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  • June 14, 2013

    Goodbye and Thank You to Tom Knapp and Bob Munden

    By Phil Bourjaily

    It has been a sad stretch for fans of exhibition shooting. In a short time we have lost both Tom Knapp and Bob Munden. Knapp, who died at only 62 in April, was best known for his exhibitions with Benelli shotguns, and for throwing up to 10 clay targets in the air at once and breaking them all before they hit the ground. 

  • June 13, 2013

    Have We Reached the Tipping Point?

    By David E. Petzal

    As the late Dr. Hunter S. Thompson once observed, societies can keep people in check only up to a point. When more people than the cops can handle get cheesed off about something it can cause the dissolution of a large and well established police state (the U.S.S.R.), at least three revolutions (American, French, and Russian) and issue-based insurrections too numerous to count. Did anyone drive 55 mph when Jimmy Carter told us to? Did anyone pass up a drink during Prohibition? Did anyone foreswear the reefer because Nancy Reagan told us to just say no?

    Now, we may be on the verge of a new era when firearms laws may be collapsing under the weight of consumer demand. In Maine, the state police are so buried under concealed-carry applications (and Maine is not a pain in the ass about this) that it can take 150 days to receive your permit. In Maryland, during the first four months of 2013, the state police had received more than 57,000 applications for guns—more than had come in during 2008 to 2011. The backlog currently stands at 26,547.

  • June 11, 2013

    Upland Shotguns: Thoughts on Barrel Length

    By Phil Bourjaily

    Once a year I shoot my sporting clays gun—a Miroku Charles Daly with 32-inch barrels—on a two-day charity preserve pheasant hunt. The stock is fitted to me and the long, heavy barrels move inevitably to the birds. It’s almost impossible to miss with it.   

    Longer barrels are easier to shoot with, especially on any kind of crossing bird. Most of my hunting guns now have 28-inch barrels, which seems like a good compromise length. Of course, barrel wall thickness varies and two guns with 28-inch barrels can have very different balance, but in general they have a little bit of weight forward that makes them easier to shoot. In fact, chances are I will shoot a gun pretty well if I pick it up and it feels too heavy in the muzzle.

  • June 10, 2013

    Never Trust a Bashed Lead Tip

    By David E. Petzal

    During the taping of this season’s Gun Nuts (which promises to be bigger than Ben Hur) the question came up whether a deformed lead tip can cause a bullet to fly awry. Several times in the past, when shooting a group, I had shot a slug with a deformed tip and seen no indication of this at all. But before I went on camera I decided to check.

  • June 7, 2013

    Gun Fight Friday: Colt 1911 vs. S&W 500

    By Phil Bourjaily

    This week’s Gun Fight features a pair of guns for actual gun fighting. It’s a classic matchup of revolver vs. semiauto with a twist: The revolver out-magnums Dirty Harry’s .44 by a wide margin.

    First, the semiauto: It requires no introduction, but I’ll introduce it anyway. John Browning’s 1911 pistol has been everywhere and done everything in the past 102 years. The .45 ACP cartridge was adopted by the armed services after the .38 proved ineffective against Moro tribesmen in the Philippines. This is a full-size 1911 but it is slender enough to ride in a holster or, as reader Bob Camarata explains, holsterless, between belt and hip. Camarata carried the gun as a police officer in Waterloo, Iowa, and carries it still—now with the addition of Trijicon night sights.

  • June 7, 2013

    A Cautionary Tale About Anything That Runs on Batteries

    By David E. Petzal

    About 35 years ago, I bought a trigger pull scale so I could measure trigger pulls. Back then, you could use weights on a rod to do the job, or you could get a spring-style scale with the weights engraved on a brass tube. There was a hook connected to the spring, and you put that on the trigger and pulled carefully until you heard the firing pin fall, and you tried to read where the indicator was at the instant you heard the click.

    The scale was by no means perfect. You had to develop a touch with it so you could see what it read at the crucial instant, and every few years you had to polish the thing so you could read it. But it worked.

  • June 5, 2013

    The Mystery Antique Flintlock Ring

    By Phil Bourjaily

    In the spirit of the 100-bladed knife that contained a pinfire revolver, today’s curiosity is a flintlock ring.

    It comes from the arms and armor collection of the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam and dates to 1650-1670. Set in between two pieces of rock crystal is a miniature flintlock, complete with a tiny flint inside. Parts of the lock are blued. The whole mechanism is carefully made and there’s cutout along the top of the ring so you can cock the hammer.

  • June 4, 2013

    Sharpen Your Shotgun Skills for Dove Season with Low Gun Skeet

    By Phil Bourjaily

    It’s less than three months until dove season and now is the time to start practicing.

    There are a few people who don’t need much practice. They are the lucky ones who shoot so much during each season that they can fish or golf all summer, then pick right up where they left off when the season starts again. Most of us don’t fall into that category. I certainly don’t—so instead of fishing or playing golf, I shoot low-gun skeet.

  • June 3, 2013

    A Few Words About Bugs and Bites

    By David E. Petzal

    In order to hunt animals it’s generally necessary to tolerate the outdoors, which is usually too hot, too cold, or too wet. That you can live with. But the worst part of the outdoors is bugs. I do not like bugs. Bugs, however, like me a great deal. Here are a few observations on the subject.

    Chiggers, or redbugs, inhabit the South, along with pellagra and okra. They are insidious little bastards who burrow under your skin and inject some kind of disgusting chemical that liquefies your flesh, which they then slurp up. Up until the invention of Permethrine, every one who stood in a Dixie swamp or field was fair game for redbugs, and once they bit you, the bites swelled up and itched like fire. The common cure was to paint the bite with clear nail polish which caused the little monster inside to suffocate. Now, however, if you spray Permethrine on your clothes, the chiggers leave you alone.