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Monday, August 27, 2018

M-4 Alaskan Survival derringer pistol


Manufactured by American Derringer Corp in Waco, Texas c.early 2000′s.
.45-70 Gov top barrel, .410/.45 Long Colt bottom barrel, single action with spur trigger.

Bears could try to mug you, you never know.


Tuesday, June 27, 2017

Ultimate Guide: How to Shoot a Pistol Accurately

Want to shoot better?
Learn how to shoot more accurately with your pistol/handgun through a review of fundamentals, easy to do exercises at home, proper range practice tips, and helpful gear.

Introduction


If you’re here, you probably realize that…shooting pistols is actually pretty hard!
In the beginning of my shooting experience, I had a lot of sympathy with the Stormtroopers missing everything too.  At least they had the excuse of a stressful situation!
Stormtrooper Miss
Yes, I know they shot blasters

Now I’m not some professional competitive shooter or instructor, but take that as a positive…I still remember how it felt when I couldn’t hit anything and the differences each tip/exercise made in my development.

Wednesday, June 21, 2017

Canadian futuristic rifle


The Canadian military is developing this futuristic rifle. It can hold a standard semiautomatic rifle as well as a shotgun or grenade launcher attachment.

Saturday, September 10, 2016

The Milkor M32A1 Grenade Launcher – Six Times the Boom!

Résultat de recherche d'images

Larry Vickers comes back to Fort Bragg to  go down with the Special Forces 18 Bravo Committee for weapons preparing. He has with him Sergeant First-Class Bill, who is the senior teacher for the heavy weapons preparing. Bill presents the M32A1, which Larry says he has never utilized. Charge says Larry’s in fortunes as he’ll find the opportunity to shoot it. The M32A1 is a 40mm, rotating activity, multi-shot projectile launcher utilized by everyone from Rangers to Green Berets to SEALs. It’s a six-shot, pivoting barrel projectile launcher – like a pistol yet with a greater blast, one you can put rounds out precisely from.

Thursday, September 8, 2016

How to Spray Paint a Nerf Gun

  1. Painting a Nerf gun can give the weapon a new fresh look and make it worthy of all your friends' jealousy. This tutorial gives the lowdown on how to paint a Nerf gun properly.

  1. Steps:

  1. Image titled Paint Nerf Gun Step 1
    1
    Purchase the right kind of paint. Not all types of paints will look good on your Nerf gun. One brand that historically works great is Krylon Fusion, as the paint bonds to plastic on the Nerf gun and makes the paint job last longer.

Wednesday, September 7, 2016

Optics Buying Guide: Scope Reticles

What’s the last thing you see before you pull the trigger? The reticle!
I’ll bet most of us tend to give only passing thought to reticle selection, but there’s a reason that there are somewhere over 96.2 billion reticle designs floating around out there. They’re designed for specific purposes. For example, a thick, course, reticle might be useful for visibility in lower light and brushy short-range hunting conditions. A reticle with very fine crosshairs will allow you to aim very, very precisely at longer distances. And there are a million other variations for different purposes.
Here, we’re going to take a look at a basic reticle types and help clarify when you would choose one design over another. The primary consideration for choosing an effective reticle is to think about the most common application for that specific optic. In other words, what are you going to do with it? Are you going to hunt in thick woods? Are you going to compete in 3-Gun? Do you want it for a home defense rifle? Are you going to use it for accuracy competition? Just plinking? Or something else entirely? Once you have your most common anticipated use nailed down, the universe of sensible reticles types gets much smaller.
Since there are so many types of reticles, let’s create some categories by general type so we can look at situations where each general style will excel.

Dot Reticles

As the name implies, a dot reticle isn’t very complicated. In fact, it’s just a dot. Most (probably the vast majority) that you’ll find are illuminated regardless of the technology used to put the dot on the glass. The Burris FastFire is a classic example of this type of reticle. With zero magnification and no tube to interfere with the field of view, it offers great overall visibility and fast sighting. You’ll find red dot reticles with different sized dots from two MOA to eight MOA depending on the intended application. A smaller dot will provide more precision at longer ranges at the sacrifice of speed and high visibility at shorter range.

A simple dot reticle like this one on the Burris FastFire 3 is great for pistol or rifle use inside a hundred yards or so.


 
A simple dot reticle like this one on the Burris FastFire 3 is great for pistol or rifle use inside a hundred yards or so.
When to choose: A need for speed, zero or very low magnification, and ranges less than 100 yards are the ideal situations for a simple red dot, although there’s no reason you can’t stretch out to a couple of hundred yards with a small and precise dot.

Duplex Reticles

What’s a “duplex” reticle? If you consider the example we discussed at the beginning of this article, thick reticle bars for visibility and fine ones for precision, a duplex reticle is a combination of both. The outer sections of the crosshairs are thick for visibility and speed, while the inner section is fine for precision. A pure duplex reticle has no other horizontal of vertical hash marks. It’s just a set of crosshairs, although they vary in width.

The thick lines of this Burris Heavy Duplex reticle make it fast and easy to see against busy target backgrounds.



The thick lines of this Burris Heavy Duplex reticle make it fast and easy to see against busy target backgrounds.
When to choose: Duplex reticles are great for short to moderate range hunting scenarios. As many rifle cartridges shoot “flat” from zero to 200 yards or so, depending on how you zero, there is no need to make significant turret or holdover adjustment to hit a target within that range. In the woods, the thick outer bars of the duplex are easy to pick up. Once you acquire the outline of the reticle, it’s easier to see the finer crosshairs in the middle to establish a precise point of aim. Since there are no range compensation marks, this design is slower to adjust for long range shots as you have to adjust turrets to get the crosshairs right on target.


Tuesday, September 6, 2016

Dual Barrel Shotgun



OLD 2012 NON-PBR SHotgun. 180 Unique Objects. 29000 Tris. 2X 4K Maps

Sunday, April 10, 2016

"Foop." |CLYDE ARMORY|

"Foop." |CLYDE ARMORY|:


Saturday, November 28, 2015

Future Solider helmet

Helmet, Mike Andrew Nash:
Cool Stuff We Like Here @ CoolPile.com ------- << Original Comment >> ------- OTAKU GANGSTA - Great concept robot/cyborg/suit sculpture:
Warrior of Zenith by SeaMonkey1.deviantart.com on @deviantART:


Saturday, November 21, 2015

His & Hers Glock


 This a  Glock 23 Gen4  with custom powder coated bullets and matching accessories.


You can find all accessories related here 


link

Sunday, October 11, 2015

Coming to a .50 BMG Near You: The AAC Cyclops

Coming to a .50 BMG Near You: The AAC Cyclops:

Don’t know when it’ll come out, don’t know who’ll get it, don’t know how much it costs and don’t know what all else.

FB Radom MSBS

FB Radom MSBS (Poland) assault rifle, 5.56x45mm NATO, being developed for the Polish Armed Forces.:

Fabryka Broni “Radom” – a Polish arms manufacturing company, part of the MESKO group – has been showcasing the MSBS assault weapon system prototypes at the 2014 SHOT Show, for the second year in a row. 

MSBS stands for “Modular Assault Weapon System”, and is currently been developed as the next-generation 5.56x45mm NATO weapon system for the Polish military and for export. The MSBS feeds through STANAG (AR-15 type) magazines, but can be converted to other calibers when required. The peculiarity of the system is its common machined aluminium upper receiver. 

When mounted on a different reinforced polymer lower receiver, with fully ambidextrous controls, the MSBS can be converted from a standard infantry rifle to a bull-pup configuration, while still maintaining a 16-inches barrel. 

A proprietary 40x46mm undercarried grenade launcher is also been developed for the MSBS system.