Friday, February 6, 2015

Catch .22 Update

Well, wonder of wonders. I was in a large central Connecticut firearm retailer the other day, whose slogan is; "Guns For The Good Guys." Lo and behold, there in the gun case, in gleaming splendor, was a copy of the afore mentioned "Colt" .22 Rail Gun. I was suprised to see it displayed, since other retailers I had spoken to about the design had said that they could not sell it, or take one in trade.

I asked the counter person if I could handle the weapon. He then produced it from the case, and handed it to me. I quickly racked, and locked back the slide. There it was, the little threaded end cap that protected the eight millimeter threads on the end of the barrel. I showed the threaded cap to the salesperson, and queried him about the legality. He said the "threads" did not protrude from the front of the slide, and was therefore legal. "Besides, do you think the owner would risk this business on an illegal firearm" he added, as he put the pistol back in its place of honor.

I am very confused. I was pretty darn sure the gun I sold my brother-in-law was considered an assault weapon in Connecticut, and therefore, illegal to own, transfer, trade, sell, or possess. It does after all, have a threaded barrel. The new law states that a semi-automatic pistol with a threaded barrel meets the criteria for assault weapon status. It does not have verbiage that says "threading that protrudes, or is visible." Hopefully, I can relate this information to my friend before he welds the end cap on his M&P. Perhaps the brain trust in Hartford is, has, or is in the process of amending or clarifying the statute.

That pistol is now retailing for nearly $400. The next time I'm in Maine, visiting my BIL, I may revisit that firearm transaction. Slim chance he'd sell it back to me for what I allowed him to pay. Anyway, I will wait for definitive proof of legality before posting here. The waters are still a bit muddy.

Saturday, January 3, 2015

Catch .22 (Caliber That Is).

A couple years back, I sold/gave one of my nearly new 1911's to my brother-in-law. We were up hunting in Maine, and doing some plinking on an off day. He liked the pistol, and at the time, I was interested in obtaining a Colt Ace .22., so I decided to let him have it, for twenty bucks (poker money). Little did I know then, Colt Aces are as scarce as hen's teeth. More on that later.

The other day, I happened to see a write up on the same pistol, and remembered the design. It was a .22 caliber, rim fire Colt Rail Gun. It was made in Germany by Walther, and marketed in the USA by Umarex. Umarex also licensed the Colt appellation for that "Colt 1911 Rail Gun".

The reason I mention it here, is the ridiculous fact that that little pistol is now considered an assault weapon by the State of Connecticut. The brilliant reasoning behind the evil, black gun, assault status, is that that Colt "peashooter" has a threaded barrel. No, not for an equally evil suppressor, it is threaded for an end cap that protects the rifled lining of the barrel. I was staggered to hear that this "feature" made the pistol "illegal" after a friend tried to trade in his M&P .22 with the same type of barrel configuration. The store where he bought it a few years back (pre Sandy Hook), could not take it in trade as it was, and told him if he hadn't registered it last year as an assault weapon, that he was in violation of the statute (felony), and since he travelled in his car with it, he was guilty of an additional felon count to boot.

Seems the only way to make his M&P .22 sellable in Connecticut would be to have the threaded cap TIG (Tungsten Inert Gas) welded onto the barrel. Problem is, he can't transport it anywhere legally, to have the welding done. How stupid is that Catch 22? I am very glad I sold my .22 caliber pistol "assault weapon" back when I did. I would not like to have to weld anything on a firearm to make it "unassaulty". I do have my Colt .22 conversion now, not a full Ace, and I really like it. What's more, it's Kosher in Connecticut.

Someday, the folks that wrote these ridiculous statutes will actually take the time to read what they voted on, and then learn about the firearms they think are militaristic and designed only as death machines. They might even look at the local history of their fair state, and ascertain the fact that Connecticut was once the cradle of modern American firearm manufacturing. Then again, these are liberal politicians, I am giving them way too much intellectual credit. Nearly all of Connecticut's firearm companys are gone. In reality, most of Connecticut's manufacturing packed up and left, years ago. The more I think about that, the better that idea sounds. Move out of Connecticut...to where? Humm, I love New England, maybe the People's Republic of Vermont. Not the most conservative state, but they do have an "open mind" when it comes to firearms.

Last one to leave the State of Connecticut, turn off the light...oops!, who's going to pay for the 50 billion dollar deficit now? I certainly won't miss the taxes either...Now, to find a real estate agent.

Happy New Year to one and all!

Shoot Straight and Do the Right Thing.

Gaff

Friday, December 19, 2014

Thoughts On Christmas, And Other 2014 Events.

I'm laying on my bed, propped up on pillows as I type this on my iPad. This "cold" I have is now on its sixteenth day of making my life less than pleasurable. Whatever "strain" this thing morphed into, it is kicking my butt. I don't get sick. Well...there are usually very long time lapses between my illnesses. In fact, I can't remember the last time something forced me to lay in bed for a day. This malady did just that about 10 days ago. Anyway, I'm on the mends, but the cough is very persistent.

Christmas is five days away, and I was thinking about how quickly this year has past and how many changes have taken place since last Yule time. Some happy, some sad, some joyus, others, not so much so.

Here are some events, stream of thought; I have added some really nice pieces to my firearm collection. I retired last May after thirty-five years in manufacturing. My oldest son had a baby boy in June. My wife had her knee replaced. One of our hunting crew members was diagnosed with a very bad case of cancer (He is an ex-military, Vietnam helicopter gunner, and sprayer of "Agent Orange"). My Apple stock split seven ways (Nice! Bought the original shares in 1989). My youngest son and his daughter had a miscarriage (Very sad), but they are "trying" again. Samuel Colt's factory, here in the Hartford area, and his surrounding property, has just been designated a National Historical Park. There were more, but that is enough to ruminate about for now.

I hope to be part of that National Park in some way. I am going to try to volunteer on the project, and help in any way I can. It will be years in the making and rebuilding, but it is woefully overdue, and will help the area immensely. Mr. Browning spend many, many days in and around Hartford as he engineered, built, modified and tested his designs in the famous "Blue Onion Domed" Colt factory.

I hope to be a big part of my grandson's life's as well. I hope to be a bigger part of my hunting brother's life, who is battling that bastard disease. I hope I never need a knee replaced. I was truly amazed how well my wife went through that. She endured what must have been a great deal of pain, and made it seem almost pain free to me. Amazing. That's why the dear Lord gave women the task of birthing. The fairer sex's ability to withstand pain is mind blowing.

Well, the cough medicine is kicking in now (narcotic), so I think it best to draw this missive to a close. Merry Christmas to one and all. I sincerely hope everyone fares well in 2015, and I further wish your dreams and fondest desires are realized.

Shoot straight, and do the right thing.

Gaff

Tuesday, October 14, 2014

The Six Sided Echo And The Set Screw

4:59:45 PM. I touched off the eight inches of waterproof fuse. Fifteen seconds later, it ignited the one hundred grains of Pyrodex in my eighty-eight caliber cannon. The twenty-seven pound steel contrivance jumped upward and rearward against the nylon braided line securing it to the boat dock's cleats. A five foot plume of white smoke shot down the dock and the ensuing explosion caused an echo to reverberate in a seeming counterclockwise direction around the four mile long lake. Six ever diminishing echoes could be heard as the concussion hit the various hillsides, exchanging and re-exchanging the powerful low frequency sound wave. THAT was cool.

It proved to be folly to try to see how far the .875 diameter steel ball was flung into the lake. We all decided it was WAY out there. I estimated somewhere between 600 and 1000 yards.

It was young Daniel's first hunting trip. His father and a friend brought him to the North Maine Woods to hunt partridge. They were staying in a cabin up the hill from our group. Daniel heard my cannon go off at five PM sharp (dinner time). He was looking closely at the cannon at 5:01. What twelve year old would'nt be enthralled with such a loud field piece? His first question; "Did you make that?" Next; "What does it shoot?" And it went on like that for about the three minutes it took me to reload the cannon. By that time, Daniel's father and their friend arrived on scene. Their first question; "You gonna shoot that again?" "Actually, right now." was my reply. "Excellent" came out of their mouths at the same instant.

I got Daniel situated behind a large bolder directly behind the cannon about 20 feet away, and gave him the task of trying to see how far the ball went. He had returned back to his cabin and borrowed his father's binoculars when I asked him to spot the shot. He was now returned to position behind the boulder, with his ear plugs in. "This is a "Plus P" shot" I stated with authority to the assembled crowd of ten. This powder charge was one hundred and twenty grains. I lit the fuse and walked back to my "safe" location. KA-BOOM!!! Well, that was a few decibels louder, I thought to myself. "Did you see the ball hit the water Daniel?" "Nope." "Oh well, we'll try again tomorrow"; I told him. And we did just that each night for the rest of the week. The "Eighty-Eight" was a rousing success.

My new Dan Wesson 10MM Valor was a success too. It did have one hiccup. Not a failure to feed, or failure to fire, or failure to extract. The hiccup was a loose rear sight. The first two shots were in the ten ring, the next was outside the six ring, and the next was off the paper. I said to myself what the heck is going on, I can't even hit the paper? After that magazine was empty, I happened to look at the pistol, and the rear sight had moved halfway out the dovetail. Luckily, I had my calipers and hex keys in my truck. I recentered the sight, and tightened its tiny socket head set screw. New magazine, and eight hits in the ten ring. All's right with the world.

Everyone makes mistakes, and I would have to guess in their haste to ship the pistol by my "deadline", they missed tightening the rear sight. Should it have happened to a pistol costing more than a couple of grand? No. But it did, and it was not a fatal error. It was easily corrected. If the sight had fallen completely out, and then fell into the long grass and black shale...lost...well...that would be another kettle of fish. The Valor performed wonderfully. Another five hundred rounds, and it will be mostly broken in.

Oh by the way, our group managed to bag 28 partridge. Not too shabby for five old farts and a couple of thirty-something's. I think Daniel will remember my cannon for a long time. It sure made those bald eagles leave their perches when it went off. Come to think of it, the loon down the shoreline was none to pleased either. He came back every night though. Must have been good fishing in that spot.

Shoot straight, and do the right thing.

Gaff

Friday, September 26, 2014

Dreams Can Come True.

It arrived yesterday. The FedEx box showed the Kansas City address of CZ-USA as the sender. My anticipation had me childishly giddy. Really. I know, very immature, but I had been waiting since April for this Dan Wesson custom pistol. My Gun Club handled the transfer, and then, off to my shop to field strip and clean the factory oil from the 10MM, Black, "Valor" 1911.


I will be testing this new pistol and 500 rounds of 10MM ammunition this Monday and Tuesday. Bird season opens in Maine on Wednesday, the first of October. Four of my dearest friends, my two sons, my brother-in-law, and myself, leave Sunday morning for the seven to,eight hour drive from Portland, Maine, to our lakeside cabin near the Canadian border. We will be situated roughly in the middle of four and one half million acres of trees and wildlife known as the North Maine Woods. It is quite a spectacular place.

Being roughly three to four hours from the nearest hospital, with no cell service, no electricity, no running water, (you get the picture). We adhere to some very strict rules pertaining to safety. If you get seriously injured out there, you will likely die before you see a doctor. Anyway, we will be throwing lead down range from a wide variety of ordinance, and we will all be extra careful whilst doing so.

I just put the finishing touches on a .880 bore Black Powder cannon. We will use it to "announce" dinner. It should fling an .875 steel ball a good distance out into the lake. My new Dan Wesson is going to be very loud. The "88" is going to make bystanders wish they were wearing their brown boxers.

So, the dream is about to become reality. Shooting my "Dream 1911".  Its a Dan Wesson custom "Valor". It is chambered in 10MM Automatic, it has a relieved slide stop pin, Clark ribbing on the top of the slide, an enhanced magwell, tritium night sights, VZ Frag grip panels, four pound trigger pull, lowered and flared ejection port, extended magazine release, checkering on the mainspring housing and fore grip. A bunch more "standard" features too. With the pistol finished in Black "Duty Treatment", and the addition of a set of elephant ivory stocks...well...that my dear readers (if you're out there) is going to be the "bee's knees", in 1940's vernacular. For me, just perfect, really a dream.

Shoot straight, and do the right thing.

Gaff

Monday, September 8, 2014

Series 70 Government Model

You guessed it, I saw the Colt 70 series Government Model, (true USGI featured), and I had to have it. What made the purchase more inevitable, was my acquisition of a 1970's era, like new, Colt .22 LR, 1911 conversion kit. I found it on a recent trip to Florida to visit relatives. This "Colt Ace" kit allows the .45 ACP pistol to fire .22 long rifle ammo by simply removing the .45 ACP slide from the pistol, and replacing it with the .22 cal. slide assembly. Then, load 10 rounds of .22 LR into the special magazine, slip it up into the .45 cal 1911 frame, rack the slide, aim, and fire 10, .22 rounds at your intended target. Smooth as a silk stocking.

The new pistol matches the finish of the conversion kit, and makes a really nice, complete dual caliber set-up. I fitted the pistol and conversion kit into a blow-molded case last weekend. I have no complaints about the conversion kit. However, the spanking new Colt pistol disappointed me in a couple of ways. First, when I removed the slide stop to clean the factory lube from the pistol before going to the range, the frame's bluing was rubbed off in two places under the slide stop. The back side of the slide stop has a struck number "1". This stamped number was not smoothed, and it's raised edges wore (scratched) the finish off. Another surface on the back was slightly raised as well, and caused the bluing to be rubbed off. Mind you, this is fresh out of the Colt Custom Shop blue box.

Another issue, was one of the new 7 round, blued magazines furnished (2) with the pistol. It would not hold the slide open after it was empty, and refused to drop clear of the frame when the mag release was pressed. Comparing it to the other new magazine, it looked identical, yet, the other magazine worked perfectly.

The last disappointment is with the ejection of the shell casings. After firing 100 rounds of factory ball ammo through the pistol at the range, I noticed a condition that I have not seen before in any of my other 1911's. Most of the spent cartridge casings had slammed into the side of the barrel hood on their way out of the ejection port. The result was a severe flattening of the case's mouth rim.

I realize that this pistol is a true representation of the M1911A1 from the 1930's, and does not have a lowered and flared ejection port or elongated ejector like a modern 1911, but this "malfunction" would still be evident on the pistol during factory test firing, even with those modifications. I believe the ejector's front profile is causing the casing to go directly to the right upon ejection, and not upward and to the right. I also am aware that the military really could have cared less what the spent cartridges looked like. They just cared that the pistol went BANG! every time. They didn't reload, I do.

For a new pistol to come out of the custom shop, or the factory floor for that matter, with this poor ejection trajectory is a disappointment. I am a Colt fan, and own a number of Colt pistols. I don't think this pistol should have been allowed to leave the plant with this issue. I will tinker around with the extractor and ejector, and see if I can improve the ejection. Or, I may "bite the bullet" and send the pistol to Colt.

I may have to write about the Florida trip next time. There are some strange Southern folk down to Florida. Very nice mind you, just a bit strange. A fully automatic UZI made a short, 20 round appearance.

Do the right thing...

Gaff

Saturday, July 5, 2014

Back To The Future

I just read an article in a military magazine that describes the US Military's recent request for quote for a new battle pistol. This pistol must have better "one shot knock-down power" than the current M9, 9mm Beretta. What? Excuse me...did I read that right? Holy-Hand Grenades, this can't be happening.

In 1985, the same military decided to replace the currently deployed CQB (Close Quarters Battle) Pistol, the much vaunted M1911 and subsequent M1911A1. It had "one shot knock-down power", and had been used successfully in four fairly large conflicts (Browning designed and redesigned it in the early years of the 1900's and up to 1910, with the intent to have something that would have dropped the Moro tribesmen that had been jacked-up on the local pain-killing chew during the Philippine-American war of 1899-1902). The Berretta won that 1985 contract because it was good, it used standard NATO 9mm ammo, and the price was right. The M1911A1 was then mothballed.

Fast forward nearly 30 years. Now, today, they want what the M1911A1 had delivered for 80 plus years. I need to put a cold compress on my aching head. These guys in the defense brain trust want a complete new platform. That's pistol, ammo, holsters, mag pouches, and accessories (suppressors, sights, special loads, etc). If any of you reading this pay taxes, I should think this might get a bit of your dander up.

I'm no Einstein, but hey! fellas, we already have the gun; and it's no "plastic fantastic" striker fired handgun. There are many, many manufacturers already tooled up to produce a new variant of Browning's Battle Pistol if that's really what you want. In addition, many 1911 pistols currently reside in military warehouses in storage crates. Did you know it's nearly impossible to get rid of anything that is stamped "United States Property" if it is still under military control. Lightning strike is about the only way I know of. Any WWI through Vietnam era pistols out on the market today were brought home by GI's. A good portion of them, against regulations. The Pentagon must have tiptoed lightly past this infringement, and let the former personnel keep their "equipment".

This is very troubling. I must digest this information further, and research the topic a bit more. I mean, I just ordered a 1911 in 10mm. Man-Oh-Man, that, is knock down power. I will post further on this when I am more enlightened on this seeming stupidity.

Shoot straight and do the right thing.

Gaff