. It’s quite standard and sticks around because it works.

Why You Should Choose a Standard Stock

The advantages of standard shotgun stocks often go underappreciated. Lots of people like to make their shotgun AR-like and might be ignoring why these stocks have stuck around for so long. First, most shotgun controls are built around the standard stock and more ergonomic with a standard straight stock. Hell, the Mossberg’s tang safety is only easy to use with a standard stock.

Additionally, the area beneath the gun is less crowded, and this makes reloading faster and more intuitive for most people. There is a reason why only really see straight stocks in the professional 3-Gun circuit. Also, if you rotate the gun slightly to better access the loading port, the gun feels much more balanced than a pistol grip-equipped shotgun.

These stocks also tend to be more robust and more capable of absorbing recoil. I tend to prefer this style of stock. I find them more consistent when mounting and easier to utilize the controls. The downside of these shotgun stocks comes from the length of the stock. Most of the time, they are too long, and you’ll want to look at a youth stock or trimming your stock down.

The Tactical Pistol Grip

When you move from a rifle to a shotgun, the attraction of a pistol grip on your shotgun makes a lot of sense. It feels much more natural. Pistol grip shotgun stocks have a pistol grip extending below the stock, and the stock is often separate from the pistol grip.

Why A Pistol Grip Stock?

Outside of quickly transitioning from rifle to shotgun, the pistol grip offers numerous advantages. First, it gives you more leverage and makes the gun easier to hold up with a single arm. If you need to open a door or hold back a child, it takes a lot less strength with a pistol grip stock.

I’ve always found it more accessible for beginners to use the push/pull recoil reduction method with pistol grip stocks. That vertical pistol grip is a nonslip surface when I’m pulling it rearward to brace for recoil. Pistol grip shotgun stocks are also often adjustable. The use of M4 style stocks on shotguns has grown, and users can set their LOPs with this style of stock.

Pistol grip stocks make a magazine fed shotguns easier to reload. For tube-fed guns, it makes the reloading area crowded and difficult to cant to the side. One important consideration is the quality of the stock. A lot of crappy companies make pistol grip stocks, and they often suck.

A cheap standard stock is a lot more robust than a cheap pistol grip stock. Well-made pistol grip stocks likely cost in excess of a hundred bucks, so be prepared for the additional cost. (Don’t even ask how much a stock for the Benelli M4 costs.)

What’s Perfect?

There is one option that is superior to both, and it comes from Magpul. The Magpul SGA stock is a hybrid that mixes the best of both worlds into a single stock. At first, it looks like a standard stock. However, notice the pistol grip position in accordance with the stock. It’s a more vertical grip.

As far as shotgun stocks go, it offers you the advantages of each. You can easily hold the gun up with one hand and cant it to the side for faster reloads. It’s not overly crowded for quick reloads and allows you to do a great push/pull technique.

Plus, the stock can be shortened or lengthened by removing spacers from the stock. This allows the user to adjust the length of pull without sacrificing the robust design of a standard stock. To me, the Magpul SGA works wonderfully and provides the best of both worlds.

However, this is still a personal decision you’ll need to make. As always, I say try ’em both, or in this case, all three. Whatever you choose, ensure it fits your needs, and you train with it. Anything less is letting yourself and John Browning down.

Running and Gunning in the 90’s

One of Hollywood’s greatest tricks (and one fully supported by firearm companies who liked the exposure) is to take a weapon that is in development or competing for a future use contract into a movie or TV show, especially if that movie or TV Show is future set or present set with latest tech. They will also pick ones that are either limited adoption or with some other mystique about them.

Stargate SG-1 was probably the most prolific promoter of the FN P90 when they swapped from the previously popular MP5. It was a cool, compact futuristic looking weapon system that actually made a certain sense in role too.

Equilibrium in 2002 took advantage of the G36’s space age looks (introduced in 1997) and some fancy Beretta 92’s (1985) that were still new or could be made to look the part.

But the place where the P90 and the H&K competitor, the MP7, came from is one that military forces seem to constantly go back and forth on.

Equipping “rear echelon” troops with a lighter more convenient weapon.

This same thing applied to tank crews due to their limited available space for gear and pilots for the same reason. When the main weapon systems or support services these personnel were to operate weren’t rifles, it made a certain sense to equip them with something else more convenient for their roles. Yes?

Kinda. If you notice today the M4 is the king of the ring but this didn’t keep militaries from looking at compact convenient weapons for where those things made sense. Now that design mission drifted into lower profile protective details and has kinda stayed there.

But from the M1 Carbine to the Desert Eagle (yep, developed for tank crews) to the actual competition for the NATO PDW, it has been an interesting ride.

Enjoy 9-Hole’s overview.

Gunday Brunch 26: NYSRPA v Bruen Oral arguments review

The arguments in NYSRPA v Bruen were this week, and Caleb and Keith are here to give you a quick breakdown of what we think may happen as a result. Will we get a win for the Second Amendment? Probably.

Costs of Preconceptions

FTGC with the wisdom once more

From the gun counter with another accurate meme to rustle the jimmies.

Your optic can easily cost as much or more than the firearm it is sitting upon, especially when it comes to complex optics like variables.

Yet, we persist in this belief that our glass and mounting it should be less expensive than the rifle it is sitting upon when, if anything, the opposite is probably true.

I’m not just talking AR’s here. Any firearm has a degree of this capacity now and it is time we stop thinking that the $400.00 hunting rifle only deserves a scope the costs $119.99. More so, dispelling the notion that spending more than that is somehow preposterous and overspending.

Readers,

Nothing is more crucial than the quality of the aiming interface between your eye and the firearm. Getting that equation right is make or break for being able to use the firearm for the intended purpose. It’s probably the most challenging aspect because the makers of the firearm can only guess and do their best to offer you enough platform to do what you want with the optic. With so many choices, the task is Herculean.

So the burden then is ours, the consumer, to pick the components to make this work and if we are stymied by an artificial cap in our own minds that the extra spend isn’t doing anything for us it makes it that much harder. We have to buy quality if we expect quality outcomes. The $8.99 aluminum rings and the $69.99 extra good most bestest hunting scope 3-12x with red and green illumination… probably not wise choices if anything other than ‘spend the least possible’ is the goal.

This isn’t to say you need to drop the colossal pile of dimes necessary to put a S&B PM II on your rifle, because that’s like 40,000 dimes. But ‘splurging’ just a little on a scope with nice glass in a range roughly co-equal to the price of the rifle? Yes. Then a nice hunt for a good pair of rings or a one piece mount to pair with it? Sublime.

The point, I suppose, is that we must continue shifting our thinking to see optics as the partner to a firearm and not a low cost accessory. Most of my rifles are topped with optic suites (optic and light) that equate to a substantial percentage of, or roughly equal to the cost of the rifle. With AR-15 types this holds strongly correlative for good performance whether you pick red dots, RDS+magnifier, ACOG, or LPVO. But when we start getting into distance glass it can easily outstrip the rifle it is on. A good .308 or 6.5 rifle can be solidly under $1,000.00 if you don’t want a fancy chassis stock, but putting 5-25 S&B on it will run far above that and with glass clarity that can nearly see the future.

Honestly, if you’re wondering which aspect to splurge on it is arguably the optic. If giving up a fancier stock gets you a next tier optic that is a win.

The UN, EU & Gun Control versus Czechs, Poles & Freedom

(from haciendapub.com)

The truth is the Arms Trade Treaty (ATT; formally the UN Small Arms Treaty) has failed to materialize because the negotiators have not been capable of reaching a consensus, but as Gun Owners of America (GOA) stated years ago, “It would be a mistake to believe that it spells the end of the effort to regulate small arms worldwide.”

GOA is correct. The Seventh Conference of the ATT will again reconvene August 30-September 3, 2021 in Geneva, Switzerland. Obama administration Secretary of State John Kerry signed the treaty for the U.S. in 2013. But then, Obama’s gun control agenda floundered in his second term, when in 2014 the Republicans gained 13 new U.S. House seats and regained the majority in the U.S. Senate.

President Trump was elected in 2016 and speaking at the National Rifle Association meeting on April 26, 2019, informed NRA members that he would un-sign the treaty. President Trump kept this promise and on July 18, 2019, notified the UN that the U.S. had terminated its legal obligations to the Treaty.

In short, for years the UN has been trying to formalize a global, civilian disarmament measure with this Arms Trade Treaty and circumventing the Second Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. The UN has trampled on and dictated national policy to other sovereign nations in environmental, criminal, and even global tax issues — so why not, the globalist elite ask themselves, try again and enforce universal gun control and include America? The fact of the matter is that the struggle to preserve the right to civilian gun ownership worldwide, including in the U.S., is an ongoing effort, and elitist, globalist organizations are bent on disarming and controlling citizens so as to make their one-world-government dream (and our nightmare) a living reality.

Since the Democrats in 2021 are still pushing for ratification of the Treaty and gun control remains on their agenda, Biden will likely re-sign this authoritarian UN Treaty in the next few months. 

But unfortunately, it isn’t only from the United Nations that citizens of the civilized world have to fear the globalists’ drive for gun control. The European Union (EU) has already joined in the act, and all member nations are targeted — not just the pusillanimous Western nations and Scandinavia, but all of Europe where the EU holds sway. Both the Czech Republic and Poland have expressed concerns and with good historic reasons.

(from haciendapub.com)

In 1938, Czechoslovakia, mother country of the Czech Republic, was sacrificed and betrayed by its allies, Great Britain and France. Soon after British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, who was deceived by Hitler, returned to England with a piece of paper claiming that he had brought “peace in our time,” Czechoslovakia was invaded and the Nazis ended up taking all of Czechoslovakia. The truth is that the Czechs could not be protected by the promises of her allies or the military of their own government. Czechoslovakia became a giant armament factory and a fortress for the Nazis, run by SS General Reinhard Heydrich, governor of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, until his assassination in 1942.

Poland followed suit in 1939, wiped off the map in the German Blitzkrieg — invaded as it was from the west by the German Army, and from the east by the Russian Soviet army. Thus, Poland was quickly subjugated by her collectivist, totalitarian neighbors — the communist Soviet Union and Nazi Germany, which were allies and co-conspirators via the signed Molotov-Ribbentrop Treaty (aka., Non-Aggression Pact of 1939) that succeeded in crushing and dismantling Poland and the Baltic nations.

After World War II, the masters were no longer the German Nazis but the “liberating” Russian communists, who in the aftermath occupied by force much of Central and all of Eastern Europe using the Soviet Army working in tandem with the KGB. The subjugated peoples were impoverished, disarmed, and enslaved.

With the exception of the Hungarian Uprising in 1956, which was quickly crushed, and the Prague Spring in 1968, which was also almost immediately suppressed, no other major upheaval threatening the Soviet empire occurred until the 1980s with the rise of the Solidarity Movement and the resurgence of the Roman Catholic Church resistance to communism in Poland. Then the sudden tearing down of the Berlin Wall in 1989 took place. The Evil Empire, having rotted to the core, imploded from within and the end of the USSR came in 1991.

So it is easy to comprehend the apprehension Czechoslovakia, Hungary and Poland, former trampled nations and Soviet satellites, feel when contemplating citizen disarmament by the mandates of an EU that is still dominated by socialistic Western Europe, Scandinavia, France, and Germany. And given their tragic histories, these nations are not easily going along with the EU authoritarian gun control measures.

Indeed, the EU, having passed the European Firearms Directive that went into effect on June 13, 2017, has imposed severe restrictions on the civilian ownership of firearms and made it very difficult for EU citizens to obtain a State-issued firearms license. Home and family protection and self-defense are no longer legitimate reasons for civilian gun ownership.

Two months after the Directive was passed, the Czech Republic, that had promised to preserve their citizens’ right to gun ownership upon entering the EU, filed a legal challenge in the European Court of Justice to oppose the onerous gun control measures, demanding that the new gun controls be scrapped, postponed, or that certain countries be given exemptions from the measure.

In the summer of 2021, the Czech government moved to amend the country’s Constitution with a liberty Amendment that simply states, “the right to defend one’s life or the life of others, even with the use of weapons, is guaranteed.”

On July 21, 2021, the Czech Senate passed the measure with 54 of 74 senators approving it. The lower House had already approved the Amendment on June 28, with 139 out of 148 legislators.

Since the Amendment can be overruled by the EU restrictions, it will be difficult for the Czechs to exercise their newfound Natural Right to self- and collective defense. The idea is that the people can be trained in the use of arms and form a militia in collaboration with the country’s national armed forces, as an internal measure to combat terrorism and assist police in controlling crime.

I hope Poland, Hungary, and other awakening nations follow suit, and that the U.S., which is seemingly going in the opposite direction under the Biden administration, does not discard American rights and freedoms. The Czech example is a first step towards the God-given or Nature-derived right to armed self-defense and preservation of their freedom from the authoritarian impingement of the globalist EU.

.

.

faria-13wmaz-sml

—  Miguel A. Faria, Jr, MD is a retired professor of Neurosurgery and  Medical History at Mercer University School of Medicine. He founded Hacienda Publishing and is Associate Editor in Chief in Neuropsychiatry and World Affairs of Surgical Neurology International. He served on the CDC’s Injury Research Grant Review Committee. His latest book is America, Guns, and Freedom: A Journey Into Politics and the Public Health & Gun Control Movements (2019).

All DRGO articles by Miguel A. Faria, Jr., MD

SAFETY RECALL: Colt Rifles

First seen on TFB,

Colt has issued a recall of a portion of their recently manufactured AR-15’s. Short version: The fire control groups are out of spec, specifically it sounds like the engagement surface on the hammer, the sear, is too shallow and is allowing the rifles to fire unintentionally. The sear shelf, the trigger body, and the two springs are what generate the feel of the trigger pull and most stock mil-spec triggers are required to be between 6-9lbs.

IMPORTANT SAFETY RECALL NOTICE REGARDING CERTAIN COLT MODERN SPORTING RIFLES

COLT’S MANUFACTURING COMPANY LLC (“COLT”) has recently discovered a potential safety issue with certain Modern Sporting Rifles (“MSRs”). Colt is voluntarily initiating a recall to protect the safety of its customers because, under certain conditions, it is possible that some of these MSRs may discharge a second round when the trigger is released when there is a live round in the chamber.

Colt is committed to the highest standards of quality and customer satisfaction. In keeping with that commitment, during routine quality testing, Colt discovered that hammers that do not meet Colt’s specifications were installed in certain MSRs that were manufactured beginning on March 5, 2021. The issue will be corrected by replacing the hammers in affected MSRs.

The recall only covers a portion of MSRs manufactured beginning on March 5, 2021, and includes the following models: AR15A4, CR6700A4, CR6920, CR6920-EPR, CR6920MPS-B, CR6921, CR6921-EPR, CR6933, CR6933-EPR, CR6960, LE6920-EPR, LE6920MPS-B, LE6920-OEM1, LE6920-OEM2, LE6920-R, LE6933-EPR, SP633784, LE6920SOCOM.

The following chart lists all the serial numbers for those models that may potentially be subject to
the recall:

Model Marking  Serial Numbers
AR-15 A4: CAR022851 – CAR023250
CARBINE: CR036354 – CR099599
CARBINE: CR713001 – CR722100
M4 CARBINE: CR716801 – CR721500
M4A1 CARBINE: CR021580 – CR022024

To prevent the possibility of death or serious personal injury, Colt advises anyone who has purchased a Colt MSR since March 5, 2021 to stop using it immediately and visit ColtRepairMSR.com or call Customer Service at 1-800-971-3216 to see if your specific MSR is affected. Please note: Not all MSRs within the serial number range in the above chart are subject to this recall and this website offers easy, step-by-step instructions to determine if a particular MSR is affected.

Customer service agents will assist anyone who needs additional help. Our expert craftsmen are ready to upgrade all affected MSRs at our West Hartford, CT headquarters

Restoration of a 170 Year Old Musket

Nothing fancy about this post. This whole process is just neat to watch and a stunning endorsement of the powers of WD40 and a brass scrub brush.

I enjoy restorations. Reviving a historical piece through careful labor is one of those purely wholesome acts that return something lost into something found and remembered. It is delightful.

The weapon is a nepal found 1840’s made Brunswick P-1841

Dr. Restoration puts it thus,

In this video I restore an 1840’s British Brunswick P-1841 officer musket that was found in Nepal. I was hesitant to restore such an old rifle, but i decided it would provide me with useful experience. I started by breaking the dirt and grime down with WD40. Once I was able to get to the screws the disassembly could begin.

The gun was not difficult to disassemble. The hard part for me was fixing the broken stock and bringing out the beautiful colors of the wood. In the end I was quite happy how the bug chewed stock came out.

I wanted to give a real test fire for the video, but for safety I will wait until I have the riffle looked at by a qualified gunsmith. I was however able to provide a tiny “blank fire” to show that it is functional.

I hope you guys enjoy, if you do leave a like and a comment. Subscribe if you would like to see more awesome content.

So go subscribe! I did.

The Ultimate PRS/NRL Long Range Competition Scope – Burris XTR3

The Burris XTR3 is a frequent recipient of top place finishes at major long distance shooting competitions including PRS (Precision Rifle Series) and  NRL (National Rifle League) competitions across the US.  In this video, Dorgan Trostel (Burris Pro Shooter and PRS Champion) takes you through what makes the Made in the USA XTR3 the best PRS/NRL scope on the market including:

  • Rock Solid Tracking
  • Best In Class Field of View
  • Race Features
  • Glass Quality
  • Special Competition Reticle
  • Eye Box

Designed, machined and assembled in Greeley Colorado, the new XTR III line of riflescopes features new reticle designs and enhanced field-of-view. Inspired by tactical and competition shooting, precision and reliability are at the core of the XTR III line of optics.  Available in a 3.3-18x50mm and 5.5-30x56mm, both models are built with a 34mm body tube for increased strength and extended adjustment range. Elevation adjustments up to 120 MOA on the 3.3-18X50mm will take the 6.5 Creedmoor past one mile. Expanded side parallax adjustment on both models allows fine-tuning focus at shorter distances.

Premium glass and optical improvements, including a smaller eyepiece signature and larger eye box, provide best-in-class field-of-view, deeper depth of focus and outstanding light transmission. The new Special Competition Reticle (SCR) 2 MIL reticle features a gridded “Christmas tree” design, allowing extremely fast and accurate windage and elevation compensation and clear communication with spotters. SCR MIL and SCR MOA reticles are also available.

To learn more about the entire line of Burris Optics please visit: www.burrisoptics.com


Burris Optics, based in Greeley, Colorado, has been an optics innovation leader for nearly 50 years. The company produced its first optics in 1972 and was the originator of the ballistic plex design employed by every hunting optics manufacturer since. Every optic produced by Burris is designed, engineered, and tested in our Greeley, CO facility. 

Beretta’s Best Model 92 – The 92X

For many years I have taught classes for shooters armed with the Beretta 92, sometimes military, more often police.

In civilian classes, quite a few shooters have shown up at class with a Beretta 92 also. Quite often veterans, they are comfortable with the Beretta and respect its capabilities. Those who used it knowledgeably at least. As for my own experience the rivalry between SIG and Beretta crossed over into police work, and my agency and a nearby agency issued different examples of these handguns.

While there were fervent fans of each, both of us felt a little sorry for the largest municipal agency in the county. They were issued the Smith & Wesson Model 59. This pistol could be problematical and was not in the class for accuracy with the SIG or Beretta. One of my friends was a fine instructor and nearly failed his instructors class with the Model 59. He ‘fell apart’ at 50 yards. When he returned home he and I carefully benchrested the Model 59 using an iron clad shooting technique. At 50 yards the pistol averaged an 8 inch group. Pistols like this are the reason many agencies abandoned the 50 yard portion of qualification.

My friends agency had just transitioned from Smith & Wesson .38 and .357 revolvers. Many of these would put five bullets into three inches or less at 50 yards fired double action from a barricade rest. My personal SIG P226 would group five shots into 1.6 inches at 25 yards with the Federal 124 grain Hydra Shock. The Beretta isn’t far behind. 

When another friend’s agency qualified with the Beretta 92 they were also transitioning from revolvers. They purchased ten thousand 9mm reloads from the same company that had supplied .38 reloads. It was jam… jam… jam… as the company had not properly sized the cartridges.

The early days of transition were not always easy.

Somehow we managed to get through getting officers transitioned and qualified in one or two days, moving to a double action first shot handgun that required learning two trigger actions and a decocker. Some preferred the Beretta’s manual safety over the SIG’s decocker only, some asked for a decocker only Beretta- and got it. Thank God most of the officers practiced on their own time and their own dime. 

I was tied up with the 1911 most of these years.  I was issued a SIG P series and used my own P220 .45 occasionally. But the popularity of the Beretta and my son’s military experience have given me a great respect for this pistol. I cannot recall an unqualified malfunction with this pistol. Like all pistols subjected to hard use there are areas of concern. The locking wedge should be replaced at some point, but a mostly unheralded change in the shape of the locking wedge has reduced the need for changing the oscillating wedge, locking wedge or locking block as it is variously called. There are improved versions of the Beretta 92 including the 92A1 and the Wilson Combat Beretta. I have owned several. At present the best choice for most of us seems the Beretta 92X in 9mm. At about seven hundred dollars the 92x is affordable but offers a number of upgrades. 

The operating system is the proven Beretta double action/single action. The pistol locks and unlocks by using an oscillating wedge as pioneered in the Mauser 96 and used in the Walther P 38 as well. In most ways the Beretta 92 is an updated and modified high capacity Walther P38. The open top slide is steel, the frame is aluminum. The frame features a light rail for mounting combat lights. the sights are improved over the original. They are set in dovetail slots allowing the sights to be changed if needed. The front post is drilled with a nice bright red dot while the rear sight features an improved sight picture and serrated rear face. The pistol is delivered with three 17 round magazines. 

The change in the 92X that endears the pistol to me is the Vertac grip. This grip has been around some time and it is my favorite Beretta grip style. It fits my hand much better than the original 92. The 92 is a bit broad for some hands. If you prefer the original, Beretta supplies a grip cover that closely mimics the original 92 grip. The combination of a Vertac grip and improved sight design would lead to a pleasant firing experience. The pistol’s fit and finish is very nice, as expected from Beretta, and the trigger action seems a bit smoother than the original Beretta 92 in the gun safe. 

I began the evaluation with a good supply of 9mm Luger ammunition, primarily Fiocchi 115 grain jacketed ammunition. The magazines are easy to load and all controls are positive in operation. I began with the slide locked to the rear and then insert a loaded magazine. With the Beretta you may place the safety in the on position and drop the slide. The hammer decocks and the pistol is on safe and ready to carry. Some will simply carry the pistol off safe and rely on the double action trigger as a safety feature, others will prefer on safe carry. The safety may be quickly manipulated to off safe using the same straight thumb thrust you use with the 1911 pistol safety.

I drew from one of the finest holsters for concealed carry, the DeSantis Speed Scabbard. This holster features good molding and three belt slots to adjust cant. The holster is nicely stitched and finished. I began standing at 5 yards, and progressively moved to 7 and 10 yards. The pistol is fast on target and controllable. Keep the sights aligned as you press the trigger to the rear and you have a hit. The Beretta’s famous light muzzle flip results in excellent controlled hits. I shoot this pistol better than any other Beretta I have tested. 

Absolute accuracy is always interesting. I settled down to fire the pistol for bench rest accuracy. I used a rolled up range bag and fired the pistol with three different loads. The results were very good. 

Load   Velocity/ Pro Chrony 5 shot group

Fiocchi 115 gr. FMJ        1140 fps         2.0 in. 

Fiocchi 124 gr. XTP Extrema  1159 fps         1.8 in.

Fiocchi 147 gr. JHP             890 fps       2.4 in.

The Beretta is smooth, accurate, fast handling, and among the most reliable handguns every designed. It is worth its price. 

XS Sights Introduces Night Sights for Taurus GX4

Fort Worth, Texas (November 2, 2021) – XS® Sights, manufacturer of the fastest sights in any light, is now offering a wide variety of its popular night sights for the new Taurus® GX4™ micro-compact 9mm pistol. These line extensions are also available for the Taurus G3c.

XS sights give shooters an advantage 24/7 thanks to the company’s proprietary sight technology. XS’s photoluminescent Glow Dot surrounds the tritium vial in the front sight and activates even before the tritium does, giving defensive shooters an edge in any light, day or night.

DXT2 Big Dot

The Big Dot leads the industry in size and has a self-illuminating tritium center surrounded by XS’s photoluminescent Glow Dot technology which drives focus to the front sight. The Big Dot is available in Optic Yellow or Optic Orange. The DXT2 Standard Dot is available in Green. All DXT2 sights feature a V-notch rear with vertical tritium stripe, creating a dot-the-“i” sight picture and eliminating the possibility of confusing the front and rear sights in high-stress situations. 

R3D

The R3D has a traditional 3-dot tritium, notch and post sight picture. The rear sight is blacked out to increase contrast against the front sight which is available in bright Orange or Green. The brightly colored Glow Dot in the front sight is a much brighter color which differentiates the front tritium dot from the two rear tritium dots.

Minimalist

The minimalist has a self-illuminating tritium vial in the front sight surrounded by an Orange photoluminescent Glow Dot and blacked-out, serrated, non-tritium rear sight.

DXW2

DXW2 tritium night sights are available with a Big Dot (Orange or Yellow) or Standard Dot (Green) front sight with a white stripe, non-tritium rear sight. The white stripe offers superior visibility of the vertical bar, which aids in sight alignment in bright light settings and performs well in low light. The increased surface area of the white stripe also enhances visibility for shooters with farsighted vision issues.

Choose the XS sights that best suit your eyes and get on target faster in any light – day or night. 

For more information, visit www.xssights.com.

All XS sights are backed by a 10-year, No Questions Asked Warranty and XS’s 30-Day Satisfaction Guarantee.

About XS Sights
XS Sights is known for making the fastest sights in any light. For more than 25 years, the XS team has created some of the most innovative sights on the market today for pistols, rifles, and shotguns. Whether used for personal defense or hunting, these sights are designed and built to be the absolute best for their specific purpose. American Made. Texas Proud. 2A Strong.