I am a left hander and right eye dominant and my cousin is the opposite. I shoot, and have always, right handed. It was just natural for me. My cousin we changed when he was having trouble with a scope one day. I shoot rifles completely right handed. Lefties have more ambidextres tendencies and...
I have a Jennings Mack 20 scale that I like very much. It weighs to the one hundreth of a grain and you can buy a power adapter for it so you won't need to mess with batteries.
http://www.digitalscalesaz.com/Jennings-JScale-Mack-20-Digital-Scale
I sent my cylinder to the cylindersmith. Big improvement. Cut my groups down, heck I couldn't even get a group before. Now it is my favorite gun to shoot.
My brother, an ex-Navy small arms instructor, has always taught a KISS method of shootin. Grip, sights, trigger. Resetting the triggger comes naturally. I never seen the benefit to being taught how to reset the trigger.
You only feel the trigger reset if you go slow. And if you are shooting...
I had one on my Charles Daly Hi Power. It was good enough for pratical shooting. I changed mine to a set of Novak three dot sights. I get better groups now. The Big Dot sight is easy to see, though. The reason for the change was the last owner froze the rear sight on the gun with lok-tite. I...
I was lucky enough to run into a Charles Daily High Power built by Dan Wesson. bought it used for $250.00 and it has been a good gun. The real choice is yours, but, if I could afford a Browning I would get one.
My first knife was given to me for my seventh or eighth birthday by my brother and sister. It is an Ulster Boy scout knife.
My most prized knife that I bought is a D'Holder I bought at the New York Knife Show for $250.00. It is the one on the top left.
I agree with Marb4, revolver. Easier the learn, load, unload and clean. You don't need a Smith either. Taurus and Ruger make some nice ones. I even hear that Ruger might be coming back out with the SP-101 in .22.
When I watch that video my whole insides feel like they are being impacted by the bullet. Would deffinately not want to be hit by that. Or any other bullet for that matter.
Try this.
http://www.reloadammo.com/9mloads.htm
http://data.hodgdon.com/cartridge_load.asp
Lyman's 49th edition states for a 115 grain JHP with 231 start at 3.5 grains to a max of 4.9.
I found this helps with figuring out the cost savings with reloading.
http://10xshooters.com/calculators/Handgun_Reloading_Cost_Calculator.htm
I can't say I am spending less, but I can say I am shooting more.
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