Recently I picked up a Remington SPortsman 48 12 gauge. My dad has one and, at 84, still seems to be in no hurry to let me inherit his. I now have my ow!
There is a story out there about the chap who bagged 2 elephants with a .22 Long rifle. The first appears to be a fluke catching it through the armpit and disrupting the major vessels atop the heart. He shot the second with witnesses to prove it could be done. I don't recall the sorce but I...
Nah I just don't want to whack a turbo goat with a rare or collectible primer. Besides I have 200 spares. I just though that the 1000 count box would be worth more.
any referal to collectors would be appreciated. The staynless are dated 1935. There is is a sick part of me that would love to harvet a deer with antique components.
John "Pondoro" Taylor may have been a bit excentric. But he had shot a lot of game (legally and not). While his experience led to his system, it should not be taken without some examination.
I manually measure each load. It is slow but I rarely load more than 60 rounds. I find that consistancy pays off with predictible ballistics. Once I know where the load hits I adjust the scope accordingly. I rarely shoot beyond 300 yards at game.
This is probably the dumb question of the day. I bought a bunch of reloading stuff from a friends widow. In it I came across a 1000 count box of Reminton Kleanbore large rifle primers. These things have to be ancient. Are there folks who collect this kind of stuff? What would these be worth...
49 grains of 4064 capped with a 165 gr Nosler Partition. So far this has been the ultimate deer/to moose round. I have used them on game for 10 years with few taking more than a step or two.
Heck, at the range I pop the bolts out and have them in a separate locked tackle box. The one for the rifle I am shooting goes down range with me when I change paper. There was an incident near Boise years ago where some creeps pulled up at the range and shot a fellow with his own rifle while he...
Rule #3 with Glocks is vital. Yes a lot of cops don't get much training, but departmental traing via a training officer can cure a lot of what the academy leaves out.
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