In Russian, school grades go from 1 (lowest) to 5 (highest). So the expression “It’s a five!” represents approval. This MP is definitely a five!
(another MAD submachine gun)
In Russian, school grades go from 1 (lowest) to 5 (highest). So the expression “It’s a five!” represents approval. This MP is definitely a five!
(another MAD submachine gun)
With Keltec Sub200o, you can either mount optics OR fold the rifle. Red Lion Precision rail allows both — loosen the collar, turn the forend 90 degrees left or right, re-lock. To deploy, reverse the process. It keeps zero.
RLP also makes muzzle devices and improved front sight. The optical sight shown is a very nice Primary Arms unit which combines a red dot with a very wide range of brightness and a green laser.
The laser just clears the front sight tower. A big advantage of having it above the bore is that the bullet path intersects the beam twice, just like with optics or iron sights. Lasers mounted below the bore only intersect the bullet path once, requiring offset UP at close range.
Another 5.56mm MAD rifle, this one compatible with AR15 magazines.
Same general design, two distinct roles.
Both made by Moore Advanced Dynamics.
Her husband brought a little alcohol stove made from a pop can, I had tea fixings, so this young lady got partially defrosted before warming up her hands further on a submachine gun barrel. Sadly, the much promised global warming wasn’t in evidence.
With one company making such guns known for rudeness and another for shoddy quality, it was nice to hang out with friendly people who make good 5.56mm, 7.62mm and 9mm roller-locked guns.
By accident of lighting and timing, we can even see a blurred bullet coming out of the muzzle.
It was worth braving the cold for seven hours to run a lot of ball and tracer through these guns and a stray MP40 as well.
PS: I also shoot a PTR91 which has been perfectly serviceable and quite accurate for me. There rifles were a good deal smoother, which is as expected from custom-built rifles.
Nobody wants to get into a gun fight, even if victory is assured. De-escalation of conflict is taught and practiced almost religiously. The number of homicides outside of drug-related gang warfare is essentially statistical noise besides the massive number of guns and gun owners in America.
Anti-gun people seldom appreciate how reluctant most gun owners are to use deadly force. The same people often do not understand why things they do deserve a forceful response. For example, one asked me if I’d shoot him just for slugging me in the face. I said that I would, which he felt was unreasonable and unfair. Asked if he would avoid such an outcome just by not attacking people, he said: “But what if I get angry!?”
That, in my humble opinion, is crazy. It’s the talk of a violent, entitled narcissist. And I see nothing wrong with the evolutionary pressures being stacked against such attitudes in the long run.
It used to be that fairy tale princess had to count on a knight or a friendly supernatural creature to ward off trouble. Today’s princess — or wench — can have a handholdable dragon that knows more tricks than just breathing fire. That’s hard on the goblins — as it should be!
Definitely an impressive film. Enough to make the viewer move in the seat. Tremendously immersive, worth seeing on the big screen. Excellent lighting, good camera work, realistic weapon handling. Excellent special effects.
Unfortunately, the depicted tactics were not realistic. Tiger rolling out of dug in position to close in with multiple Shermans instead of defeating them from stand-off is silly. Sherman letting infantry equipped with Panzerfausts get right on top of its position instead of scything them from standoff with cannon and MGs is also silly.
Worse from the standpoint of the movie impact, the narration kept getting interrupted with philosophical and religious asides. Too much undiluted pathos, and a serious disruption to the pacing. They should have let a Czech director make this movie, their approach tends to be lower key but more effective.
The final fight seemed to be a send-off to Sam Peckingpah’s Wild Bunch.
Despite my misgivings on the acting and dialog, this ranks as one of the most competently done war films I’ve seen yet.
Something like this. Need one or two for a photo shoot.
Keltec RDB with AAC Mini4 suppressor and 1x prismatic Vortex Spitfire scope.
with Vortex 1-6x scope and Noveske Flaming Pig muzzle device.
When I posted photos of CMR30 with a 4-16x Lucid scope, some people complained that is was too much glass. In my opinion, that depends on the size of the targets. If you are shooting varmints like prairie dogs at 150 yards, 16x helps to see the target better and to gauge the atmospheric conditions as well. A support is pretty much necessary for using 16x. If going after small rodents at 25 yards off hand or sitting, 4x and parallax adjustment down to short ranges also help.
The illuminated optic shown above is a much lighter and smaller compromise. At 3x, it gives sufficiently more detail to justify it over a red dot. Built-in BDC scale is helpful for further out, and the glass is sharp and bright. Fixed parallax becomes a limitation very close up and much further away, but the ballistic limitations of 22wmr make it a 200-225 yard round in any case. At 1.5MOA, good glass actually makes sense.
Soon, I will post results of penetration testing vs. 22LR, 9mm Luger and 357 Magnum. The conclusions may surprise you.
Does anyone know where I could find a DVD or a video file of Miasto 44 with English subtitles?