Search results for query: *

  1. Confederate

    Unwanted Ruger revolver

    I bought two Ruger Speed-Six revolvers (both .38), and they were advertised in SHOTGUN NEWS. No one bought them and the prices kept dropping like a rock. The barrel length was 3 inches and both were stainless steel. I bought them and took them to Alexandria, Virginia, to a gunsmith who converted...
  2. Confederate

    686-6 vs no lock 686

    I have both a 686-nd and a 686-6, both in pristine condition. I've wanted to shoot the nd, but I've made it a collector's piece. And every time I go shooting, I end up taking my Ruger Security-Six because I enjoy shooting it more. But concerning my nd, I've never had it fixed via the...
  3. Confederate

    Revolvers .357 Magnum

    Why would you do that? You must really like your friend. Beautiful gun. It's one outdoorsmen would much rather carry than 6-inch 686s and GP-100s. The gun mags of the 80s and 90s raved about the 66's place as a near perfect hunter's gun and praised it as a hiking, camping and fishing companion...
  4. Confederate

    Speed Six or S&W 66

    No reason you can't have both. I'd love to have a S&W 66, but would I trade my Ruger Speed-Six 3-inch .357s, or even one of them, for a 66? Well, yeah, if I could get a mint S&W 66-no dash, but that's the only way I'd let one of them go. My 3-inchers have great actions, and a 3-inch barrel looks...
  5. Confederate

    Ruger Security Six

    If you take a black Sharpie or black magic marker, you can restore the rear sight to its pristine condition. S&W has great adjustable sights on its guns, and though Ruger has adequate rear sights, its sights just aren't as good as S&W. Still, black magic markers can restore Ruger's rear sights...
  6. Confederate

    Ruger Security Six

    I have several Security-Sixes, but wish I'd bought a few Service-Six 4-inchers. They are beautiful pistols and great for hiking, camping and fishing. Six shots and no extra steel. Very mean, lean fighting machines. I can believe people aren't selling them, and those who are are asking a lot for...
  7. Confederate

    The Better Gun: Colt Python or S&W 686?

    Years ago, the Colt workers joined the UAW (United Auto Workers) to represent them. One off color magazine, in reporting it, wrote, "Now the same people who screw up your cars can now screw up your guns!" The company actually put the UAW label on the gun boxes. This was years ago when the Colt...
  8. Confederate

    The Better Gun: Colt Python or S&W 686?

    The Pythons are laser bored sighted. To find out which is more accurate, you'd have to put them in Ransom rests and test them. Sadly, no one does that anymore. And most testers only put five shots in the test guns, which is stupid. Each chamber of a revolver has to be tested because each has a...
  9. Confederate

    Model 66 no dash

    I've never liked the way many S&W stainless guns come from the factory. If it's a fun you're going to shoot, consider having it hard-chromed. They may have a matte-polished finish option that would tone down the reflections and significantly harden the parts and lengthen the wear and tear of the...
  10. Confederate

    The Better Gun: Colt Python or S&W 686?

    Yeah, I want a Python, too. Nothing wrong with that. But I wonder what drives the demand. I can understand people wanting a Python for its lustrous blue. I have a Browning Hi-Power with an amazing blue. It's so beautiful that I don't want to shoot it for fear of damaging it, but stainless steel...
  11. Confederate

    The Better Gun: Colt Python or S&W 686?

    I know this is an issue that's been discussed many times, but trying to add a new dimension to it while avoiding points such as personal preferences, beauty, cost of manufacture, supply and demand, and concentrating only on quality, accuracy and durability. So which is it? The choices are...
  12. Confederate

    How Many of You Kept Your Factory Springs?

    Yeah, and courts are oftentimes only too happy to award idiots. That warnings telling people to read the manuals had to be put on guns speaks volumes. And attorneys who are offended by lawyer jokes need to take notice. True. Had a S&W 13 with them and it was a beauty. Why I let it go is...
  13. Confederate

    AMT 22LR Lightning: Do You Have One?

    As a personal gun owner, would you consider owning one? And does Ruger have liability insurance? Is that annoying warning on the Rugers a part of its liability? When I was a dealer back then, I never inquired about such insurance. I'd never heard of any liability lawsuits, either. That doesn't...
  14. Confederate

    How Many of You Kept Your Factory Springs?

    Bill Ruger made many irritating decisions in his career, the most moronic one summed up by what we said years ago. For example, we read three classics in English literature: War And Peace, The Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire and the Instruction Book Warning on the side of our Ruger...
  15. Confederate

    Ruger Security Six

    Yes, but if you want to be rid of the underlugs, you're going to have to shell out your $$$. I've got enough guns that don't have them that I can just sit back and criticize, but even though both Ruger and S&W have magnums without underlugs, I just don't see them on the shelves of gun dealers...
  16. Confederate

    Ruger Security Six

    I hate to resurrect an old thread, but there's a lot to be said for the older Rugers. When underlug barrels are the issue, a 6-inch barrel is near perfect. Give me a GP100 6-inch and I'd trade it for a Glock, and I don't much care for Glocks at all. And though I'm sure there are people who use...
  17. Confederate

    AMT 22LR Lightning: Do You Have One?

    I bought about 6 or 7 magazines and used two of them in my Ruger, and they worked fine. I don't know what I did with them, and I assume I still have them somewhere. I heard there were some reliability issues with the AMT Lightnings, which is why I checked it out. A friend of mine bought the same...
  18. Confederate

    AMT 22LR Lightning: Do You Have One?

    Years ago I bought one of them. I took it to the range and ran about 70 rounds through it with no malfunctions. I then brought it home, thoroughly cleaned it and it's been sitting in my safe ever since. It's too good to get rid of, but wasn't fun to shoot. The sights were Milletts (one of the...
  19. Confederate

    Weird Horror Stories/Buying And Selling

    It's one thing to kill an SS officer because he's an SS officer, but to kill a man to get his gun is cold. There were trials for those who committed war trials, and I won't mourn his passing, but I would have no respect for a man who killed another just to relieve him of his gun. Perhaps there...
  20. Confederate

    Snub-Nosed .357s, What's The Best Barrel Length?

    Hmmm...I think there's a lot to be said for what this article says in the paragraph beginning with, "The short extractor rod...."
Back
Top