what you packin crazy white boy?

Started by UncleBeaner, January 04, 2010, 01:22:32 AM

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phucker

lol disco.... and if your hitting good at 25 yards thats some good shooting.look into some trijicon night sights for the xdm, cost about 100 bucks but they have a radioactive isotope in them and they glow at night, pretty sweet. oh and dont feel bad about using the loader for the last few, it takes a while to break in the mags

Langford

Quote from: Bert on January 21, 2012, 06:34:42 PM
If you guys were buying a .22 pistol for plinkin/squirrels what would you buy?  I grew up shooting a Ruger Mark II so I was looking at them. Heres the Mark III Competition. Do I need that or would the Hunter or Target be fine?
http://www.ruger.com/products/markIIICompetition/models.html

 I don't understand the differences or purpose between the slab sided target barrel, fluted target barrel & the standard. Does it really make a difference? Yeah a longer barrel will help accuracy but the different shapes.... what gives. So what do you guys think, is this is a good choice or would you get something else?

You wont see any difference in accuracy with the different barrel shapes.  The longer barrels do help, but when it comes to the slab side, vs standard, vs fluted...just pick which one looks better to you.  

I have the MKIII Hunter, and it is by far my favorite gun to shoot.  The accuracy is more than I could ever ask for, and you can tune and tweak them to fit your shooting style.  
Just like my quads, cars, rifles, etc...I can't leave anything alone.  Here is my MKIII Hunter.




This one is outfitted with a handful of parts from Volquartsen (yes phucker, I do like that brand ;) ).  It is the most accurate pistol that I have ever shot.
'07 powerwheels raptor...with a belt driven twin screw centrifugal turbocharger!  Wait for it, wait for it...!


phucker

volquartsen makes some damn nice stuff. my dad has an old mk11 and my brother used it for our cpl class, the instructors were giving him shit that he didnt shoot enough shells for the test cause he had a hole no larger than a dime. the gun is more accurate than you are lol

Bert

 Langford I like the looks of that. I checked out Volquartsen.  I think a trigger kit or accurizing kit would be in order for me. How are those grips ? The finger spacing is correct?  It feels good?

My state isn't in favor of suppressors so I heard about this from a guy at work. You guys used it yet?
Quiet-22™ .22 Long Rifle rounds
http://www.cci-ammunition.com/whatsnew/newproducts.aspx

After looking again online its a toss up between the Hunter & Competition MK III. I do favor the looks of the fluted barrel on the Hunter. It looks high tech compared to the slab sided barrel which looks odd to me.  I think  some parts from Volquartsen & possibly a new grip & I'd be happy.  I would like some range time with both of these before buying but I havent' found that opportunity yet. I'll have to keep looking. Thanks for the input guys.

disco

I haven't shot the ammo you listed but I tried out the Aguila Super Colibri that came in the other day and it doesn't stack right in the MkII magazine and doesn't even begin to cycle the action when fired.  It's a little louder than a hot pellet gun to me coming out of the MkII but I haven't tried it in anything with a longer barrel yet.  I would imagine with a normal 40 grain bullet the CCI you listed will function much better.

http://www.midwayusa.com/product/295321/aguila-super-colibri-ammunition-22-long-rifle-20-grain-lead-solid-point?cm_mmc=Froogle-_-Ammunition+-+Rimfire+-+Blasting-_-PriceCompListing-_-295321

QuoteSuper Colibri has no powder, relying on only the primer to propel the bullet down the bore. The result is an extremely quiet rimfire round, perfect for close-range pest control or quiet plinking.

WARNING: These rounds are powered by the rimfire primer only. They must only be fired in handguns. If fired in rifles, the bullet may remain lodged in the barrel.
Will not cycle the slide of semi-automatic handguns
Aguila packages these as Long Rifle ammunition, but they are in fact slightly shorter than a 22 Long cartridge [my emphasis]

Technical Information
Caliber: 22 Long Rifle
Bullet Weight: 20 Grains
Bullet Style: Lead Solid

Ballistics Information:
Muzzle Velocity: 500 fps
Muzzle Energy: 11 ft. lbs.


mostly stock with a 12t sprocket of fury

Krandall

Are suppressors registered to people? How would someone in a state that doens't allow them get one?

not asking for myself. Just wondering out of the search for knowledge,


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PCIII Maps Here:
http://www.krandall.com

Cowards die many times before their deaths The valiant never taste of death but once

disco

I think the best way is to have a lawyer draw up a gun trust.  If you don't go this route you need to submit fingerprints and have the head of your local law enforcement agency to sign off saying its okay for you to own one.  They aren't going to do that so that's a dead end.  With a gun trust, it becomes the legal entity owning the suppressor.  Everyone named still needs to have a clean record because they're going to get a background check. 

This isn't all inclusive, this is off the top of my head.

Not 100% on the order of events here:
write up the trust
pay for suppressor (remains at store until paperwork clears)
submit paperwork
wait 3-6 mos
get your $200 tax stamp (looks like postage stamp but it's $200, not $0.45)
go to gunshop with your stamp and approved paperwork
place stamp on paperwork
take possession of suppressor
make color copies and store originals in a safe place
a copy ALWAYS remains with suppressor
mostly stock with a 12t sprocket of fury

Langford

Quote from: Bert on January 23, 2012, 02:03:32 PM
Langford I like the looks of that. I checked out Volquartsen.  I think a trigger kit or accurizing kit would be in order for me. How are those grips ? The finger spacing is correct?  It feels good?

My state isn't in favor of suppressors so I heard about this from a guy at work. You guys used it yet?
Quiet-22™ .22 Long Rifle rounds
http://www.cci-ammunition.com/whatsnew/newproducts.aspx

After looking again online its a toss up between the Hunter & Competition MK III. I do favor the looks of the fluted barrel on the Hunter. It looks high tech compared to the slab sided barrel which looks odd to me.  I think  some parts from Volquartsen & possibly a new grip & I'd be happy.  I would like some range time with both of these before buying but I havent' found that opportunity yet. I'll have to keep looking. Thanks for the input guys.

The accurizing kit is the way to go, it will make your trigger pull superb.  I love the grips, but if you have small hands...they may not be for you.  My girlfriend doesn't like shooting with them, but they fit my hand perfectly...I was unsure at first because of how big they are, but I couldn't go back to the factory grips now. 




Krandall, Disco nailed it with the process for getting a suppressor.  But you will still have to look into your state laws, some states still don't allow them even with all the BS that he listed.  Michigan just recently made them legal to own...I'm very tempted, but I'm still not sure if I can justify the cost with all of the hassle you have to go through to get one. 
'07 powerwheels raptor...with a belt driven twin screw centrifugal turbocharger!  Wait for it, wait for it...!


Krandall

Lang, aren't you from the hood? Don't you "" know people


:lol: get it done brotha!


Sponsored by:
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PCIII Maps Here:
http://www.krandall.com

Cowards die many times before their deaths The valiant never taste of death but once

preddy08

Just took my Schmit Ruben out with a buddy to the firing range. 200 & 300 metal gongs aint shit for this bad boy.

Love the stright pull bolt.





Origional soldiers tags from back in the day.
Just a little 81hp trail bike.


UncleBeaner

its been a while but guess who just got their nfa trust done along with class three paper work drawen up. oh noes for the zombies
:beans:

phucker

haha awesome beaner. i cant wait till im back home, im gonna get two tax stamps, one for my 10-22 and one for my ar15. but i am not gonna but them, way to easy to build them so that is what i will do. it is basically just a can with several baffles in it that screws on to the end of the gun, nothin to it. i just ordered a 20 inch bull barrel for the ar15 im building and had them thread the end of the barrel. man i need to find a good paying job back home so i can have some time to play with my toys

disco

I had to google that Schmidt-Rubin rifle.  Me and some guys from work ordered some Mosin-Nagants some time back.  I was telling one of the guys, "can you imagine carrying this into battle?  Talk about outgunned."  I kind of felt sorry for the poor slob that carried it all those years ago.  Then I got to thinking about it, it really was a leap forward.  You had either muzzle loaders or single shot rifles.  Here comes a "new" rifle with 5 shots ready to go as fast as you can work the bolt.  We had muskets, then single shot trapdoors, then a 1903 Springfield (5 shot bolt), then came the 8 shot semi-auto Garand.  Then a 20 shot select fire M14.   Now 30 round select fire rifles are the little guys.  Maybe I'm the only one that thinks about it but it's an interesting evolution.

I'd thought about a single can but then reading how dirty .22LR is, I might need another.  Darn.  :) 

Do you have to pay a tax or file as a manufacturer if you build one?  I can see your serial number now:  phkr0001
mostly stock with a 12t sprocket of fury

phucker


disco

for Randy, lol, eagle and swastika on a Mauser.  I thought there was one more distinct on it but I guess not.


hammer and sickle on a Mosin-Nagant


crescent moon of a Turkish Mauser, basically a copy of a 98.  Bought this for $40 with the bayonet.  Told my friends what I paid for it and they scattered before I could pull the trigger.   :lol:
mostly stock with a 12t sprocket of fury