Guns!!

Kaendar

Well-Known Member
For the price of two Hi-Points, you can buy most of a real gun. Jmo. cn
Wat do you have against Hi points? they are probably some of the most reliable semi autos on the market rite now. For the price of 2, I could probably buy a less reliable Ruger or Sig..
 

Blue Wizard

Well-Known Member
Wat do you have against Hi points? they are probably some of the most reliable semi autos on the market rite now. For the price of 2, I could probably buy a less reliable Ruger or Sig..
I don't know about the pistol, but my carbine jams after you fire a few clips through it. If it has any fouling at all it becomes very unreliable, that and every time you fire off a round the stock vibrates and feels like you are getting shocked by something. I wanted to sell it shortly after purchase.

If you want a good cheap auto pistol tokarev's are in the same price range, my friend loves his.
 

GreatwhiteNorth

Global Moderator
Staff member
Guns - good for more than punching paper.
An "eater" Caribou Bull on the Alaskan peninsula taken with .375 JDJ.
That saddens me, I hate ppl that hunt for sport. Hunting is necessary if u need the meat.
There, fixed my post so it would be easier to get the point.


And I dislike people that cannot take responsibility for their own protein needs.

My family needs to eat, so I killed it & we ate it.
Problem solved.
 

Kaendar

Well-Known Member
There, fixed my post so it would be easier to get the point.


And I dislike people that cannot take responsibility for their own protein needs.

My family needs to eat, so I killed it & we ate it.
Problem solved.
you couldnt have gone to the store and bought some meat?
 

GreatwhiteNorth

Global Moderator
Staff member
You have a point. I just hate killing animals.
I understand - it isn't for everyone, but just think of this whilst standing @ the meat counter.
All those pretty packages of tenderloin and t-bones aren't there from some mystical meat warehouse. Those animals had to die to get there & just because you didn't kill them, or see them killed (for you) doesn't mean it didn't happen.
Unless you are an ultra strict vegan, you are as guilty as I of killing.
 

Kaendar

Well-Known Member
I understand - it isn't for everyone, but just think of this whilst standing @ the meat counter.
All those pretty packages of tenderloin and t-bones aren't there from some mystical meat warehouse. Those animals had to die to get there & just because you didn't kill them, or see them killed (for you) doesn't mean it didn't happen.
Unless you are an ultra strict vegan, you are as guilty as I of killing.
True that. I guess its the actual act of killing them that makes it hard to swallow.
 

KatBUSA

Well-Known Member
Yea no ty on fast FMJ rounds. If the round cuts clean through and didn't have the chance to translate all of its energy into the target it loses a lot of stopping power. I personally use fully frangible rounds for home defense. I wan't to make sure there is max stopping power at the same time trying not to send rounds sailing through the walls possibly injuring people I didn't want to.
 

drolove

Well-Known Member
Yea no ty on fast FMJ rounds. If the round cuts clean through and didn't have the chance to translate all of its energy into the target it loses a lot of stopping power. I personally use fully frangible rounds for home defense. I wan't to make sure there is max stopping power at the same time trying not to send rounds sailing through the walls possibly injuring people I didn't want to.
ya those work well too. from my understanding though those rounds are harder to come by then hollow points and what not.
 

BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member
Think you're hot shit under fire with a handgun? Gotta love those Russki's.

[youtube]rI01qKAqYts#t=169[/youtube]
 

doublejj

Well-Known Member
......John E. Holbrook
In early July 1967 I was sent to South Vietnam to try to determine why many of the 500 lb. bombs being delivered by naval aircraft were not detonating. I had extensive experience with both conventional and nuclear weapons. The VC would dig up these duds, melt out the Amatol and use the explosive to manufacture crude but very effective anti-personnel booby traps. I was assigned an EOD (Explosive Ordnance Disposal) team and we would be escorted by whatever Army or Marine units were available for protection. We would remove the fuses and detonate the bombs.
On July 13, 1967, while on one of these missions, we were attacked by a force of approximately 50 Viet Cong. As the attack developed my M16A1 jammed, which left me unarmed. I came across a wounded Marine officer, Captain Eldon M. Martin lying in a rice paddy. Captain Martin, although severely wounded was alert and indicated that he was lying on an M14, which was under water and that he had a fully loaded .45 pistol in his holster.
As I removed the Colt M1911A1 .45 automatic (serial # 23002XX) from the Captain, I observed three VC armed with AK-47s moving toward me in a crouched position through the thick grass which was about 2 meters high. I waited until they were within about 4 meters from me. I rose to a kneeling position using the grass as a shield. I put the front sight of the Colt on the man on the left and pulled the trigger. The man in the middle went down! I had jerked the trigger and was very lucky to have gotten a hit. I then moved back to the man on the left, held my breath and fired again. This round hit the man on the left in the chest and he went down. The last man realized what was happening and began firing his AK in my direction. I could see the bullets hitting the water in front of me as he brought the AK up. I fired my third round which hit the magazine of the AK, then glanced down striking him in the right leg. As he spun around from the impact of the 230 grain bullet, I fired two more rounds one of which hit him in the temple just above the left eye. The gunfight was over!
This action lasted not more that 4 seconds and I got four hits with five rounds of GI 230 grain hardball from a pistol that had mud and water in it. All of these hits were one shot stops against three men armed with automatic weapons. God bless the .45 ACP.
I must thank my father, who was the Sheriff of San Patricio County, Texas during World War II. He carried a Colt Government Model and I was shooting the big Colt when I was 10. I was a very good shot with both pistol and rifle very early in life and took my first deer when I was 11. I must also thank John Browning and Colt for inventing and producing the finest combat pistol ever made, bar none. I believe that if I had been armed with a 9MM, both our names would be on the Vietnam Memorial Wall in Washington D.C.
Captain Martin, although badly wounded, survived the action. He insisted that I keep the Colt and I still have it. The greatest honor was when he named his first son after me in 1971. Unfortunately, Captain Martin died in 1991 of MLS. He was a good man, I miss him as I do all the fine young Americans who died in Vietnam.
After that action, I “lost” the M16 and acquired an M14, and I was in love.
John E. Holbrook
Chief Aviation Machinist Mate
U.S. Navy (Retired)
SN 361-43-78
 
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