Thursday, February 3, 2022
Wednesday, February 2, 2022
Biden Is A User of ... You
NEWS FLASH: Biden wants to appoint the first-black-female Supreme Court Justice to cement his virtue-signaling legacy (or his handlers do), but he threatened the filibuster to block the first-possible black-female Supreme Court Justice way back when.
Sunday, January 30, 2022
Saturday, January 29, 2022
CCO 1911 & Glock Hacks
The "ideal" carry Glock in .357 SIG would have a G17-size slide with a G26-size handle. So, maybe. There is a lot to unwrap here, BUT there might be a short cut.
Can you just short circuit the whole problem by throwing a G31 barrel in a G33 gun?
Actually, it looks like it won't work: https://www.glocktalk.com/threads/are-glock-handguns-barrels-interchangeable.1787366/
So, well. Time to get out the hacksaw. And it'd be cheaper. The original work around.
Tuesday, January 25, 2022
The Most Pedestrianly Exciting Shot Show 2022 Release
There is enough to be all aflutter about a few releases that were actually or sort of made at Shot Show 2022.
Mega-boutique gunmaker KelTec's P15 demands a response from the blue-collar gun makers.
.30 Super Carry raises many questions including: (1) Is it hype? (2) Will it ka-BOOM pistols? (3) Will it gain traction?
A four-column (A)rmalite (R)ifle magazine receiver.
A hunting cartridge that is perfected for a shorty bolt-action. And it is 8 or 9mm or something.
Franklin Armory's ridiculously expensive G-S173 binary trigger system (pretty much everything but the frame, barrel, and recoil rod and spring).
| credit: TheFirearmsBlog |
Harrington & Richardson has been reinvented with a retro M-16A1 clone being its first release. H&R really does still holds some trademarks to and full technical specifications for the M-16, because H&R was one of the original manufacturers. And guess what. Palmetto State Armory bought H&R in the Remington liquidation.
So what's the big news? Taurus has a .327 Federal Magnum revolver already cataloged on its website. It looked very exciting, because it looks very similar to the 856 UL revolver - the 6-shot .38-Special Ultra-Lite version of Taurus's 5-shot model 85. Unfortunately, the current offering of the Taurus 327 is a full-weight albeit snubnose 6-shot format tipping the scales at 22 oz. It's at a nice MSRP of $371 and 5 cents.
I really hope Taurus has a 327 UL in its back pocket. Maybe it will be called the 3277 UL - keeping the trend going for Taurus of adding a round at the same time that the Ultra-Lite version appears.
| credit: Shooting Illustrated |
Wednesday, January 19, 2022
KelTec's NEW P15 vs. the OLD PF9 (and, yeah, of course the SIG P365)
| credit: KelTec |
KelTec Joins The Fun
The #Micro9 craze has been going great guns, since SIG Sauer introduced the P365. Well, not really. It took the other players a few years to catch up. Unfortunately, KelTec was early to the party and sat in a folding chair on the edge of the dance. Let me digress.
KelTec had the P11 for years. It sort of took Smith & Wesson mags that were from S&W old metal DA/SA pistols, but it came with a 10-round "proprietary" mag based on the S&W mag. It was everything the SIG P365 came to be. Don't laugh!
Before we get into the nitty gritty, who are the players in the industry?
Micro 9s (order of intro)
KelTec P11 (1995-2019)
SIG P365 (2018-now)
Springfield Armory Hellcat (2019-now)
S&W M&P Shield Plus (2021-now)
Ruger MAX-9 (2021-now)
KelTec P15 (2022-now)
And to celebrate the P11 that was ahead of its time - a Viking funeral.
The Nitty Gritty
How does the KelTec P15 stacks up to the gun it sort of pretty much replaced - the KelTec P11? And how does it compare to the lightest 9 - the KelTec PF9? How does it size up to the SIG P365 - the quintessential micro 9?
Well, hell that's inconclusive! Is the KelTec P15 a SIG P365 killer, or is it just a little bit too tall?
NEXT: KelTec P15: Glock-19 Killer!
Monday, January 10, 2022
.30 Super Carry IS .32 Super!
UPDATE:1/6/22 4:00 PM
UPDATE: 1/6/22 11:43 AM
Why is no one saying this?
Same caliber: .312
| .30 Super Carry (credit: American Rifleman) |
| .32 ACP (credit: Wikipedia) |
| .30 Super Carry (credit: The Gun Dungeon) |
Tuesday, December 21, 2021
Revolvers Are Great: Revolver vs. Autoloader for CCW (Part 3)
Differences. It's all about the differences.
Will You Carry It?
It's all about size, weight, ease of concealment, and feeling comfortable with the damn thing. All of the above could be a deal breaker. Two people could buy the same 16 ounce revolver and have two different outcomes as far as being willing to carry the gun. Different modes of carry affect how it prints and feels. People are shaped differently.
There are so many factors, but different holsters can mitigate any issues. So I believe that choosing between a revolver and a semiauto will depend on other factors more than exact comfort. I could be wrong, especially when someone that wears more form fitting clothes has to make a choice, which means more concern about comfort and printing.
Training Up
Revolvers seem to provide more of an "easy entry" path to conceal carry. Checking to see if a gun is loaded and basic functions seem so obvious and intuitive with a revolver. That's why gun-store clerks seem to naturally try to put snubnose revolvers in the hands of women. Small revolvers can be a handle to shoot, but so can the lightweight .380s.
Of course, the modern "troupe" is that you can getting anyway hitting the target, if you hand them a Glock G19. But I am not so sure that they wont' be shooting themselves in the thigh, if they take such an easy-to-shoot gun as their CCW gat.
So a revolver seems to be harder to shoot accurately. That probably is mitigated, because most non-LEO legal carriers will have to defend themselves at close range. But again, the semiauto has another advantage, mostly. Because of the long double-action trigger of revolvers, a person with an autoloader can most likely get their shots on target quicker. But then again, that is probably not needed.
For a more in-depth look at the differences between proficiency with an autoloader and a revolver, here is a video by Caleb Gidding:
Ammo Cost
Ammo cost doesn't seem to a big deal, if you're just going to get a gun and not shoot it until you need it. But that doesn't seem very responsible. My wife wants to learn about handguns, get her CCW permit, and shoot regularly. And I want to shoot more. I'm of the opinion that you should shoot with your carry gun with carry ammo (at least analog, which ammo companies are capitalizing on) - NOT .22s or easier-to-shoot larger guns - at least when you are practicing for carrying.
So, practice costs money for range time and ammo.
(brass-cased FMJ 50 round box - 12/13/21 on LuckyGunner.com)
9mm $23.50
.380 $37.00 (57% more)
.38 Special $38.00 (62% more)
9mm wins this category on a round by round basis. But how many rounds would you put through a CCW gun at all - or in each caliber?
A Gun Is A Gun
Eventually, you have to make a choice. The conventional wisdom is that autoloaders have won the fight, but revolvers can ease an entry into CCW. And if one can handle the trigger pull and recoil - and make hits on target at typical non-LEO civilian ranges - then a revolver is good enough. So be it.
Monday, December 13, 2021
Kel-Tec's Chassis-System Pistol
Who knew that Kel-Tec has a pistol in it's line up that uses a serialized chassis instead of a serialized frame? Well, I did, sort of.
| Credit: KelTecWeapons.com |
| credit: UBuy.gr |
Last week, my wife said once again that she wants to get her CCW and a small pistol. .380 would be most practical size wise, but 9 mm is always more available. So I've been looking at all kinds of guns, and of course I drifted back to the absolutely lightest pistol (not revolver) - not the smallest one (that might be the Kahr CM9/PM9) - the Kel-Tec PF-9.
Then I started looking for recent, good video reviews of and comparisons with the PF-9. There aren't many. Then I stumbled on the a recent video about the P11 - the original double stack micro 9. Which made me check Kel-Tec's sight for dimension info, and naturally to their "so long" video for the P11. Which is on You Tube, on Kel-Tec's channel. So I started scrolled and stumbled on this, their video for switching the grim frame of the PF-9.
Wait a cotton picking minute! That's a chassis system, but ...
If you watch the video, then you realize that taking the gun apart and putting it back together could be a comedy of errors. Stuff can fall off the chassis, and there is a distinct possibility that you will assemble a nonfunctioning pistol - if you're not careful.
And what is the advantage for you to switch grip frames with the PF-9?: (1) Change colors. (2) replace a broken grip frame without having to retransfer your firearm
So for the earliest chassis-system pistol that I know of, Kel-Tec has done a piss-poor job of capitalizing on it. Could they already have done a slim double-stack modern micro 9?
