Observations

Best Gun for Home Defense?

noburglarMost people looking to buy their first gun tend to have the same question: What’s the best gun for home defense? I know I have a tendency for long winded introductions, so I’m going to skip right to the point: Let’s answer that question, shall we?

Note: The original opening I had in mind was 6 paragraphs. You’re welcome. 

So what does “home defense” entail? Close quarters combat in relatively tight spaces. There are obstacles and hallways. Defensive situations are fast, and violent. As such, maneuverability is of utmost importance.

So what are the options? You have the choice of a rifle, a shotgun and a handgun. Continue reading


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Creative solutions…

46gJFI just love looking back at the progress of guns from the hand cannons of ancient China to the advanced weapons of today. You can tell, as time went by, people knew and understood the inherent weaknesses of the time. It’s interesting to see how some of the more creative (yet less engineering inclined) people thought of ways around the problems. Continue reading


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Thoughts on Aurora

I haven’t commented on the Aurora massacre here on this blog. There were too many different aspects of it, too many things about it that had to be digested. Watching the media coverage of the very predictable political fallout, particularly when it comes to gun rights, I am filled with contempt, not only for the shooter, whom I will never name here as notoriety is exactly what he wanted, but also for those who would so eagerly dance in the blood of the shooter’s victims as part of their ongoing crusade to strip millions of Americans of one of their inalienable human rights, the right of self defense. Continue reading


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From Tacticool to Practicool: The Pistol Bayonet

bayonetEvery so often you come across something someone’s done to a gun purely as a joke, like the guy who puts an Ace bottle opener on their AR15 to stay hydrated. He shows it off in a YouTube video and everyone has a good laugh. That’s pretty much what I figured when I first saw a pistol bayonet.  The only conclusion I could come to was that someone modified their pistol for a bayonet as a gag and in a horrible turn of events that spun out of their control, someone took it seriously and ran with it, leaving the original gun owner absolutely mortified with the Pandora’s Box they had opened. It doesn’t help that some of the more influential voices in the world of young people getting into guns makes attempts to show it as somehow useful.

Thanks for nothing, Call of Duty 3!

Believe it or not, the pistol bayonet has a historical precedent. Sailors would carry them on raiding parties because when you’re in the bowels of a cramped ship with no room to draw a sword and your pistol only carries one shot, it helps to have a Plan B. But that Plan B became less and less necessary when pistols started carrying more rounds and didn’t take five minutes to reload. The same thing occurred with rifle bayonets over the years as rifles became easier to reload and shorter in length. It used to be a bayonet on the end of a rifle made perfect sense because the rifle itself was already as long as a spear, troops were already massed in large, tight formations in order to concentrate firepower, and in the middle of a close-in fight, you couldn’t call a time-out to reload for five minutes.  While some modern rifles still have bayonet lugs, they’re almost never used in combat.

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The last U.S. Army bayonet charge was in 1951 (though the British were bayoneting people as late as 2009). But even though they’re not used as much, bayonets for rifles still make some sense, whereas a bayonet on a pistol makes me wonder what the hell is wrong with people. Explain to me the scenario where this thing will be used as it’s intended. I’ve only seen them advertised on automatics, so let’s assume the shooter using it has at least 10rounds in the magazine. (FOAD, California!). What possible situation are you going to be in where you run through 10rounds in a magazine, possibly 10 rounds in another, and instead of escaping you’re closing with someone to bayonet them with your Glock?  For Chrissakes, this is the Orange Park Mall not Rorke’s Drift!

There’s also a safety aspect to think about, if patent absurdity isn’t enough to dissuade you. By putting this thing on the front of your pistol you now have all the safety concerns of a pistol added to the safety concerns of an unsheathed razor to contend with.  I’ve been looking on the internet to see what other people have been saying about this thing, and some of the stuff I’ve seen makes me fearful for the people who interact with them on a regular basis. One guy lamented that he wasn’t sure which Airsoft gun he was going to put his on.

Read that again. He put a razor sharp bayonet on the end of a TOY that he runs through the forest with and uses to engage in simulated combat with his FRIENDS. You know how your mom always told you not to run with scissors? I’m pretty sure the basic principle underpinning that lesson transfers readily to sharp %&^*ing knives.

What to get instead: A light or a laser

Believe it or not, the rail below the barrel of your new pistol has a purpose beyond comic relief, and the options for it are quite practical, particularly for new shooters. While a flashlight or a laser isn’t quite as dangerous as a knife, you could make “vroooo vroooo KSHHHHH!” noises and pretend it’s alight saber, though I and all of your neighbors would beg you to make sure it’s unloaded first.

Lights

Weapon lights and I have an uncomfortable relationship. I have a family situation wherein having an adrenaline-pumped me pointing my light in the same direction as my weapon isn’t ideal in the most likely situation I would use it for its intended purpose. However, I do believe it’s a good resource for those who don’t share that situation. A single person living alone who hears something strange downstairs in the middle of the night would benefit from having a light on their weapon, allowing them to have one hand free for opening doors or operating light switches. Lights have become so prevalent in the firearms community that they can be found just about everywhere.

Lasers

Despite what The Terminator and Cobra have taught us, a laser isn’t a one-to-one trade-off for sights, but it does have its uses,particularly when dealing with low-light conditions where the shooter may be amped up.

Laser

Have you ever tried to aim with iron sights in the dark? It’s a bitch, ain’t it? A laser ameliorates this somewhat by putting the dot in the approximate area your bullet is going to go and the best part is you can see it in the dark, a distinct possibility for anyone who’s purchased a gun with the fear they may have to use it at home in the middle of the night.  While some have said a laser is a two-way street, the idea that someone can find you by following the laser has been pretty much debunked. It’s not ideal for every circumstance, but for this situation it’s a good fit.

I dislike the entire pistol bayonet concept for a variety of reasons. One is practicality. Are you going to carry this thing around with the blade attached or wait until you’re getting mugged, yell “fix bayonets!” and hook it onto your gun while your would-be mugger stares at you in slack-jawed fascination?

The second is simple safety. For the most part I believe all care should be made to make guns safer for the user and more dangerous for the assailant. Sticking a knife on the end of a gun isn’t going to make the user safer and probably more of the opposite. I’ve carried knives on me since I was 13. You know how many times I’ve stabbed an attacker? Zero. You know how many times I’ve stabbed myself? Holy crap!Break out the abacus ‘cause we’re going to be here awhile.

Look, if you want to learn to use a gun, learn to use a gun.If you want to learn to use a knife, learn to use a knife. Not everything goes together like toast and jam. Sometimes it’s just toast and chapstick. Sure, I could make the stretch in logic that eating toast while protecting my lips from the elements is a good idea, but why would you even want to try?


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From Tacticool to Practicool: The Fake Suppressor

There’s a tendency among shooters to want the best gear, and there’s nothing wrong with that. One doesn’t walk into a car dealership and demand to see their shittiest compact, after all, and shooters are no different. For the most part, people want to outfit themselves with quality equipment, and for better or worse, the barometer of quality gear is the military. This is a fallacy for a number of reasons.

  1. Military equipment is geared toward a specific purpose that 99% of people will never see.
  2. The military has passed on acquiring great pieces of kit due to price or politics.
  3. The military makes stupid decisions.

Number 3 is kind of subjective, but if you need evidence just look at the latest fiasco wherein the military spent $5 Billion dollars on camouflage that makes Soldiers easier to see.

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The end result of this thinking is that people go out and buy stuff for their weapons because it’s “milspec” even though “mispec” will do absolutely nothing for them. A person who does this obsessively is commonly referred to as a “mall ninja.”  This is the guy who puts a long-range scope on his 16-inch AR and only shoots it at a 100-yard range.  The guy who buys a plate carrier and no plate.

And believe me, it’s hard to keep yourself from buying the latest gadgets for your rifle. They make so many scopes now!  With so many dots! Some are green and some are red! And it has RAILS! You can put a scope on top of another scope!  HOW CAN YOU MISS WITH TWO SCOPES?! YOU CAN’T! IT’S A MATHEMATICAL IMPOSSIBILITY!!!

Then you look at the price tag attached to your new super scope, and you realize you’ve made a horrible mistake. “Two scopes?! What the &*%$ was I thinking? You can’t hit anything with two scopes! It’s a mathematical impossibility!”

“But, TJ, you condescending %&*$#, who gives a crap what we put on our rifles?” you ask. And the answer is “no one but you.” If you’re military or LEO and you live in that tactical world, this isn’t for you. If you want something because it looks cool, then nothing I say will change your mind. This new series of articles is for the people who are just getting into firearms and their exposure to what good gear is comes from movies, video games or the internet. Because you shouldn’t feel like you have to spend a lot of money for something you’re not going to use or use to its potential.  So we’re going to kick this off with what I feel is the most egregious example of mall ninjitsu, the fake suppressor.

Now, look, there is a lot, and I mean A LOT of “tacticool” gear out there, but the saving grace of 99% of them is that they at least serve some actual purpose.  I may not need a quad-rail handguard on my AR, but at least it performs a role holding stuff. A fake suppressor, on the other hand, is like motorcycle helmet made of paper mache. It LOOKS like a helmet, but when the time comes to protect my bean from the ravages of the open road it doesn’t even do a proper job of holding the pieces of my skull together for the paramedics who must now deal with the added inconvenience of finding them all.

Now, a real suppressor is a good piece of kit to have. It’s better on the ears, and in the states where you can hunt with them, you can take an animal without scaring off every other piece of game for three miles. The problem is they’re expensive and you have to have ATF’s permission to have one in the form of a tax stamp, and that can take ages. So, instead, people put a fake suppressor on their rifles, usually AR15s. It doesn’t make the retort any less loud. It doesn’t hide muzzle flash. The best you can say is that the weight of this metal cylinder on the end of your rifle helps with muzzle rise. It’s like instead of having a spoiler put on your car, you have a vanity plate that says “SPOILER.”  I’ve heard of some people having fake suppressors permanently fixed to their short-barreled rifles in order to get around those pesky laws mandating that rifles be of a certain barrel length, but sweet monkey Jesus!

Let me get this straight. You wanted a short-barreled rifle, but since for whatever legal reason you can’t have a short-barreled rifle you extended the length of your barrel by welding a fake suppressor onto the end of your gun. The end result is a rifle with a longer barrel that behaves like a short barrel (as the fake suppressor isn’t rifled).

Now call me stupid, but I think I just would have bought a longer rifle to begin with.

I’ve seen these things being sold online for as much as $125. That’s $125 for a block of metal that makes your barrel longer with no net benefit.

silencer

But if you HAVE to get one…get the best one out there.  This one is from Spike’s and costs about $40.

Spike's Fake Suppressor

Spike’s Fake Suppressor

What to get instead

Okay, you want your AR to look cool. I get that. But you also want it to be useful. And if you’re not going to shell out the cash and time to get a real suppressor, you should probably just get a new flash suppressor/compensator. Within the same price range as a fake suppressor you can get something that screws onto the end of your AR with an actual function. And with the wide breadth of designs out there, you can get something that also makes your rifle look nice. A compensator diverts gasses from the muzzle to help “push” the barrel down as you fire, cutting down on recoil and muzzle rise. A flash suppressor hides the muzzle flash from your rifle, meaning that if you’re shooting at that damn raccoon who keeps coming up on your porch in the dead of night, you’re not blinding yourself with a big flash of light on the first shot. You can buy them separately, or for a little extra you can get something that does both, and they’re only about an inch long.

There’s tactical and then there’s tacticool. The difference between them is practicality. For the no-kidding operators out there who really do jump out of planes and conduct special operations, tactical is practical. For those of us who don’t, it’s not. It’s tacticool. It’s mostly harmless, but it can be expensive. Julius Caesar was said to have a servant stand next to him during speeches to whisper the words, “You are not a god,” into his ear as the crowd cheered him to keep his feet on the ground. I sometimes think it would be nice while I’m browsing at the gun store if my wife would whisper, “You are not an operator,” into mine.

Keep shooting.

TJ


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My Grandfather’s Gun: The Revelation Bolt Action

revelation1It was stored in a forgotten corner of my grandparents’ house for an unknown number of years. After their passing, it was used as a decoration in a room in my parents’ house that I had never really been in. It hung there above the door for a few years, adding to the western theme of the room’s decor. Then my parents moved to a smaller place. They had no need for the knick knacks and such from that room in their new home. So then the gun was passed to me. I don’t really remember the exact time frame when I came to possess this gun. I do know that, at the time, I didn’t have the interest in guns that I have now. It was a while before I even unwrapped it from the towel it was handed to me in. I knew, however, I would never get rid of it. My grandfather was a great man and this reminder of him was precious to me. There was just a lot going on in my life at the time and I didn’t have time to spend with this gun. Looking back, I rather regret that.

As my interest in guns increased, so did my desire to find out more about this gun. There was also an unending urge to see this gun restored to the shiny, working condition it so deserved to be in.

In my research of the history of this gun, I learned a lot about the firearms industry and just how our attitude towards guns has changed over the years. I’m not speaking in purely political terms, because that is forbidden on this site. I’m speaking more about the access to firearms overall. You’ll see what I mean soon enough.

First off, let’s look at the mechanics of the gun itself. Most people today, when they see a bolt action they immediately think “rifle”. Admittedly, that was my first thought when I saw this gun. It turns out, however, that this is a bolt action, .410 shotgun. I’ll let that sink in for a moment. A shotgun…with a bolt action. They sure as heck don’t make them like that anymore! The bolt action shotguns were a kind of stepping stone between the break actions and the pump actions. They didn’t last long either. Most of the bolt action shotguns only held 3 rounds so the 6 round pump actions were much more desirable. Consumer demand drives production and the bolt action shotgun disappeared from the market and memories of the firearm industry.

So where did it come from? This particular gun was built by a company called “Revelation”. I wouldn’t be surprised if you haven’t heard of that brand. I would be surprised, however, if you haven’t heard of that company’s real name.  Much like the Kenmore brand is just Whirlpool appliances repackaged and sold exclusively at Sears, Revelation is another name for Mossberg (and a couple others, as it turns out). Revelations were rebranded Mossbergs to be sold exclusively for Western Auto Parts stores.

revelation2And Bam! An M. Night Shyamalan twist in the story! You read that right: this gun was bought at an auto parts store! Western Auto wasn’t like your typical Pep Boys retail store that you know today. They were a pretty massive mail order catalog company similar to Sears, Montgomery Ward and J.C. Penney at the time. The difference was that Western Auto pretty much only sold auto parts at first. Sometime in the 1940s, Western Auto started selling rifles and shotguns through their catalogs. They weren’t the only ones either. All the major catalog chains sold firearms that were rebranded for their stores. You could be getting Mossbergs, Remingtons, Winchesters, Savage Arms or High Standard guns and never know! Even crazier better, at one point you could order a Thompson Machine Gun from Sears and it would be delivered right to your door. No need for an FFL or even a background check! Talk about a whole different mentality towards firearms!

But I digress. Mossberg wasn’t the only manufacturer that was rebranded as “Revelation” for Western Auto. Depending on the gun you purchased, you could be buying either a Savage or a Marlin as well. All three companies sold their guns under the Revelation name. This lasted until the late 60s when the stores all stopped selling guns due to political and societal pressures.

Let’s talk about the features of this gun: In short, there aren’t many. In order to keep prices competitive, these store brand guns were the absolute basic models. You see, stores wanted something to sell and the manufacturers didn’t want to be undercut. So if you wanted a cheap gun, you bought their gun from Western Auto or Sears. If you wanted something with some toys features, you had to go to a real gun seller and get the real brand name. In this case, you get a single brass dot for a front sight, a blued barrel, and a solid wood stock (I’m not sure if it’s birch or walnut).

As far as the condition, I’ve got some work to do to it. There’s some corrosion on the outside of the barrel and it desperately need to be re-blued. The stock is in surprisingly good condition, however. After a quick wipedown with some Ballistol it looks almost new (yes, you can use that stuff for polishing wood and it works great!).

In terms of the functions of the gun, it feels great. The trigger is really crisp and the bolt moves smoothly. The only thing that worries me is the condition of the barrel. I plan on taking it to a local gunsmith to get it looked at in the near future.

I want this gun working. It deserves to be in working condition. Not only to honor the unique history of the gun itself but the great man that bought it.


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Feelin’ Hot Hot Hot

hotI don’t know if you’ve noticed, but it’s a bit warm outside. I know it’s hard to believe we’re having hot weather in the summer but temperatures keep climbing and it doesn’t look like there’s going to be any breaks for a while.

I should note that this article pertains to those of you who shoot at outdoor ranges or outside in general. If you shoot in one of those air conditioned indoor ranges, you probably don’t have to worry as much. However, I didn’t open up my browser to type up a discussion about weather alone. I’m typing this as a warning: this heat is dangerous.

I don’t mean in terms of heat exhaustion and such, but that is something else to keep in mind if, like me, you shoot at an outdoor range. I’m talking more about your ammo and the guns that shoot it. Here’s an experiment: go look at your gun collection. Chances are most, if not all of them are black.

Now, as Mr. Wizard (or Bill Nye for those of you under 30) told us long ago, darker colors absorb more light and therefore get hotter than lighter colors. This means that your dark colored guns and magazines, if left in the sun, will get hot fast.

This heating will cook the bullets inside the magazines. According to the Mythbusters, you’d have to cook the bullets to between 400-500 degrees before they’d go off on their own so I don’t think you’ll have to worry about that. What you WILL have to worry about is that when bullets get hot, the explosion of the powder is more energetic and that can lead to a damaged gun. Depending on what kind of rounds and their loads, the results could be a catastrophic failure of your weapon.

bulletsAt the same time, many guns have tight tolerances. I’m going to talk in depth about just what that means in a future article. The short of it for now, however, is that there is a bit of give in the moving parts of a gun to allow for movement and expansion from shooting and other things. If something goes outside of those tolerances, the gun usually stops working. If it’s too far out of tolerances…that’s right: catastrophic failure.

So when your dark colored gun is sitting in the light energy generated by a ball of fire with an outer surface temperature of 9,940 degrees fahrenheit, it’s going to warm up. Again referring to Mr. Wizard: when things get hot they expand. So as your gun heats up those tolerances are going to get thrown off. If the gun heats up too much and you try to fire it, you get a broken gun.

So what can you do to minimize the heating of your gun? First off, keep them out of the sun. If there isn’t much shade, get a couple of light colored towels (white, preferably) and use them to cover your gun and magazines between use. The thick towels will insulate from the outer air and the light color will reflect the sunlight instead of absorbing it.

If you really want to go all out, get one of those soft side coolers and a cold pack and store your ammo or loaded magazines in there. Don’t go crazy with the cold packs and I wouldn’t store my gun in there, however, because you don’t want condensation forming on your stuff as that can lead to rusting. Cooling the cold pack in the refrigerator before going out instead of the freezer is a great way to cut down on potential moisture.

Other than that, drink a lot of water and put on some sunscreen. It’s an oven out there. Be safe!

Images used under Creative Commons License from SashaW and kcdsTM respectively.


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What’s a scout rifle and do I need one?

In the 1970s, Col. Jeff Cooper, a rifleman’s rifleman if there ever was one, pioneered the idea of a general purpose rifle that would work in a variety of roles from hunting to defense. The concept was dubbed “the scout rifle,” and Cooper refined it over the years until his death in 2006. Cooper believed in the “scout,” a man who “acted alone, not as a member of a team. By choice he did not fight, but he had to be an expert at the hit-and-run art of single combat. By choice he did not shoot, but if forced to shoot, he shot quickly, carefully, and as little a possible. ‘One round, one hit and then vanish!’ – that was his motto. He did not need an assault rifle. He needed a scout rifle.”

Cooper caption

So Cooper set out to create the perfect rifle for this man. Now, this isn’t ‘Nam, this is scout rifles… there are rules, rules so stringent that not even Ruger’s Gunsite Scout, designed with help from people at Gunsite who knew and worked with Jeff Cooper, lives up to Cooper’s vision. I’m not talking about the political “if it has a magazine, it’s an assault rifle,” kind of rule, either, where they’re deliberately vague. Cooper’s vision was specific for very specific reasons.

  • It’s a bolt-action rifle.
  • It’s ideal weight is 6.6 pounds, but can be as heavy as 7.7 pounds, and that’s with the scope and sling.
  • It’s a meter long or less.
  • It’s barrel should be about 19 inches.
  • It should have a low-powered, low-mounted, long eye relief scope placed forward of the action.
  • Ghost ring iron sights are not required, but are preferred.
  • It should have a fast loop up sling.
  • The preferred caliber is .308 Winchester, though other calibers can be used if more power is required. A .243 can be used if the shooter is frail, but .308 is considered the minimum for power.
  • It has to shoot a four-inch group at 200 meters.

Not so easy to find now, is it? Cooper’s requirements come for good reasons. A bolt-action rifle is typically lighter than a semi-auto and less prone to failures. It has to be light-weight because whoever’s using it is running through the wilderness with it for long periods of time. It needs to be short enough to not snag on brush as you’re walking, but the barrel has to be long enough to retain range and power. It should have iron sights as well as a scope because scopes break. It needs enough power to take out an unarmored target, human or animal, weighing in at 500 pounds. The sling should be able to support your arm during a shot, not just be a way to haul the weapon around. Bipods are okay, but Cooper felt they were almost useless in rough terrain and could become a dangerous crutch for a shooter to get addicted to.

A long-eye relief scope allows a shooter to hit a target at range while retaining their peripheral vision. (Okay, I know this is kind of a faux pas, but it’s the best way I can come up with to describe it. You know how when you’re playing Call of Duty on the X-Box, and you’re using a sniper rifle, and while you’re looking through the scope, some random asshole named HelloKitty@$$Face comes around the corner and tags you in the side of the head from like eight feet away because you couldn’t see him come up on you? That’s the reasoning behind the long eye relief scope. You can see the world around you and maintain situational awareness.)

snipercaption

Cooper was big on shooting with both eyes open, and with a low power scope mounted forward of the receiver, you can do that pretty well. It also makes it easier to load the weapon with a stripper clip, and you can hold the weapon around the receiver, the rifle’s center of gravity, when you’re hauling ass away from a bear big enough to laugh at .308. The downside is that it doesn’t do well in low-light conditions, and during sunrise and sunset you can get a glare off the glass that makes the scope useless.

So this is hardly just a rifle with a weird-looking scope. Cooper didn’t give a dump about making the rifle look nice. Function came before form, and yet the end results are pretty nice looking rifles. The Mannlicher Scout, a rifle Cooper approved of, has sleek lines and looks almost futuristic for a bolt-action rifle.

But should you get one of these general, all-purpose, do-anything, ass-kicking rifles designed by one of the most brilliant men in the firearms field since John Moses Browning descended from Heaven to present man with the 1911?

In a word, no.

In several words, allow me to explain. I’ve heard the scout rifle described as “a solution looking for a problem,” and unfortunately, in the modern world, that’s true. This is a frontiersman’s rifle. It’s a rifle you use when you don’t know what you’re going to shoot tomorrow, but it’s a pretty good bet you’re shooting something. On paper, that sounds great, but in the modern world, how many people live that life? What it excels at is doing everything “okay.” You can use it for hunting, but it’s not going to be as good as a regular hunting rifle. You can use it for defense, but it’s not going to be as good as an AR15.

Look, in the modern world, guns are like women’s shoes. There’s a right kind for every occasion, and even if a person doesn’t know Gunsite Scoutwhat kind of gun they want, they have a good idea in the back of their mind why they want a gun just like a woman may not know specifically what brand of shoes she needs, she knows she wants shoes for dancing at a wedding. So when a person says, “I want a gun,” they may not know what kind of gun they want, but they know they want a gun for a primary reason. If I live in a bad neighborhood, I want a gun for self defense. Do I get a scout rifle? If I want a gun to go hunting elk, do I want a scout rifle? A scout rifle could do those things, but not as well as a gun that’s designed to do those things, and in this day and age, 99 percent of shooters don’t need a gun that does everything.

“But, TJ, you bombastic simpleton, what’s the harm in getting a scout rifle if that’s what I want?” you ask.

Hey, I’m all for getting what you want. And you’re right, the above reason, in itself, is not enough to determine that a scout rifle is the wrong way to go. However, there’s another factor that, when combined with the above, makes me say no to a scout rifle.

The price.

The MSRP for a Ruger Gunsite Scout is about $1,000. A Mannlicher Scout, the over-the-counter rifle that comes closest to Cooper’s vision is $2,000. Custom-made scout rifles that accurately reflect Cooper’s concept can run past $4,000. For the price of a Mannlicher Scout, I could buy my AR15 ($1,000), my Ruger American ($380) and my FNP-9 ($500). That’s an awful lot of money for a bolt-action rifle that doesn’t hunt well during the morning hours when the deer are actually out and about.

I’m not trashing Cooper’s vision. I just think it came too late. The guys who explored the heart of Africa in the turn of the century probably would have been jazzed to have scout rifles with them. It’s the kind of rifle Teddy Roosevelt would have wanted to carry while wandering around the American west. But those frontiers aren’t frontiers anymore, and the scout rifle is a rifle that excels in a frontier.

This guy should probably have a scout rifle. But that’s because he’s living that life in one of the few places and few ways you still can.

Bearcaption


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Good golly, Miss MOLLE!

What’s the deal with MOLLE gear?

Recently MOLLE has become to tactical fashion what modular rails are to AR15s. They’re everywhere. Vests, holsters, body armor, sheathes, bags, tactical tomahawks, and a Christmas stocking that makes me weep for humanity. You might have some and not even know it. Take a look at that “tacticool” rifle case you bought for your AR15. Does it have a bunch of nylon loops sewn into it about an inch-and-a-half wide? Congratulations, you have a place to strap frag pouches.

MOLLE stands for MOdular Lightweight Load-carrying Equipment, and you pronounce it like the girl’s name, “Molly.” Basically, it’s a series of rows of heavy-duty nylon sewn into bags, tactical vests and body armor, and it allows a person to customize where they attach and store their gear. So, for instance, if you’re a left-hander, you want your magazines stowed somewhere near your right hand. You just loop the straps of your mag pouches through the loops on the right side your vest and voila, convenience! Continue reading


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Don’t Be This Guy.

I’m going to address this one to the fellas, just because I don’t normally see women behaving this way.  It really goes for everyone though..

Before I begin, I want to say that this has nothing to do with safety rules, which we should all police each other on all the time.  Hurt feelings or not, safety is paramount. Continue reading


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