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The Markings on Your Remington Firearm

So often we look at firearms parts, barrels especially, and wonder what the letters, numbers, and markings correspond to. Manufacturer? Batch? Date? Testing Proof? Could be anything.

Remington found an easy way to decipher these markings, with a clever twist.

All information on the markings on your firearm can be found in the link below.

BLACK POWDERX is the name of the game with deciphering the manufacturing month on your Remington firearm that was manufactured after 1921. To decipher the year look at the letter to the right of the month letter. These markings and others can be found on the LEFT side of the barrel. On the RIGHT side of the barrel markings that show magniflux, proof mark, and test are found. Knowing that these markings are there tends to give a soft and fuzzy to the life of your firearm. These markings also show if the firearm has been repaired or not and when the repair happened.

Note: While these markings can be trusted, the firearm needs to have the original barrel for the markings to be true to the firearm. Remington states, “Using barrel codes (such as those listed above) to date the manufacture are reliable on Remington rifles, as the company rarely changed barrels on a customer’s rifle. Using these barrel codes to date a shotgun is somewhat unreliable, as shotgun barrels are often interchanged at random. One needs to be sure that the barrel is original to the gun before trusting the Barrel Code listing”

and if you’re curious as to what magnaflux testing is and the importance..see below.

ATF 4999 High Score Challenge!

Credit to Kalash_lover for the meme

Before we go ANY further, go over to regulations.gov and add your comment to the list. Be polite. Be respectful. But dismantle the rule as the ridiculous NFA expansion that it is for no reason beyond the ATF backing themselves into this corner.

Now, the why (and the fun part) the worksheet!

Worksheet 4999

The new ATF worksheet 4999 gives a ‘score’ for any given pistol manufactured or made to determine if, despite using pistol parts and being made as a pistol by legal definitions, it is actually a rifle or short barreled rifle (SBR) because reasons.

Remember, the ATF put all this in motion. The ATF is the one doubling down on complexity. The ATF is the entity that made the NFA process so unbearably arduis that this became the preferred method to get to SBR’s or get to shorter carbine style firearms because it didn’t take a whole year to complete what should be a simple and nearly instant process. The Digital Age is clashing with the 1960′ and 70’s and the ones who lose are the gun owners.

So let’s break it down and score one of mine.

Section I

Section I is simple. Two go or no go questions

  • Is the weapon (their term) at least 64oz (4lbs)
  • Is the weapon between 12-26 inches overall length

Immediately we have invalidated and felonized anyone with a RONI or FLUX or any of the other other brace kit that braces a “conventional” handgun like a Glock or Sig P-Series. Section I is done without the brace. These firearms will not be considered. Using the kits automatically places them under the NFA as SBR’s, shoulder-fired designs.

Section II: Accessory Characteristics

Section II of Worksheet 4999 is about the brace itself.

How did mine do?

Alright! 7 Points!

But I am only allowed 4. Keep in mind this is a factory brace. Best I can come up with from the language used (which isn’t vague at all [/sarc]), my XCR-L scores 7 from the factory, making it a ‘stock’ and not a ‘brace’ in their eyes (if the rule is implemented).

Let’s break it down.

  • 2 Points: Bases on known shoulder stock design. It uses the FAST2/3 upper assembly so I can’t see ATF saying it isn’t based on a stock
  • 2 Points: Rear Surface useful useful for shouldering the firearm. The tailhook isn’t a blade design, which is specifically mentioned, and it didn’t have material added either. That leaves the 2 point option
  • 2 Points: Adjustable/Telescoping
  • 1 Point: Counterbalance Design that folds. Tailhook use counterbalance to brace and the mechanism folds.

Section III: Configuration of Weapon

I nailed it here.

HIGH SCORE!

Muzzle to ‘stock’ since we scored 7 points there.

  • 1 Point: Rifle-type flip up sights
  • 4 Points: Presence of a Secondary Grip
  • 4 Points: Optic with an eye relief incompatible with one-handed fire (meaning one-handed at arm extension, despite nobody training to shoot anything one handed)
  • 4 Points: (This one is maybe but I suspect the ATF would rule thus) Modified Shoulder Stock since it comes from the FAST2/3
  • 3 Points: Modified shoulder stock replaced replaced by stabilizing brace. Again, FAST2/3 body with a Tailhook
  • 1 Point: Length of Pull between 10-1/2 and 11-1/2 inches.
  • 4 Points: Weight above 120oz (7-1/2 lbs), 7lb base weight plus the optic alone breaks that.

Gun Controllers in Illinois are annoyed…

Retro Style Photo Of A Police Riot Barrier In Chicago, Illinois

By their own Democratic Governor of all people.

From The Chicago Tribune:

More than two years after Aurora mass shooting exposed flaws in state gun laws, Illinois Democrats have yet to act

‘Exposed Flaws’ is a nice way to say that making unenforceable mandates into mandates doesn’t actually work. A that not everyone respects is one has very little sway unless backed by force. We’ve known for years that even the most basic and logical enforcement of gun laws is way down LE’s to do list. They rarely care when someone fails a background check, they rarely follow up despite the fact a marked prohibited person attempted to purchase a firearm. This alone is an acknowledgment that gun control doesn’t work as advertised. If they’re already ignoring the most basic core tennent because it doesn’t work, why pile on more?

But Gun Controllers don’t ask questions like that, too logical.

A month after Gov. J.B. Pritzker took office in 2019, giving Democrats complete control in Springfield, flaws in Illinois’ gun laws were exposed when a convicted felon whose state firearm owner’s identification card had been revoked opened fire in an Aurora warehouse, killing five co-workers and wounding a sixth along with five police officers.

Here’s June to Date, but let’s focus on the ‘Mass Shooting’ two years ago because a disgruntled employee incident and gun laws are definitely the problem

Not to diminish the tragedy, but… maybe broaden your focus?

The case became a rallying point for gun safety advocates, who’ve pushed for mandatory fingerprinting for FOID card applications, universal background checks for gun buyers, and a system that ensures people whose FOID cards are revoked hand over their weapons to authorities.

Which would help how? How exactly will mandatory fingerprints, UBC’s, and “a system that ensures” FOID revocations are enforced..

Sorry but if we aren’t able to follow up on denials, how are revocations gonna be any better? And what about the folks who are just going to ignore it and do their thing anyway? Ya know.. criminals.

This isn’t a rallying cry, it’s another bloody shirt to wave for cheap political points by even cheaper politicos. The problem is the useful idiots in Windy City are calling the credit due with the crew in Springfield.

More than two years later, however, Pritzker and the Democratic-controlled legislature haven’t enacted those policies or any other major gun safety measures, even as they successfully pushed progressive measures that range from legalizing marijuana to abolishing cash bail.

“These are complicated issues,” Pritzker said of gun control last week in an interview with the Chicago Tribune.

No they aren’t. You just can’t give them the simple and correct answer, that these policies are pissing into the wind.

“We have Democrats from downstate, from areas where people are deeply concerned about protecting their gun rights,” he said. “And then we’ve got people who live in other parts of the state who believe, as I do, that we need to have a greater focus on gun safety, but it’s a complicated challenge in order to get enough votes put together.”

Because let’s just ignore your Republican and Independent constituents right? Of course.

It’s only complicated because it doesn’t work. So you have to keep pedaling your snakeoil as the Chicago body count rises and your FOID card does jack squat to curb the tide. *que blaming neighboring states*

Despite going into overtime, lawmakers adjourned their spring session June 1 without reaching an agreement on gun legislation that would address the issues the Aurora shooting thrust into the spotlight.

You want to know why, because it was never going to be a priority. It was a cheap way to get the anti-2A vote. They know that even in their deep blue territory more and more Democrats are becoming more and more pro-gun. Which means if these policies keep failing they realize more and more that the emperor is looking mighty bare bottomed.

Solution? Don’t actually enact the policy and leave it in the infighting limbo. Doing something without doing anything. A neat trick.

The House approved a measure with the bare minimum 60 required votes that would require fingerprinting for FOID card holders — the second time the chamber has showed support for the idea since the Henry Pratt warehouse shooting in Aurora.

The Senate passed its own bill — which has the backing of Pritzker’s Illinois State Police — that would make fingerprinting optional.

Lawmakers are set to reconvene in Springfield next week to take up an energy policy overhaul. But while House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch, a Hillside Democrat, said in a statement Tuesday that the House also would take up other outstanding issues, the Senate’s gun safety legislation was notably absent from the list.

See. Limbo.

They promise it is a priority and they promise it will be on the to do list, but the longer they don’t actually have to do anything because they are ‘doing something’ by deliberating the better for them. If they never enact the policy they can just use the circle of blame instead of admitting the policy was ineffectual.

A spokeswoman for Welch, a co-sponsor of the House gun control bill, did not respond to a request for comment.

Shocking [/sarc].

The more stringent elements of that proposal make it a nonstarter in the Senate.

“The mandatory fingerprinting just wasn’t going to pass the Senate,” said Democratic Sen. Dave Koehler of Peoria, who’s sponsoring the measure that includes voluntary fingerprinting. “That’s just a step too far for any gun owner to think about because the whole point of trying to do legislation is to not go after law-abiding citizens who are gun owners.”

Funny how they’re a little wary of abuse of power when they’ve consistently been abused by power and seen power abused.

The Senate measure was approved by a 40-17 margin with a lone Republican vote. Supporters say it would make help keep guns out of the hands of people who shouldn’t have them and make it easier for legal gun owners to keep their FOID cards and concealed carry licenses up to date, addressing the problems exposed by the Aurora shooting while also alleviating a backlog of applications to state police that has been exacerbated by the coronavirus pandemic.

And you can believe as much of that as you so choose. When have adding more restrictions and requirements to something ever made a process faster? That before we get to the utterly ridiculous line of ‘keep guns out of the hands of people who shouldn’t have them’ which is simply the meme-grade throw away line to vaguely suggest certain individuals, whom they promise they can accurately identify despite all evidence to the contrary, should not have firearms. It’s a classic straw man tactic because everyone can picture someone who we wouldn’t want having a gun, be they an imbecile, a criminal, or a terrorist. But then when it comes to enforcing the dirty reality of control, all of a sudden things get really grey really quick.

Under the proposal, the state police would be required to continuously monitor state and federal databases for information that would trigger a revocation of someone’s FOID card or concealed carry license. The bill also would charge a state police-led task force with taking away firearms from people who’ve had their FOID cards revoked but haven’t turned over their weapons.

Well, good luck with that. Unless the revocation comes immediately with an officer attached to it there isn’t going to be a long line of folks eager to comply with an order that disarms them just because the state told them no more pew pews.

Exhibit A: https://newschannel20.com/news/local/less-than-half-of-revoked-foid-cards-in-illinois-returned

The measure also directs the state police to create a database of guns that have been reported stolen and would require background checks for private sales or transfers, with a requirement that sales records be filed with a federally licensed gun dealer within 10 days.

More annoying red tape, I’m sure that will help keep criminals from doing the murder and stuff and non-compliance will be low. After all, it was only less than 50% for FOID cards under the current rules.

To cut down on red tape for gun owners, FOID card and concealed carry license expiration dates would be synced and the two would be consolidated onto a single card, with a digital version available.

Oh! Oh ho! Now that is the absolute height of convenience right there. Makes all the rest of the nonsense worth it, only one card instead of two and with the same expiration date. Probably a birthdate, I am guessing, so you have to pay even more fees on that wonderful anniversary of your uterine independence.

Gun owners also would be able to have their FOID cards automatically renewed if they submit fingerprints — a carrot for making that choice and the key departure from the House version, which would require all applicants to submit prints.

Give us that identifying information and we will make our infringement slightly less infringy. We’ll give you a golden sticker too! Look how accommodating we are being to the totally uninfringed gun owners of the great state of Illinois.

Fingerprinting became a focus of gun safety advocates in the wake of the Aurora shooting because it showed the potential for keeping guns out of the hands of people who aren’t legally allowed to possess them.

How?

The shooter had his FOID card revoked after fingerprints he submitted to speed up his concealed carry application flagged an out-of-state felony conviction that made him ineligible to own a gun in Illinois. The system broke down, however, when authorities failed to make sure he turned over any firearms in his possession.

Yeah? And that magically won’t happen? Nobody is gonna slip through the cracks or get away with stuff during all this ponderous red tape?

A 2019 Tribune investigation found that as many as 30,000 guns were potentially in the hands of people who’d had their FOID cards revoked in the previous four years. A follow-up review last year found improved compliance but also an increase in the number of firearms that were unaccounted for.

And what exactly about the new plan will improve these number so measurably that it is worth increased hassle and risk of other forms of non-compliance?

The piece continues along this vein for a good while, but nothing in it amounts to more than “We wish bad people won’t do bad things and our strategy is to penalize good people to try and catch a few more actually bad ones…”

It’s piling ineffectual policy onto ineffectual policy without putting any foreably effective mechanisms in place to catch the criminals. It’s like throwing random bits of junk onto a path with joggers and hoping one of them trips, and hoping on top of the first hope that the one that trips was actually a menace to the trail somehow. Casting a wide net that is clearly designed to catch tuna but telling everyone you are looking to pull shrimp out while you do. When you ask them why they aren’t using shrimp nets, they yell at you that they have to use something.

Further down it is noted

The Illinois State Rifle Association, which has opposed the existing FOID law as an infringement on the Second Amendment, has taken a neutral stance on the Senate proposal, a key development for Democrats who support gun rights. Executive Director Richard Pearson did not respond to a request for comment.

Neutrality in this is probably a capital trade, instead of burning their stash of it on a noble but futile gesture they can come back and gain ground with a later move as many other states are gaining.

Still further down…

“Every time we pass a measure, we’re trying to close off one of those pipelines that allows illegal guns to flow into communities, and we think this is a big one,” she said.

Yet it doesn’t work. You act like these arms pipelines are anything more than people who do not respect the authority of the state, who don’t care, who know they’re only at moderate risk of prosecution, and this won’t change those attitudes. It will only change those who still respect the state, although it is likely to lower that number further.

Read the whole thing here, but you get the idea. Illinois is promising gains against violent crime that simply aren’t that feasible without doing the one thing they constantly fail to do. Prosecute with a purpose the crimes that you want to curb. Make it known that there are no easy outs. Follow up on failed background checks. Clear some homicide investigations even…

But no… more red tape for the law abiding, just in case they aren’t. That’s the ticket.

“An assault rifle is not a Swiss Army knife”

“False analogies lead to dangerous conclusions when people know longer think rationally.

This opinion piece published at the Tampa Bay Times is yet another example of people letting their biases color what they believe is “rational” while forgetting that rationalizing something is subjective. The Chinese rationalized creating concentration camps for the Uighurs, censoring their media, and controlling their population through threats of violence and murder. Those were all also rational, by their standards. Not our rationale, theirs. You can absolutely rationalize yourself into “wrong” actions. You can rationalize yourself into very narrow views and limited perspectives. You can do this all within the veil of perceived authority that is academia, or under the government identity that what you are doing is right because you are the government and acting ‘rationally’ in the ‘interest’ of your people. Under these perceptions of authority it becomes easy to see your perspective as the only proper one.

Once again the author is commiting the intellectual sin, failure to acknowledge that nobody is obligated to think like they do. I think it far more egregious, but also unsurprising, in this instance because of the author’s background.

I have spent the past 42 years practicing and teaching principles of rationality. As I learned during my doctoral education in rhetoric, rationality is at the core of our humanity, and it anchors productive deliberation in a democratic society.

What I hear is someone establishing their bonafides while simultaneously failing to realize that their background placed them in a position to condition others think as they do from a place of authority. This is a widespread problem in academia at the moment, the goal of the academic should be to never give away a political opinion they hold as a teacher in place of providing the information and attitudes the form the various sides of a debate.

I am a firm believer that a student of yours should never be able to nail down your politics as a teacher. Cold objectivity.

The good Professor, despite their background being in rhetoric, fails to grasp that rationale is subjective. What they reason and what the next person reasons, given similar information, will still be influenced by their life experiences and critical thinking capacity. Two people with similar powers of reasoning can come to two different but very logical conclusions.

The shallow response towards these two differing conclusions is for one side or the other to immediately attack the other as imbecilic. It is a tactic seen from all groups towards their opposition and has no origin in the left or right, it is an old old tactic.

What undercuts it here is the immediate false appeal to the authors own authority which amounts to, “Yo, I been doing this thinking thing for 42 year so I am daaaamn good at thinking, so my thinking is the best thinking and any other thinking opposed to my thinking is dumb.”

In the past few years, the hope by many is that rationality and logical reasoning will be restored, serving as an effective corrective to the untruthful narratives dominating and contaminating our public discourse. However, I have become less sanguine that this will happen, given the current hyperpolarized political environment.

Again, the problem is failure to acknowledge that more than one point of view can be held and respected is the problem. In this case the author is completely antithetical to the idea that a rifle is a practical multi-purpose tool and is using their lofty academic background to force their single perspective rationale down the readers’ intellectual throats.

Unfortunately, the absence of rationality and logical persuasive appeals also has intruded on the realm of legal decision making — a place that historically has prided itself on the lack of partisanship. An example from this past week provides a case in point.

Translation: I don’t like this legal decision, so I am going to declare it partisan instead of acknowledging their are more perspectives, including rational ones, than my own.

In a ruling on Friday that compared the AR-15 to a Swiss Army knife, a federal judge overturned California’s longtime assault weapons ban. In his ruling U.S. District Judge Roger Benitez of San Diego used this questionable analogy to argue that California’s 30-year assault weapons ban violated the Second Amendment’s right to bear arms.

“Like the Swiss Army Knife, the popular AR-15 rifle is a perfect combination of home defense weapon and homeland defense equipment,” Benitez said in the ruling. “Firearms deemed as ‘assault weapons’ are fairly ordinary, popular, modern rifles.”

Apparently, Benitez never took a course in argumentation and critical thinking, thus failing to understand a false analogy. As I taught my Argumentation and Advocacy students at the University of Texas for over four decades, a false analogy is where one makes a comparison between two subjects that have more dissimilarities than similarities.

You notice he drops immediately into attacking Benitez’s intellectual credentials. Benitez has a Doctorate in Law for reference, and earned it in 1978. Meaning Benitez’s credential in Law (which this case is about and his field of expertise) is longer than the author’s credential in ‘thinking’.

A false analogy is a type of informal fallacy. A false analogy takes a similar characteristic of two things and then falsely assumes another thing about them. The Ford F-150 and Ford Mustang both have powerful engines, therefore they are both good at towing because towing is easier with a powerful engine. That is a false analogy. It misses crucial extra details to the comparative assumption, in this example the structure of the vehicle also matters a great deal for towing and the engines power is only one of many factors that make a vehicle suitable or unsuitable.

Judge Benitez analogy works fine. The Swiss Army Knife is a tool that does many things. It is a term that doesn’t just mean the Victorinox products, it is analogous with any device that has many purposes. The AR-15 has many purposes as a rifle, it is not as limited or purpose built as other rifles are. The analogy works fine, it is also not the point of the argument but simply what was single out on as a point of attack.

Only an angry pedantic individual would misconstrue the crystal clear analogy to attack this point instead of trying to dismantle the argument that the AR-15 is exactly the type of personal firearm the Second Amendment is meant to protect. Common, ordinary, and popular. No one can successfully argue that anything about the AR-15 or similar firearms is unusual or dangerous, because on the macro scale.. it isn’t. The AR is the logical progression of personal arms technology just as the laptop and tablet are the progression of personal computing.

Nobody argues that the laptop or tablet should be limited because they are sometimes associated with the commission of crimes, you prosecute the criminals. The entire argument is “but it is a weapon!” and nobody can seem to accept the answer that “that is the point.”

Consider this example: Using hairspray every day is analogous to launching a nuclear weapon. Like Benitez’s comparison of a Swiss Amy knife and an AR-15, this analogy is not only fallacious but defies common sense. Therefore, we must ask Judge Benitez: When has a Swiss Army knife ever been used to kill a large number of people in a short period of time? Surely Benitez realizes that had a Swiss Army knife been the chosen weapon in recent mass shootings, more victims would have not lost their lives.

Wow… should we bring up knife homicide vs rifle homicide statistics? Or do we only care to look at enough information to confirm our bias that the AR-15 is an effective weapon while ignoring the fact the knives are also effective weapons while inserting the wild hypothesis that if a knife had been used, even a Swiss Army Knife specifically, a mass casualty attack would somehow be improved.

Failing to see the forest for the trees, there is such animosity toward this one method of murder that they are angrier at it more than murder. They fail to see that mass casualty attacks are not particularly hard for someone who rationalizes the need to do so.

Yes, Professor, every single mass casualty attack was rationalized by its perpetrators. They thought about it. They planned it. They chose the method of firearm, explosive, vehicle, arson, etc. They had reasons. They found it to be the prudent thing for them to do, even if the rest of the world was in direct opposition. They rationalized it.

So no, Benitez does not need to realize that had a ‘Swiss Army Knife been chosen’ in the recent mass shooting, more victims would not have lost their lives. This is a false analogy. It boils the whole intricate process of planning such an attack, a meticulous process often carried out by intelligent people, down to the method of injury alone. It ignores other methods of injury that resulted in high death counts. It furthermore makes the asinine assumption that Judge Benitez’s analogy was speaking about the Swiss Army Knife as a weapon and not as a device with many purposes, which anyone with a greater than 5th grade reading level and an objective outlook lacking a pedantic axe to grind can easily and properly understand.

Sadly, Judge Benitez’s spurious reasoning is yet another instance of our nation’s current rhetorical habit of abandoning previously well-accepted standards of rationality and logic.

There are plenty of examples of this, yes. But this ruling is not one. You simply disagree, Professor, and are therefore throwing out the base logic because it does not match your subjective rationality.

Everywhere you look, partisanship dominates and trumps (no pun intended) our discourse — something that makes deliberation less possible and therefore threatens the survival of democracy. Moreover, as a colleague and friend of mine poignantly observed, faith in humanity is required for a faith in rationality.

What expresses more faith in humanity than trusting them? Trusting that men and women are naturally of general good faith and character and can, with the structure of nonpartisan logic, make their choices. Choices that do not have to agree with yours.

Seems we are at another false analogy. The premise seems to be that the AR-15 is owned only by ‘mass shooters in waiting’ according to your subjective rationale. By that same logic, every human being is a mass killer in waiting. While objectively true by casting a wide enough set of observations, like all mass shooters drank water at some point in their lives or some other patently ridiculous single point, it is a fruitless observation that does nothing more than confirm your subjective feeling on the AR-15.

You don’t like it.

Cool.

You don’t have too.

I do.

Also cool.

My faith in humanity allows me to confidently state that everyone should be able to make the decision whether or not to participate in the right to ownership of common and effective personal arms on their own. That the knowledge and skills to learn them should be prevelantly taught and widely available from an early age follows. That fearing our fellows, that some men and women will take this or other knowledge and use it for unjust harm, does not diminish the right to arms, nor my overall trust in humanity, nor my belief that this should be an individual and well informed choice.

For me that faith in humanity is dwindling.

Why? Because you disagree?

Judge Benitez’s ruling, combined with what seems evident from current congressional political skirmishes, leads me to believe that we have reached an inflection point in our nation’s history.

We’ve been there, but partisanship is nothing new. This isn’t an inflection point, it is business and history as usual where we’re a little more iriate with each other than we have been a few years back. But not so badly as other points in history.

As a former scholar and teacher of rhetoric, who on a daily basis monitors and analyzes the country’s political discourse, I feel less confident that America’s great experiment can withstand the onslaught of persuasion not grounded in rationality and logic.

Me too. But we likely disagree on the ‘why’ it seems. Maybe we are more closely rationally aligned than either of us believes, I don’t know. What I do know is this argument against Benitez is shallow garbage that all boils down to, “I don’t like AR’s so Benitez is wrong.”

I hope my pessimism is refuted in the near future.

I believe, sir. That by opening your mind to perspectives and rationality that differs from your own and giving it the respect that it was arrived at logically, you will be open to all kinds of perspectives, stress less, and ultimately see that despite the individual negative events and the fact 2020 and 2021 have been hard in places the world is continuing to do alright in the grand scheme and the 21st Century is our best one yet.

We cannot banish negative outcomes. We can work to reduce them by continuing to create opportunities for positive outcomes. The AR-15’s ownership isn’t a negative outcome. It isn’t anymore special than the bolt action or the pump action or any other item that came previously, especially in the age of greatest human civility we have had yet.

But just as more safe or safest does not mean the absolute safety, more civil and most civil does not equate to universal civility.

The Second Amendment is the harsh acknowledgment that neither individuals or governments are under any unbreakable obligation to be civil, moral, or polite. History teaches us, and therefore a rational mind should acknowledge, that all it takes is the choice of someone with the ability to cause harm to do so. The same goes for governments, see the Treaty of Versailles.

Morality platitudes of ‘limiting the harm’ fail all logical threat analysis, they rely on absolute compliance against extreme behaviors which would make the rule irrelevant in the first place.

Rifles, firearms in general, in the hands of free citizens do far more good than harm and it is because of the ‘western’ rationality, the overall societal belief that weapons are meant to protect, that this remains true.

Blackhawk Stache IWB Setup – Premium

Justin with Blackhawk takes you through the setup of the premium Stache IWB holster from Blackhawk.


This holster is designed by concealed carriers, for concealed carriers. It is the ultimate solution for everyday carry, with features such as ambidextrous, impact-reinforced polymer, a spare magazine carrier, a low-profile shirt guard, friction-adjustable passive retention, and much more. The Stache IWB is the most technologically-advanced modular holster system that was designed never to be seen. In this video, Justin takes you through just how easy setup can be!

The Mesa Truckee Handguard – M-LOK Your Benelli M4

I love my Benelli M4, and my love of the Benelli M4 has made me hate 922R even more. If you’re not familiar, let me educate you. 922R is a series of laws that makes it impossible to import a wide variety of weapons in the configurations in which they are made to function. They get neutered, and you have to replace certain parts with US-made parts to unneuter it. One approved piece is the handguard, so when I decided to unneuter my Benelli M4, I figured the handguard was an easy fix, and that led me to the Mesa Tactical Truckee handguard.

If I was going to replace something on my Benelli, I better replace it with the best option possible. Only a few companies produce Benelli M4 handguards. Surefire did a railed variant, but it’s stupidly expensive and hard to find. Agency Arms makes an M-LOK model too, but the Truckee appealed most to me.

Breaking Down the Mesa Truckee Handguard

The Truckee is 11 inches long, which extends it beyond any other handguard option for Benelli M4. They also make an 8.5-inch model if you want to keep the stock length. The 11 inch model of the Truckee offers more handguard to love and gives you more slots to mount your goodies too. One of my intentions with a modern, modular handguard was to add a light.

The further I can push the light forward, the better for eliminating barrel shadow. A few extra inches go a long way if you know what I’m saying. The sides of the Truckee have these little wings that reach just a little further forward than the rest of the handguard, making it perfect for mounting a light to.

On top of the extra length, the Mesa crafts the Truckee from 6061-T6 aluminum. I wanted metal over polymer solely because high round count stuff starts to get real warm with a shotgun, and metal adds a little more protection. Also, metal is good, metal is tough, metal is reliable.

We get six M-LOK slots on the right and left-hand sides, as well as five M-LOK slots on the bottom. Plenty of room for all your rails and accessories. The Truckee has an MSRP of about 120 bucks, and as you’d imagine, is made right here in the good ole US of A.

Installing the Dang Thing

Installation isn’t hard to do by any means. However, the instructions Mesa Tactical sends are terrible. They include color pictures which is great, but the pictures are so dark they are nearly useless. Go to Youtube and do a quick search, and you’ll find way better instructions than the included paper instructions.

With proper instructions, it takes no time at all to install. It attaches to the barrel and over the gas system. A nylon hammer will help you fit a clip-on to hold things in place.

You’ll also need to remove the factory sling point to install the 11-inch Truckee. For that, you’ll need to remove a snap ring, but that’s a four-dollar tool at Walmart and rather easy to do as well.

We got lots of room to mount lots of accessories. I tried vertical grips, angled grips, lights, rail sections, and even cup holders. It’s pretty dang easy to do. The slots are in spec, and attaching anything, and everything takes little effort. I mounted a TLR RM 2 to a Magpul M-LOK rail section, which is predictably mounted as far forward as possible.

Putting Rounds Down Range

You can get a new toy and not expect to toss some batteries in it. As such, once I got the Truckee installed, I hit the ground running. I started with an AFG 2 on the gun, but it didn’t work well for my style of shotgun shooting. I used a push/pull method taught by Rob Haught to mitigate recoil.

A vertical grip worked extremely well for this purpose. I could push forward nice and hard and pull rearward to create tension that kept the recoil from beating me up. This put a lot of force on the Truckee, and it stayed put without issue. It didn’t bend, give, or fail in any way. The Truckee has a little give and wobble to it. I wouldn’t try to zero a laser to it, but the wobble isn’t bad enough to throw your shot off or cause the gun to slip.

I ran the gun sans grip with just the smooth nature of the metal handguard. As such, it is a little slick, and when I apply that forward pressure, my hand can slip. I didn’t notice it until the heat and humidity started to climb. Once my hands got sweaty, I’d feel it sliding forward little by little. I would advise a grip of some type, or even Talon grips, or rubberized M-LOK slot fillers that add some extra grip to the gun.

M-LOK It Up

Overall the Truckee handguard provides outstanding performance. Especially compared to the stock two-piece plastic handguards the Benelli comes with. It’s the 2020s y’all, who doesn’t want to add accessories to their shotguns? Modern problems require modern solutions and the Truckee handguard is a modern solution that seemingly outperforms the alternatives. It’s affordable, well made, modular, and counts as part of 922R compliance. Check it out here.

Oracle 2 – Introducing the Oracle 2 Rangefinding Bow Sight

Burris Optics is proud to introduce the new and improved Oracle 2 Rangefinding Bow Sight.  The Oracle 2’s design is based on all the customer feedback we got from the original Oracle and includes: Improved Auto-Brightness Detection, Improved Manual Brightness Control (lower levels), Improved Set-Up (micro-adjustments on LRF), better waterproofing and more accurate arrow drop calculations. The function is still the same… range your target at full draw with the push of a button. The Oracle 2 instantly provides the distance to your target and an exact aiming point that factors in the angle of your shot.

No more guessing distance, fumbling with rangefinders, dialing sights or aiming between pins. Most importantly no more watching the trophy of a lifetime walk away because you didn’t have time to range him and shoot or worse yet, tried to range him and spooked him from the movement!

Don’t leave your shot of a lifetime to chance.  Get the Oracle 2 from Burris. Find what matters!

Expected to be available in June at select Burris Dealers with an estimated price of $799.


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. 

The Max 9, A Maximum Capacity Sub Compact

The Ruger MAX 9 is a well designed and reliable pistol.

Ruger’s Game Changer 

There have been several revolutions in firearms manufacture. The move from iron to steel ushered in the era of high performance smokeless powder.  Aluminum frames allowed powerful handguns to be carried with a minimum of sag on the belt. MIM parts allow- well, cheap guns. No change in firearms manufacture has been as profound as the introduction of polymer frame handguns. Unlike aluminum there seem to be no drawbacks in polymer. The material is light, durable, and easily formed into modern firearms shapes. Glock was the first but took the lead from HK and the rest is history. The recent introduction of sub compact 9mm pistols with high magazine capacity shows just how innovate a designer may be with modern polymer technology.

I am certain after doing a bit of research a little more involved than asking around at the local pawn shops that the polymer frame slim line 9mm is the single most popular carry gun in America. And rightly so. They are easier to use well than a snub nose .38, have decent magazine capacity, and carry light and flat on the hip. When SIG introduced the P365 with its ten round standard magazine the Glock 26 had real competition. But not so fast- we also have the Shield Plus, Taurus GX4, and the Ruger MAX 9. The Ruger is the subject of this report. 

The MAX 9 bears a family resemblance to other Rugers handguns but then perhaps this kinship is a few steps removed. The LC9s isn’t a bad gun at all, reliable and easy enough to use well. The larger Security 9 is one of the best buys in a mid size 9mm. The MAX 9 isnt a larger LC9s or smaller Security 9 but rather a design with some of the same features but a character all its own. The pistol features a polymer frame and a steel slide, no surprises there. The grip frame is larger than the slim LC9s but fits my average size hands well. Trigger reach is good. The grip frame is nicely pebbled and offers a good feel. Not too abrasive with the hotter 9mm loads but offering excellent purchase with sweaty or slippery hands. I wrote this during a 101 degree heat wave and worked up a sweat handling and firing the pistol. I never lost confidence in my grip and the beads of perspiration running off my forehead never caused corrosion on the blue slide. 

Among the best features of the MAX 9 are the sights. Note the fiber optic/tritium front.

The pistol features a modern striker fired action. While there are explanations for the sear engagement that tend to have makers claiming their pistol isn’t a single action- sure it is in my book. The sear design makes for additional safety and the trigger lever is a good safety feature. My example has a manual safety as I prefer. You may use the safety, ignore the safety, or purchase the no manual safety version. The manual safety is frame mounted, easily manipulated, and doesn’t slow you down on the draw and getting a rapid first shot hit. Provided, of course, you don’t forget to take the safety on. The slide is nicely contoured with a bevel at the front of the slide to allow easy holstering. The barrel, surprisingly enough, features a nicely recessed target crown. I demand as much accuracy as possible in a defensive firearm but this is an unexpected touch. The sights are well designed personal defense sights. The front sight features a fiber optic sight that is easily illuminated by any light during waking hours. The center of the sight features a tritium insert. Now we are talking and this is the kind of sight that should be found on a purpose designed personal defense pistol. Point shooting is like driving with the eyes closed except at kissing range and I like a good set of sights on all of my handguns. The sights are good to excellent. The pistol is optics ready with a cut out in the slide for mounting a red dot. The pistol is supplied with two magazines, one a twelve round box and the other a flush fit ten round magazine. The grip frame, interestingly enough, features a magazine guide at the rear of the grip. This guide may be removed if you prefer the more compact flush fit magazine for concealed carry. The trigger features a modest take up, you meet a wall, and the trigger breaks. I have tested two examples and trigger compression runs 5.6 to 5.8 pounds, not as tight as a Glock but controllable. 

Compare the Ruger MAX 9 to the CZ 83 .380 high capacity pistol and you can see we have come a long way in affordable user friendly high capacity handguns.

I have made several trips to the range with the pistol and put a dent in my precious 9mm ammunition supply. I drew and fired as quickly as possible, engaging silhouette targets at 7 yards. The pistol handles well. It is neutral in heft, neither handle heavy nor slide heavy. A short sight radius means you have to concentrate on the sight picture. Recoil is modest, the pistol is quite controllable, but you must address muzzle flip and bring the sights back on target for each shot. The pistol shoots well. It isn’t in the Glock 19 class but it is a good shooter for the size. Moving to ten yards I continued to burn up my Black Hills 9mm FMJ loads and found that I could eat out the X ring on demand. I fired a mix of defense loads including the Black Hills Ammunition 124 grain JHP and the incredible mean looking Black Hills Ammunition Honey Badger. Function isn’t a problem. This is a shooter and on every count a better all around handgun than the Ruger LC9s and quite a few other small guns. The MAX 9 is also more expensive than the LC9s. Shops had the pistol on hand for $450 to $540, depending on how many hands the pistol passed through before the small shops got their hands on it. The LC9s EDC is about two hundred dollars less. If you want high capacity, two magazines, night sights and an optics ready slide the MAX 9 is worth the extra tariff. This is good kit well worth its cost. The pistol seems to be in the pipeline and selling briskly.

Long Range Fundamentals from Ballistic: Ballistic Coefficient, Caliber Selection and MOA

Ballistic:

Gainesville, GA (June 8, 2021) As with most technical pursuits, long-range shooting has a good number of basic terms a shooter needs to know on their way to being a top shot. These terms include:

Ballistic Coefficient – According to Wikipedia, “the ballistic coefficient (BC) of a body is a measure of its ability to overcome air resistance in flight.” Less air resistance equals less drag, and less drag means better performance from a “body,” in this case, a bullet.

BC is denoted numerically, and the higher the BC number, the easier and more efficiently the bullet passes through the air. BC is determined by several factors, including the shape or design of the bullet, its weight and the diameter. Long-range shooters want bullets with a high BC to retain speed longer, drop less and be less affected by wind.
 
For example, the Hornady ELD Match round in 6.5 Creedmoor, loaded with Hornady’s sleek, 140-grain bullet, has a very high BC rated at .646. Meantime, the Hornady 30-30 Interlock American Whitetail hunting round, loaded with a round-nose 150-grain bullet, has a BC of .186.

Guess which is the better choice for banging steel at 1,000 yards?

Caliber Selection — Long-range shooters use a variety of calibers, and within each caliber, there are many, many loads available. And each specific load will have its unique bullet weight, BC, and muzzle velocity.  

So how does a new shooter know which caliber and cartridge might be best for their particular long-range endeavors? 

The smart shooter will use Ballistic and its huge load library to make that decision. Ballistic contains information on over 5,000 projectiles, factory loads, and military loads, plus performance data points (like BC’s) from leading manufacturers and military and performance testing. 

Using Ballistic, plug in the various calibers and cartridge loads within the calibers under consideration, the distances at which they will be used, and the anticipated environmental conditions. Ballistic will calculate all the data needed to make the best load choice. 

MOA – MOA stands for “minute of angle.” It is an angular measurement used in rifle scope adjustment values.

[Edited for math correction]
Think of a circle cut into 360 equal slices, and each slice equals one degree. Then each degree gets cut into 60 pieces and those are your “minutes” of angle. At 100 yards, each individual minute equals 1.047 inches. Let’s say a rifle is hitting the center of the bullseye at 100 yards. If the elevation control on the scope moved up one full MOA, the bullet should now strike 1.047 inches higher. Move the windage control one full MOA to the right, and the bullet should hit 1.047 inches to the right.

Angles work proportionally, so at 200 yards, 1 MOA is 2.054 inches. At 1000 yards, that 1 MOA is 10.47 inches.

Now, go back to the 100 yards standard. Most rifle scopes have elevation and windage adjustments set at either .5 or .25 MOA per click. So, the shooter takes three shots at 100 yards to zero the scope and rifle, and the three bullets all hit two inches low and a half-inch to the left. With a .5 MOA scope, a bullseye hit will require the shooter to give the elevation control 4 clicks up (.5×4 = 2 inches) and 1 click to the right (.5×1 = .5 inch).

MOA is not the same as MILs or Mil-RADs, which are also angular measurements used in some scopes but perform their measurement on a different scale.

Ballistic is the definitive ballistics trajectory calculator, intended for long-range and precision shooters who want a serious–and a seriously accurate–application. Ballistic will calculate your bullet’s trajectory, windage, velocity, energy, lead, and flight time for any valid range. The app can also compensate for atmospheric conditions such as temperature, barometric pressure, humidity, and altitude–it can even accept density of air or density altitude inputs! The world-renowned JBM Ballistics engine powers all Ballistic computations. Ballistic is used by competition shooters, long-range hunters, and the military to deliver the most precise calculations possible.

With Ballistic, you’ll be able to make the most accurate calculations for every shot, everywhere, even in areas with no cellular coverage.

For more information, please visit WWW.BALLISTICAPP.COM

They’re back after Braces…

Click and prepare your brain… it’s a rough ride.

https://www.atf.gov/file/154871/download?fbclid=IwAR121POAaeI84fUhN4M8RbgBgWb5gdgmjrGIvS47BeMcNEAJd3vzkTcKWr8

Have you made it? Are you okay? Is your eye twitching yet? Take a moment.

71 pages of utterly confusing lunacy to try and justify ‘why’ each and every possible variation on a ‘braced firearm’ must be submitted to the ATF for review. I do mean every. single. variation…

You run your red dot one space further forward than mine? Different variation. You use a different sling? Different variation. You use a sling but put it on the firearm at different points? Different variation. Literally every possible combination of features must be classified individually by the ATF for a firearm category literally built on its modularity and customization. At least, that is what I am reading. It might be slightly more reasonable than that, in the same way the Saturn is ‘small’ compared to Jupiter.

The rule is a Sisyphean task, one that can literally never be completed. It is impossible, and the ATF leadership wants to put the onus on the manufacturers to cover every possible variation of their firearms. They must be individually submitted and evaluated.

I haven’t even gotten to the archaic nonsense about SBR’s and SBS’s being ‘firearms suitable for crime’ and how because they were used in two ‘mass shootings’ they somehow meet that absurd NFA definitive standard.

What the actual fuck are regular handguns then?

Excuse my French, but seriously. If two incidents is enough for the ATF to consider braced firearms NFA items, what about all the crimes with plain old handguns? The things we typically consider handguns, not the legal corners that the Congress and the ATF have over regulated and over defined us into in a misplaced attempt to somehow corral these nebulous firearms as different from other ones when really they aren’t

All these 71 pages do is reinforce the fact that ‘Gun Control’ is made up. Murder is murder, gun or not, these “rules” just keep making it more convoluted and obtuse every time they try, and it never works to improve anything because “weird” guns don’t drive crime rates. They are motives.

Check out that ‘score card’ that no braced firearm will probably ever pass… Pages 16/17

We’ll let you know when the rule opens for comment.

The Pocket Mate – Streamlight’s Key Chain Blaster

Streamlight had a big year in 2021. SHOT Show might not have happened, but Streamlight pelted us with new releases at the beginning of the year. We saw the TLR 7 SUB, the Wedge, new models of the RM series, the TLR-10, and more. One that might have slipped through the cracks was the release of the Pocket Mate. Stuff like the Wedge and weapon lights often steal the show, but the Pocket Mate captured my attention. 

The Pocket Mate is essentially a large keychain light. Streamlight has done the Nano, the KeyMate, and the little LED Keychain flashlight. All tiny lights designed more for novelty than actual use. The Pocket Mate changes that. It’s quite powerful at the cost of being a little less compact. The Pocket Mate gives useful light for EDC-like tasks. 

Breaking Down The Pocket Mate 

The Pocket Mate is tiny and keychain-appropriate. It’s much smaller than something like your average Keyfob, but it’s bigger than the average keychain light and infinitely more useful. The Pocket Mate is 2 inches long, 1.08 inches wide, half an inch thick, and it weighs only half an ounce. 

The Pocket Mate pumps out a mighty 325 lumens. Okay, I get compared to a modlite that’s not much, but for a keychain light, it’s rather impressive. The 325 lumens are backed by 1,450 candela that casts the beam a decent distance in the perspective of a keychain light. That’s the high mode, and the low mode grants you 45 lumens of light backed by 200 candela. The lower level is well suited for social settings. 

It’s a small package that packs a big surprise. Battery life varies depending on the mode chosen. On the high mode, it will last 20 minutes, and on low, it will last an hour. Once the battery dies, you plug it in and recharge it. 

The Pocket Mate utilizes a USB charger and takes 4 hours to fully recharge. Plugin before bed and call it a day. A light under the go button gives you an idea of its status. Green for good, red for charging, and that’s it. 

Durability also proves to be rather high. The Pocket Mate is IPX4 rated, meaning it can be splashed and rained on but not submerged or hit with jets of water. It’s also 1-meter drop resistant. It can take some casual abuse, which is nice because my clumsy ass will drop my keys at least twice today. At least once, I’ll just consider leaving them on the floor and starting a new life without them. 

But It’s So Small 

That’s true, it won’t replace a dedicated EDC light like the Wedge, but it can supplement it. It will also provide you a backup if your main light dies or is damaged. Or, in my case, sometimes forgotten at home. The Pocket Mate’s 325 lumens provide an impressive amount of light for such a small tool. 

Lumens aside, the throw allows it to work across a small room on high, and the cool blue light illuminates dark corners with ease. A quick click of the button turns it on, swaps modes, and turns it off. The Pocket Mate is very simple, but simple isn’t a bad thing with a light like this. 

Outside of a keychain light, it comes with a quasi-clip-like device. You could stash it in your pocket, or even better, attach the light to the visor of a hat for a hands-free option and a quickly improvised headlamp. Perfect for doing close-range work, I tossed some external breakers in the middle of the night and fixed a water pump with this setup. Plenty of light to accomplish either task. 

That clip is removable if you don’t care for it, but I’m going to stick with it personally. I like it and think it’s relatively useful for improvised hands-free use. 

Beyond the Keychain 

The same clip that attaches the Pocket Mate to a key ring can attach it to a zipper, a pull tag, or whatever else you want to tack it to. Make it part of a Greg’  Gorillafritz’ Ellifritz style emergency escape kit paired with an LDK and handcuff key to escape bad situations in bad places. You can easily use its size and relatively low price point to utilize multiple lights for a variety of uses. 

Heck, they even come in a wide variety of different colors that allow you to match them to your wardrobe if you so choose. If you need a micro-sized light, the Pocket Mate offers the most light out there. It’s smaller, less than half the weight, brighter, and packs a good bit more candela than the Sidekick. However, the Sidekick has better battery life. 

Shining Bright 

The Streamlight Pocket Mate retails for right around 20 bucks at most retailers. It’s quite affordable and provides a lot of power for its size. It’s amazing to see how far lights have come and how fast technology is advancing to make them better. The Pocket Mate provides a good enough amount of oomph to provide an alternative light source when a normal EDC light isn’t available. Streamlight’s are killing it this year, and I can’t wait to get my hands on some more of their new stuff

How to Sight in the Oracle X Rangefinding Crossbow Scope

In this video, Jake Kallenbach (Burris Optics’ lead engineer on the Oracle X) walks you through how to install the Oracle X rangefinding crossbow scope and get it sighted in.

The Oracle X features a modern, lightweight design that is waterproof, shockproof, fog proof, and nitrogen filled so it can handle any weather conditions you might experience. Backed by the Burris no questions asked Forever Warranty, you don’t have to worry when you invest in the Oracle X.  Expected retail price is just $899 with models available for purchase in June – plenty of time to get comfortable with the Oracle X before fall hunts begin.

The wireless remote sets it apart from the competition.  It can be placed anywhere on the crossbow within easy reach of your fingers for quick ranging.  There are no wires to get caught in bow strings, cables, or accessories.  With the included attachments there’s no worry about a lost remote either.

Our 2-7 variable power scope will not only range your target but also includes angle compensation bringing unequaled accuracy to your crossbow setup in shooting situations that crossbow hunters will experience in the field including tree stand and elevated blind hunting.  The Oracle X, once a target is ranged, automatically calculates distance and angle and displays an illuminated pin at the exact point of impact.  This pin will change to stay accurate throughout the zoom range of the scope so no matter what magnification you’re using you know the illuminated pin is exactly where you need to aim.  The accuracy and consistency of the Oracle X is exactly what you need to make a clean, ethical shot.

Don’t leave your shot of a lifetime to chance.  Get the Oracle X from Burris.  Find what matters!


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. 

A 5.11 Tactical Father’s Day, Part 1

5.11 Tactical's Coyote Union 6" Waterproof is ready for duty,, range or field.

Sitting watching the rain fall on what feels like a fall day, even though the calendar says it is May; I realized Father’s Day and graduation season are fast approaching.  Fortunately our friends at 5.11 Tactical have a couple of items that make ideal gifts.

            With all the rain we have had lately, the Coyote Union 6” WP is a perfect item for those of us who venture out in wet weather.  5.11 uses eVent as the lining of this waterproof suede and nylon boot to ensure your feet stay dry in the wettest conditions. I can say from past experience with 5.11’s eVent lined boots that this lining does work. I have worn their XPRT and A.T.A.C series on the range and out hiking in virtual monsoons and my feet have stayed dry. So far when out about town for daily walks in this nasty spring weather; the Unions have kept my feet dry.

With it’s aggressive Vibram outsole the Union is ready for all conditions.

            Another feature of the Unions that I like is the 6” height. It is tall enough to give your ankle support without being too high that your feet get hot in summer weather. When hiking and climbing the big hills out west, I have found 8” boots are just too hot in the summer. This height is also ideal for slipping the boots on to take my dog for walks around the campground.

            5.11’s use of nylon reinforcing bars in the ankle area instead of a solid piece of suede allows the boot to breath while providing support. This also allows your ankle to flex more naturally when stepping on/off uneven ground. While it might sound counter intuitive, on uneven surfaces if your ankle and foot are overly restricted; you can twist or break an ankle. By having a degree of give, your body will compensate as you shift weight. If you cannot roll and move your body will stiffen up, that’s when bad things happen.

Using straps instead of full body suede reduces weight without sacrificing suopport.
Rounding the toe and enclosing the toe cap ensures your grip on hard surfaces while protecting the boot and your toes.

            An often overlooked area when it comes to giving you support is the outsole. Many uniform style boots have “squared” heels and toes. When you toe off or plant, this can cause you to slip. The Union rolls the outsole up both of these areas.  This will allow your foot to naturally roll on and off soft or hard surfaces while providing an additional point of traction when needed. You will find the toe area is part of a runner toe cap that will prevent sole separation in rugged conditions. The rubber toe cap will also protect your toes from loose rocks that inevitably fall on your foot when hiking or hunting.

With a rounded, beveled heel your odds of a twisted ankle are reduced without giving up traction walking down a hill.

            The outsole of the Union not only aids in stability, but it is what provides traction. Using an aggressive outsole made from Vibram’s XS-Trek formula ensures good footing in all but the worst conditions. In wet muddy conditions this sole is self-cleaning, grips on wet river rocks and is still sure footed on oily concrete floors.

Vibram’s outsole is aggressive and gives traction in the mud and on oily wet concrete.

            You will have all day comfort thanks to the polyurethane midsole and Ortholite insole. Unlike other midsole materials polyurethane will not lose its ability to dissipate the shock from every footstep. The Ortholite insole further reduces felt impact thanks to its gel like properties. Unlike gel insoles Ortholite is not prone to wear from abrasion and debris you pick up in the field. You will find the polyurethane midsole and Ortholite insole will drastically reduce leg and back ache as well as general leg fatigue.

Ortholite insoles help combat sore feet and leg fatigue.

            When 5.11 Tactical designed and built the Union 6” WP, they built the boot with action shooting competitors, hunters and serious hikers in mind. I am certain your dad or you will put them to good use. Next article will look at the AMP family of backpacks.

The ‘Musket’ is Alright

In recent weeks I’ve seen the ebb and flow of the gunternet coalescing around some old AR arguments again.

10.3/.5 or 11.5 or 12.5 barrels? Free-float? Iron sights? Front sight post in the way? And all that other hubbub.

These are old. They are tired. They have been answered.

But fresh faces keep asking, so here it goes, here it goes, here it goes again. (Name the band)

The things you need out of an AR, and by extension any rifle you’re relying upon, are a good barrel, bolt, recoil spring, and gas system that work together. That’s pretty much it. You can thrown in proper dimensions and finishing in the receiver so that fire control and magazine work reliably and the receivers surfaces stand up, but that covers it. You need the parts to work together.

You don’t need the latest carbon fiber lattice handguard. You don’t need an adjustable 39 position gas block with a matching adjustable gas key. Hell, you don’t need to free-float your barrel. You don’t even need a quad-rail, though the KAC’s are nice and sturdy.

Those are all ‘quality of life’ improvements. They grant greater utility instead of base function. Think of it like adding an adapter to your computer that allows you to plug in USB and USB-C compatible gadgets. Sure the computer can now talk with your gizmos and that adds functions, but the processor speed and onboard memory aren’t changed.

So when people are asking me my favorite AR, it still inevitably comes back to the M16.

Specifically my “A5-I” variant, but the core change between mine and an A4 is very simple…

Adjustable stock

In my moderately well informed opinion, the M16 needed an adjustable stock, and that was pretty much it. I’m annoyed that the military continues to be behind on proper 2-point adjustable slings too, but that isn’t just for M16’s. They’re getting there.

Have we determined the M4 (and by extension, other carbines in the 11.5-14.5 barrel length range) work well? Yes we have. But the thing that made the accurate, soft recoiling, and hard hitting 20″ gun unwieldy wasn’t the barrel. It was the stock designed for a 5’11” Marine, slick (no armor), and firing prone with iron sights in a traditional marksmanship position. Not moving and shooting from upright, where shorter LOP’s work wonders.

Combat marksmanship developed as a discipline away from traditional marksmanship, building upon those lessons but taking into account the fact that troops would always be building an unconventional off-hand shooting position and needing to deliver accurate repeatable shots, not one shot on a semi-reactive target that would tell you if you hit it or not (Known Distance Army and USMC ranges) and wait to score.

So, in addition to once again loving my old musket for the great things it does well, what I am getting at is…

Stop overthinking it

Do the core components of your rifle work well?

Yep?

Good. Does your optic cover your core purpose for the rifle?

Yep? Alright, 2 for 2. Now, if its a defense gun especially, do you have a decent light on it?

Yes? Excellent, got the Turkey!

If your rifle is a 16″ or 20″ barreled quality old warhorse, rocking a front sight gas block, an A2 flash hider, and a Magpul MOE handguard, don’t worry. The question isn’t whether you should be running a 13.9 Hodge barrel, with a permanent Deadair KeyMo muzzle instead. That answer is no. You shouldn’t be. Your next rifle can be, but don’t throw the baby out with the bathwater thinking you need to replace your rifle.

Supplement? Sure. Improve on with the next build/buy? Certainly. But not need to replace.

The military concept of ‘turnover in place’ applies. Military units always (where possible) turn over a region’s responsibilities to the next unit gradually. When the oncoming unit is ready to assume the responsibility for the role, only then is the original stood down.

Applying the same logic to the rifle, you should not cannibalize the in place rifle to ready the new one. The rifle that is ready should remain ready until the new rifle is fully ready. Make sense? Have two working and complete systems before you relieve the older system.

Don’t be in a hurry to retire what works to get the new hotness working, I know it’s tempting. I’ve done it. It was dumb then and it is dumb now.

So look at those old reliable rifles and give them their due.

Gunday Brunch Episode 5: Gun movies we love

Every gun nut has a list of movies that they love for the guns, whether it’s for realism and accuracy like Way of the Gun, or over the top carnage like the Matrix, we love movies, and we love the guns in movies. In this episode, Keith and Caleb talk about some of their favorite “gun” movies and why they’re so great.