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Revolvers have closer tolerances than pistols so they're more sensitive to grit and debris. I had a friends S&W (in .45 ACP) lock up because of unburnt powder under the extractor star.
The sandbags are very effective, but they will make the dresser too heavy to slide. You may have to cut the legs off and replace them with wheels in case you need to roll it in front of the door.
If it's a marketing gimmick, they must have forgotten to notify the marketing department. I haven't seen any marketing hyperbole from Glock on 4th gen pistols.
Yes, the height, width and length are the same, it's just heavier. The other difference is it has removable grip panels so you have more options to dress it up. If you want a laser, you can use laser grips instead of the type that clips in front of the trigger guard and interferes with...
I haven't tried one of these, but how about an all-steel Kahr MK9? It's smaller and thinner than your Kel-Tec P11; I'm pretty sure it has a better trigger. It's a little more expensive, but you can sell the P11 to make up the difference.
http://www.kahr.com/PA-1_9mm_mk.html
No, being able feel the wood grain doesn't necessarily mean the finish is gone. It could have a thin finish that doesn't fill the grain. If water beads and doesn't darken the wood after a couple minutes, then it's still sealed. You want it to be sealed so that any oil or other stuff that gets on...
If you find it, don't use it to hammer in the locking pin on a machine gun mount. ***GRAPHIC***
No, it doesn't become more dangerous. If you find it and don't want it, take it to a gun shop or shooting range; I'm sure someone will take it off your hands. This ammo goes for $5 a round. Find...
Yes, if the finish is gone you would see and feel the wood grain. If there's still some finish, he could buff it with 1000 & 2000 grit emery paper (from paint area of automotive store), then put some paste wax on it.
It doesn't look bad from the pictures. If he leaves it like this, he won't...
Yes, he probably took some finish off. He could try to match the finish and refinish just that area. It would be hard to get a perfect match though.
For a laminated stock, I would probably try two parts of semi-gloss polyurethane varnish mixed with one part odor free mineral spirits. Wipe it...
You must be thinking of scopes for spring-piston air rifles. The reason they have special rimfire scopes is that they're focused to be parallax free at a closer range, e.g. 75 yards rather than 150 yards.
The scope should be under warranty; call Simmons and they'll give you a new one.
That's only for an AR with EoTech sight.
Your best bet is to bore sight at 25 yards, then shoot at 25 yards. Dead-on at this range will usually be on paper at 100. Use a ballistic calculator to see exactly where your load should hit at 25 yards for a long range zero...
I used to use LPS3 on outdoor farm equipment. It's very messy after it dries for a few months and turns into gummy wax; works ok, but you can't just wipe it off when you go back to use the equipment. The stuff is expensive and the nozzle tends to clog up when you don't use it for a while.
Motor...
The main problem is condensation on cold metal when the temperature drops. It will help a lot to cover the equipment with tarps or old sheets to prevent cold drafts from hitting metal. I've seen this effect on a table saw in my garage; an area of the cast iron top that was covered had no rust...
It's not hard, you just need to make sure that you drill the holes centered from side-to-side and perpendicular to the surface. I assume you just have a hand drill. If you have a small steel framing square, hold it against the stock to judge the angle to hold the drill. Punch a dimple so the bit...
Having different chokes can be useful and the longer chamber on the 887 would probably be better for duck hunting with steel shot. I'm pretty sure the Wingmaster is nicer looking though and it would do the job.
If you already have a Mossberg 500 6-shot, getting a longer barrel would be a good...
Maybe not a good round for moose, but just fine for deer. The round I mentioned Post #3 will go through a 200 lb. deer, breaking a couple ribs and punching a hole in the offside shoulder blade. What different does it make if it doesn't break skin on the far side? If you saw the internal damage...
The Bushmaster should do fine with the muzzleloader bullets it was designed to fire.
I wasn't really serious about Mall Ninja comment, but now I'm wondering if Gecko45 actually could have been involved. Marty ter Weeme, the designer of the SOCOM cartridge, is the founder of this outfit...
I voted for the Bushmaster; anything with SOCOM in the name is too Mall Ninja for my taste. Also, with Remington and Hornady selling ammo I think it's more likely to be around for a while.
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