I saw a couple of used J.P. Sauer side by sides at the Bass Pro Shops in Montgomery, Al the other day. Does anyone know anything about them? They seemed pretty well made but they were selling for about $600.
8/17/2008 10:30:31 AM
\Picked up a GSG-5 in 22LR for $499[Edited on August 17, 2008 at 10:50 AM. Reason : .]
8/17/2008 10:50:33 AM
Oh man that looks like a fun plinker.
8/17/2008 10:53:56 AM
I've seriously considered getting one of those, just for the fun value, but instead decided to get a .22LR conversion kit for my AR. We'll have to go out to the range sometime and do a .22 fun day.
8/17/2008 8:21:48 PM
I use the .40 Short & Weak as my primary carry round. My G23 holds 14 155-grain Ranger SXTs. They step out at about 1200 and flatten out into a nifty little flower-petal talon thingie when they hit things. .40 has quite a bit mroe bump and snort than the 9mm though, and muzzle flip and recoil is noticeable.In response to the post on the mighty 9mm.[Edited on August 18, 2008 at 9:38 AM. Reason : ;]
8/18/2008 9:28:41 AM
Who here has done trigger work? I've got a Savage Model 24 and the trigger is atrocious. I'd like to smooth out the pull and drop the pull weight. If anyone has any advice let me know or feel free to drop me a PM. Thanks!
8/18/2008 1:26:36 PM
8/18/2008 4:46:54 PM
I agree with some of that except that you left out the .357 SIG cartridge. It out performs the 9mm and .40 on almost every level. It is also more fun to shoot. Personally I dont want to get shot with any of them.
8/18/2008 7:07:40 PM
8/18/2008 7:27:48 PM
The savage 24 looks complicated as hell according to my gunpartscorp. catalog. I have used Kapp Ogburn ( inside pdhsc) with great results, he will work on old stuff but he has a big backlog. Take it and go talk to him. more than likely the work needed is just stoning some stuff smooth and polishing the pins, then lubing it with a good grease. That being said it has more pins and doodads to go flying into your carpet than a box of tinkertoys, so dont fuck with it. gunsmiths charge extra if you bring it in a ziploc ( ask me how I learned that gem) You will have to pay for alot of labor but not much for parts.
8/18/2008 8:07:59 PM
yeah, I'm in Alabama. I'm not going to Ogburn for this one. I wanted to do it myself. Part of the reason I bought the 24 was as a project gun . . . complicated or not. I wasn't planning on doing anything major, just replacing some springs and polishing / stoning the trigger mechanism. I'm competent enough that I can deal with flying pins and doodads. That's what linoleum is for.
8/18/2008 9:02:03 PM
8/19/2008 10:07:17 AM
8/19/2008 12:52:59 PM
this is the tenative plan for the GSG-5
8/19/2008 10:29:30 PM
Tacticooool .22LR [Edited on August 19, 2008 at 10:38 PM. Reason : Shit looks nasty son, if only it were an MP5.]
8/19/2008 10:38:12 PM
you can get a semi auto mp5. it's all old though. mp7 yo.
8/20/2008 4:47:23 PM
8/21/2008 1:08:10 AM
8/21/2008 9:06:39 AM
Why didn't you put it in yourself?A Timney is a drop in part, just pull the barreled action out and swap trigger assemblies.
8/21/2008 11:16:04 AM
Thanks for the link. I'm fully aware that this isn't a beginner job, but you have to start somewhere and this isn't a gun I'm emotionally attached to. I just thought it was pretty cool and I wanted a project gun, so this is it.We'll see how it goes.
8/21/2008 11:29:56 AM
8/21/2008 6:15:46 PM
did you get the gsg-5 at PDHSC? they had 1 rifle length marked sold ont he wall when i went in, 1 'sold' pistol length, 1 still up for grabs.
8/21/2008 7:39:40 PM
8/22/2008 7:50:53 AM
i agree i'm not willing to part with upwards of 10k for one weapon. well maybe a howitzer or something, but nothing smaller.
8/22/2008 8:23:49 AM
http://www.cannonltd.comA full scale 12 lb Mt. Howitzer is only $6,500 if you buy it with a carriage which'll run you another $4,200. So you're actually pretty close with $10k.And lets be honest, it'd be a lot cooler to blast away Old Man Dreher style with this in your back yard than some stupid MP5:
8/22/2008 12:42:05 PM
uh can it shoot real cannon balls? functional?
8/22/2008 1:01:18 PM
yup, you've just got to make your own cannonballs or canister shot. ]
8/22/2008 2:12:57 PM
bcsawyer and I have pulled the cord on the new 32pound cannon at Ft. Fisher. Family legacy FTW
8/22/2008 4:58:12 PM
8/23/2008 6:23:20 AM
freakin grapeshot man, crazy stuff. takes too long to load. would be useless against a zombie army.[Edited on August 23, 2008 at 10:39 AM. Reason : eh ]
8/23/2008 10:38:48 AM
both grapeshot and canister loads just as fast as round shot.
8/24/2008 4:20:20 PM
do you have to load powder manually? does a prepacked charge exist?
8/24/2008 10:54:01 PM
If you're interested in modern competition with them, check this out - http://www.n-ssa.org/. I do Civil War Reenacting, so I know quite a few people that do this regularly. If you've never seen a live shoot, you're missing out.
8/25/2008 10:07:56 AM
^^ Powder came pre-measured in cloth bags. I don't recall if they had different increments as they do today, but the bag itself was rammed down the barrel, followed by the projectile of choice. Canister and grape shot both came pre-packaged:canister:Grape Shot:IIRC, grape shot was a bit bigger, had longer range, and was more common in naval warfare where it did the double duty of anti-personnel and anti-material whereas canister was mostly a field weapon.
8/25/2008 2:03:06 PM
ToysRUs is selling Night Vision Scopes?I wonder if it comes with a nerf adapter.http://www.toysrus.com/product/index.jsp?productId=2850488&kw=2850488&f=Taxonomy/TRUS/2254197&sr=1&origkw=2850488#showReviewsfreakin sweet. but not for $2800
8/26/2008 6:14:36 PM
8/26/2008 8:01:16 PM
So the trigger job on the Savage 24 went pretty well. I took a little height off of the sear, polished the face of the trigger and, aside from a tiny bit of creep at the beginning of trigger travel, the gun is considerably cleaner breaking than before.
8/28/2008 6:19:07 PM
pics?
8/29/2008 11:14:48 AM
No, not really. A slightly reduced and polished sear on a 30 year old trigger isn't worth taking pictures of when it is already out of the gun, much less after I've re-assembled the thing.It looks about like this though:This'll be a fun gun to bum around in the woods with after deer season is over and while squirrel is still in.
8/29/2008 3:30:36 PM
If you own a 1989 or older P226 Sig Pistol with serial # U0 or U1 and were thinking about getting the .22LR conversion kit, think again. It doesn't fit.The newer ones with U3 and higher do fit. The same with the 229 conversion, only the railed models are compatible.
8/30/2008 9:39:00 PM
I'll never use that information, but thanks!
8/30/2008 9:47:57 PM
I found a used, but still in very good condition, Sig P220 today with a Crimson Trace laser sight grip and Trijicon night sights for $650, which sounds like a good deal to me but I wanted to double check with people who know better. Is that a good deal or does it sound about what one might expect?
9/9/2008 5:11:31 PM
caliber? what condition are the CT grips in? Over time the soft rubber grips can disintegrate, so you'd want to check for that. Doesn't sound unreasonable though, if it is in really good condition and the CTs are too.
9/9/2008 6:28:17 PM
I bought my P220 with Trijicon night sights but no Crimson Trace laser sight grip for $550 in great shape if that helps.
9/9/2008 8:58:27 PM
CT might replace the grips for you if they are too far gone.
9/9/2008 9:02:15 PM
That sounds like a fairly good deal.Used 220 with night sights would be around $600 in excellent condition. CT grips are freakin $250 new...so $650 in good condition sounds good to me.Keep in mind, night sights use tritium, a radioactive isotope of hydrogen.It's got a half life of around 12 years. If the 220 is 12 years old or more then the sights will only be half as bright, (or getting close to worthless in all but complete darkness).So, if the gun is old then night sights shouldn't add much value.[Edited on September 9, 2008 at 10:27 PM. Reason : My 17 year old 228 has night sights that are hard to see in total dark.]
9/9/2008 10:25:13 PM
Tritium is very nice in nuclear weapons too. It allows you to make them significantly more potent (Tritium-Deuterium fusion). Although I believe the tritium is actually formed during the fission process of Lithium-7 (Or even naturally occurring, un-enriched Lithium-6) in "dry" Thermonuclear Warheads, rather than being isolated beforehand and injected into the mix. The reason for this being that, as stated above, the half-life of tritium is very short and requires warheads that contain it to be serviced quite often to keep them viable.That crazy eagle scout kid (David Hahn of "Commerce Township, Michigan") used tritium from gun sights as well as americurium from smoke detectors to use in his homemade "reactor." It was a block of lead with a hollow hemisphere cut into it, lol. He looks real good with all of those radiation sores y0.mmmmmm, tritium boosted fusion (15Mt total; 10Mt "fast fission," 5Mt fusion I believe):
9/9/2008 10:40:31 PM
9/9/2008 11:41:28 PM
Yeah, from my understanding his face looked like that recently (Photo was from 2007, but he built his "reactor" in 1994 at age 17), when he was arrested for stealing a bunch of smoke detectors from his apartment complex. They think those sores are from recent exposure, indicating that he's still trying to build reactors or is at least playing around with radioactive isotopes. He did join the Navy and was put on the USS Enterprise (Nuke powered as you know), but he was not allowed to see the reactor (And we both know that's probably the only reason he went in). It also says on his Wiki page that he later re-enlisted as a Marine.I like how he got his mom's property designated as a Superfund Haz. Mat. site, btw:
9/9/2008 11:56:44 PM
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9/13/2008 1:12:36 PM