What is the worst gun you have ever owned?

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Eric F

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For me in my young just turned 21 days I bought a Hi-point infact I ended up doing paperwork on six of them as the first one broke so I took it back and the factory sent me another this process continued until finaly after 6 guns I decided enough is enough and sold the last one and bought a norinco 1911

By far Hi-point was the worst gun I ever owned.
 
Llama 45! and I really hate to say that....The llama 45 woud fire three rounds and slide lock.....out of the box.....cool off laying on the table and the slide woud fall.... 3 or 4 more shots same....

I had a llama .380 and it was a really cool firearm...a baby 1911 really and concealed well, shot well, not a problem one!

Also bottom of the heap for me......jennings .22 and .380....broke slide on .22 & .380 with factory ammo.
 
mini 14... shot atleast 12" groups at 100yds from a bag with all diffrent kinds of ammo. ( it was not just me, several other people had simlar results with that gun)
 
It is a tie between a Charco Undercover and an AMT Backup. Both were awful and coincidentally I bought them both on the same day.
 
Hmmm. Tough one. I've never had a "bad" gun, "bad" being defined as poor quality, or failure to function as intended. I've sold plenty, but mostly because I never really took a fancy to them, or they didn't get shot much and I wanted to trade for something else. If I had to answer this, I guess the lowest price/quality gun I've owned was a Kel-Tec P11; sold it in favor of a Kahr, which I like much better, but the Kel-Tec was a good gun for the money.
 
ruger p-85 MK II

While it was fairly reliable, it wasn't very accurate. at 25 yards, slow careful aiming from a fully supported rest, it would shoot a 2 FOOT group.
 
Hands down Llama .45 , runner up Llama 9mm. Oddly enough DW owns a .380 Llama Micro Max that isn't a bad little shooter, considering how badly I despise Llamas that's high praise.
 
Jennings .380 - horrible POS that wouldn't fire one mag worth without jamming.

At my last CCW class there was actually a guy letting his wife qualify with a Jennings. Makes me wonder if he does care about her safety!
 
Ruger MK III 22lr.

Total piece of crap. Impossible to take apart, jammed all the time. Was fairly accurate, but thats about the only good thing about it.
 
Ruger MK III 22lr.

Agreed! Right before Ruger released their Mark 3, I got into shooting more. I'm glad I went with a Buckmark for a .22 pistol, I had nothing but problems with a friend's new in box Mk3, it jammed even with quality CCI ammunition.

my 91/31 since the irons are off and I don't have one of those tools to fix it

Windage - a rock, hammer, etc. Elevation - you should be able to set this with the rear sight leaf. You might need to also adjust the front sight post, which does require a tool.
 
Wow. That's two negatives on the Ruger MkIII. I don't have one, but I was going to add one to my stable shortly.
 
A tommy gun clone made in Georgia. Fail to feed, fail to fire, stovepipe jams, short cycle, trigger pin broke (twice).
Paid $320 for it, sold it for $450 3 months later!!:evil:

Oneshooter
Livin in Texas
 
Ruger MK III 22lr.

Total piece of crap. Impossible to take apart, jammed all the time. Was fairly accurate, but thats about the only good thing about it.

No offense, but did you read the manual and try different type of ammo?
 
Cobray M-11 back when I was in high school (80's).

When it didn't hang up, it couldn't hit the side of a barn-- from the inside.


-- John
 
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