Need a quiz answered on why when looking through a scope for a while I can't get it focused right. I've noticed here lately that if I take too long with a shot the sight picture will go out of focus. Even looking away from the scope doesn't help much when I get back on it. It doesn't happen 'as bad' with my 8.5-25's but I have a Premier boosted 20-50 (originally a 8.5-25) that really gives me fits. I can start a string with really good focus and 10 shots in I have to start trying and re-focus. Very frustrating when trying to run a good string in good conditions.
Optically challenged, Bolt out!
Bolt
Focus challenged in............, NC, - Friday, February 1, 2008, at 00:11:19 (ZULU)
(no direct proof of GCA'68 violations claimed).
http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=59970
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Friday, February 1, 2008, at 00:20:54 (ZULU)
HA!~
Boltster Dude...
>" I've noticed here lately that if I take too long with a shot the sight picture will go out of focus. Even looking away from the scope doesn't help much when I get back on it. It doesn't happen 'as bad' with my 8.5-25's but I have a Premier boosted 20-50 (originally a 8.5-25) that really gives me fits. I can start a string with really good focus and 10 shots in I have to start trying and re-focus. Very frustrating when trying to run a good string in good conditions."<
First off, how old are you... (it makes a difference).
Us old guys have a special advantage and a special disadvantage.
Lemme know and then I'll 'splain (e-mail me if it's a secret ;)
-
'lito
CatShooter
Spring has sprung, da' creek has riz, I wonder where dem kitties is? - Friday, February 1, 2008, at 04:15:10 (ZULU)
<So, are you fellows saying that the current production SS10X42 (and similar) is a SFWA exclusive?>
Yep
jc
Cordova, TN, United States - Friday, February 1, 2008, at 05:08:45 (ZULU)
Yep, getting old sucks, Bolt sleepy and out!
Bolt
Unfocused in........, NC, - Friday, February 1, 2008, at 10:21:04 (ZULU)
<So, are you fellows saying that the current production SS10X42 (and similar) is a SFWA exclusive?>
Yep"<
And more YUP... SWFA has been the supplier for many years - they contracted for the scopes to be made for them, after Tabasco went TU.
The scope was originally a Tabasco catalog item.
-
Boltster - I'm on the way out - I'll answer tonight.
-
'lito
CatShooter
Spring has sprung, da' creek has riz, I wonder where dem kitties is? - Friday, February 1, 2008, at 13:41:28 (ZULU)
Something they Taught us going thru the course was to look at green when our eyes start getting tired and blurry... It is suppose to help relax them. I tried it, and I didn't find it not to work so hey give it a shot. let us know if it works for you.
Morgue
Mourge
Overseas, - Friday, February 1, 2008, at 16:22:06 (ZULU)
Duman, you and Bravo come by the Snipers Hide booth. I'll show you some thing's I've been doing the last couple of years. I'll also show you an ammo belt that I've been working on that'll be going to an operator overseas just as soon as SHOT is over. If I'm not there have Bravo give me a call, he has my number, or have someone there holler at me and I'll come say hi.
SSG Mac, I'll have some of my suppressor covers at the Ashbury International booth. I guess they'll be on display, I had to overnight a bunch of them to Vegas Tuesday. What does your buddy Gary Vance do for Ashbury?
Mourge, I've been using MultiCam for almost 3 years in the gear I make, and completely agree with you. I told Bravo about it a while back, and I think I created a MultiCam monster.
Tony Burkes
Alvin, Texas, United States of America - Friday, February 1, 2008, at 16:28:15 (ZULU)
Geoff,
I remember reading a post somewhere a year or so back where a guy was having a similar problem. Luckily, his eye doctor was also a shooter. He had a set of lenses made up with the right magnification for him right in the center of the right lense. He couldn't do much else with those lenses, but he could shoot pretty well with them.
Bolt,
The focus problem you're having is because your eyes don't focus as fast when you get older, because your brain works slower. I used to be able to see my front and back sight and my target all clearly at the same time. Now, 2 out of three are fuzzy. It sucks.
Sometimes, if I'm looking at my computer screen, and it has a dark background, while I'm reading the text on the left, if there is a bright video screen on the right side, my right eye keeps focusing and refocusing, trying to pick up what's going on on the right side.
LEssons learned today:
1.) Border Collie pups HATE baths.
2.) They LOVE red Kool-aid mix. I'm even gonna have to scrub down and re-paint the kitchen!
3.) My wife is the idiot queen. She left it where they could get it, then woke me up laughing about it. Then left. (okay, leaving was smart!)
Travis Morgan
Wichita, Ks., U.S.A. - Friday, February 1, 2008, at 17:02:33 (ZULU)
SSG Mac
Friday, February 1, 2008, at 17:20:07 (ZULU)
The government took one in the shorts on what most legal experts thought was a slam dunk.
I'm LMOA, though I figured Snipes was toast, too. The overreach for the gov was the thought crime and of course, fraud, which the jury could not find---Snipes did not file anything--so where was the fraud? Oh, bawhawhawhaw. Can't file these charges ever again, and it is a very narrow shot to appeal a jury verdict.
Between this and the Alabama lawyer case--you can bet the government is taking notice.
Joe M
Saturday, February 2, 2008, at 00:56:59 (ZULU)
CDC'
Saturday, February 2, 2008, at 03:01:06 (ZULU)
CDC: McCain's win in the general would put conservatives into another 40-year trek thru the wilderness; akin to the pre 94 wanderings as the minority. He will destroy the party---such as it is (the 2000-2006 repubs in congress did enough damage already).
I simply will not vote for him, and I say this knowing that it means the other socialists can win. That is fine by me---I'd rather an actual commie wins than a rino; at least then the aftermath is easily fixed on the guilty ideology. McCain would only muddy up the argument against socialism. ANY and ALL federal involvement in healthcare payments--including medicare---is just a stepping stone towards single payer crap. Medicare, and its full compliment of fraud, is one of the major drivers of the rise in costs (regulatory stupidity is another); these upward pressures, or unintended consequenses of government meddling---are at the root of this "desire" to socialize the whole shebang.
Doing so will kill the dollar---and Weimer Germany will be our historical parallel. The difference, IMHO, is who will have the balls in this country to step up after the mess descends.
Joe M
Saturday, February 2, 2008, at 04:00:44 (ZULU)
Get ready folks, the ride may turn bumpy.
I live at a fairly high elevation on a hill. It snowed on the mountains behind my house. The temperature stayed low enough that the flakes didn't stick together. The wind has been running about 30mph +/- 5mph. So the snow drifted. In fact, my yard has 4 or so huge snow drifts. It is unbelievable. And it is going to melt. I just hope it melts slowly. My down-hill neighbor is spooked.
CDC'
Saturday, February 2, 2008, at 06:09:03 (ZULU)
(I'm BACK ;)
The lens in the eye is like a transparent "Jello" lens of the worst possible quality.
It focuses by having muscles attached around it to squeeze it and make it thicker in the middle to focus closer.
When you are young, this change is almost instantaneous.
When you are young, it is real wiggly, but as you get older, the jell gets thicker and thicker, so the focus and return to relaxed state takes longer and longer.
By the time you are in your 50's, it can take 10 seconds, up to a minute to change... so most ol' guys just don't think they focus at all.
If the scope eye piece is not properly set up so you see the reticle with your eye relaxed, then as you force it to try to focus, it kinds takes a "set" and doesn't want to go back to where it was.
If I use my computer without my "puter glasses" that were made just for the distance thatI am from the screen... my lenses slowly adjust, and then wanna stay that way - if I get up to do something else, the world looks fuzzy for a while, until the lenses go back to their relaxed position.
This is what is happening to you... after a while, your lenses have settled, and don't want to go back to where they are supposed to be, and things look fuzzy and hard to focus.
Go to the articles section and read my article on Parallax.
I talk about eyepiece focusing too...
http://www.snipercountry.com/Articles/Parallax.asp
The good news is...
... it gets worse as you get older :(((
-
'lito
CatShooter
Spring has sprung, da' creek has riz, I wonder where dem kitties is? - Saturday, February 2, 2008, at 08:25:08 (ZULU)
CDC, I don't blame your neighbor: the most underestimated thing around is the power of flowing water. Lots of really nice, solidly built stuff has fallen down because the ground it was on left to go downstream.
Joe, color me clueless: which Alabama lawyer case? I've been eyebrow deep at work all this week.
EDITED TO AD: Ther's a picture of one of the things (in this case a new rifle) that Asbury has on offer at SHOT over on the hide.
http://www.snipershide.com/forum/ubbthreads.php?ubb=showflat&Number=459952#Post459952 or click.
SSG Mac
Saturday, February 2, 2008, at 08:28:22 (ZULU)
McCain can't destroy the Republican party - there is nothing left of it - the two Bushes killed it.
There is not a single Republican running - you have the very left party, and the kinda left party... then the Libertarian (who isn't running a candidate), and the Anarchist Party who haven't got enough money to run a candatate.
There is nothing left, and why the democrats are bitching is a mystery to me - both parties are close to the same - I guess it's now down to "my gang over yours", cuz philosophies are not part of the contest.
For the first time in my long life, I may not vote. I've been voting for the lesser of two evils for so long...
... and now I can't find any of the candidates that I can pull the lever for, in a contest of "The lesser of two evils".
These guys are sell out scum.
I'll vote for Ron Paul in the primary, and then just pass.
I listen to these "republicrate" guys on TV and just I wanna puke!!
-
'lito
CatShooter
Spring has sprung, da' creek has riz, I wonder where dem kitties is? - Saturday, February 2, 2008, at 09:12:01 (ZULU)
Reticle is clear and crisp per your instructions that I memorized when you first wrote the article. Site picture is what gets fuzzy. So the focus knob thingy isn't going to take care of this without screwing up the parallax? Any way to fix this or am I doomed to guessing where the x is half way through a string? Getting old does suck but if a scope doesn't cure this I'm doomed to five shot strings :(
My eye doc who is also a shooter gave me a script for new bifocals for driving at night and seeing up close. I hate wearing glasses and try to only use them at night or when I'm doing close up detailed work. He also gave me a script for a set of shooting glasses lenses so I can shoot with irons. Haven't got them made yet cause I'm still trying to decide what frames to get for shooting. The frames I have seen are damn expensive so I thought about just using an old set of lenses from my old glasses.
Optically depressed, Bolt out!
Bolt
Out of focus in........, NC, - Saturday, February 2, 2008, at 13:02:45 (ZULU)
If the cross hairs are sharp, and the target is fuzzy - your AO or Parallax thingie is not set right... it is not possible for the hairs to be sharp and the target to be fuzzy, if they are adjusted so they are in the same place.
Signed...
Optical Abby
;) ;)
-
'lito
.
CatShooter
Spring has sprung, da' creek has riz, I wonder where dem kitties is? - Saturday, February 2, 2008, at 15:34:33 (ZULU)
Charles S. Hunt
San Antonio, Texas, USA - Saturday, February 2, 2008, at 17:39:41 (ZULU)
Perhaps if the Democrats get the White House, it would dawn upon the Republicans that they need to return to their conservative roots. I think they need a lesson - 8 years of the current administration spending like a drunken sailor is enough. Right now, it's very hard to tell the two main parties apart.
I certainly won't vote for a Demoncrap - but I may very well stay home.
Lindy
The Northern Occupied Territories of Mexico, Texas, U.S.A. - Saturday, February 2, 2008, at 18:54:23 (ZULU)
IMHO, we are on our way down this path already--perhaps beyond saving the mess from failure. If no one wants to face this music politically--then I say go for the one who will hasten the process along. Might as well get it over with while I am still young enough to handle it, and the aftermath.
And, whether it is a repub/ socialist or a dem socialist DOES matter; sheep will bleat the curses on the party left holding this potato for generations.
I am thinking in terms of the great depression--which was only great because FDR kinda deepened it with his fixes. The tsunami of all the weaknesses in the economy today dwarf all the ills of '29 by a huge margin. Now, the great depression had an effect---it was blamed fairly or not on Hoover--and the aftermath was this country adopted socialism-lite; the camel's nose under the tent.
My overall view is that to bring this country back from its headlong rush to trample under the constitution in exchange for socialist policies--we need a major amount of pain. Be it civil liberties assaulted by the patriot act, healthcare via government mandate (already here, medicare, and set to expand), the tax code itself (punish the rich!) that actaully pays americans money they NEVER contributed (EIC), or any of the myriad federal usurping of state's rights (education, local laws held hostage by highway funds, etc)--we have simply walked away from the very basis that made this nation great.
The conditions are there to bring about changes. Unfortunately and as is often the case throughout history--the catalyst for change is a sesmic event in a society; my view it will be the collapse of the Fiat monetary system with rampant inflation and economic contraction. If you look at all that is going on, it becomes clear that the only way to slow or stop the bleed is to reign in federal spending. Congress is no longer capable of that. Ergo, hasten the fall!
Besides...chaos is fun:)) You cannot control it--but it can be manipulated! I imagine that this is where the military and LE differ tremendously in thought processes. Chaos; it is what the military does at the very tip of all that choreography. Heheh.
As for McCain: Vote your conscious; I'll vote (or not) mine. My stance is that I will never vote for a socialist. Any thought of party allegience is way secondary to my moral principals. The (R) by anyone's name is only a letter; it is what they believe that I vote for. McCain is no conservative. McCain's stance on Iraq is hardly worth considering. No one who sits in that chair will think differently than McCain once they have the decision matrix in front of them. So, security is a wash---no one wants to be the idiot in history that undoes the lack of attacks. It comes down to domestic policy. And, there's not a spit of difference between Hitlery, McCanadycane, or Osama-Bama for making the government the answer to all your little problems. Except this: If what I believe about the inability of our dollar to absorb further deficit spending (exponentially increased)--then who gets the blame for the collapse is kinda important. If no candidate is standing up for fiscal responsibility, then I will vote for no candidate. Many other feel this way. Perhaps, if I am wrong about the resiliency of the dollar and the deepness of foriegn pockets to underwrite our excessive lifestyles, then maybe the party will take note of my absense and adjust in the future.
Either way, I get to send whatever message I want with my participation in the process.
Calling it childish is pretty shallow thinking. Sheep take what comes at them, with no further thought (just wtach polls change their minds about everything). You are better than that and that sentiment.
Joe M
Saturday, February 2, 2008, at 19:08:31 (ZULU)
Actually, if Hillery runs, I'll vote for Hitler to stop her.
But between McCain and Obama, there's no difference - they will both tax the crap out of the middle class, and let in all the Mexicans that can swim.
-
'lito
CatShooter
Spring has sprung, da' creek has riz, I wonder where dem kitties is? - Saturday, February 2, 2008, at 20:21:29 (ZULU)
Charles S. Hunt
San Antonio, Texas, USA - Saturday, February 2, 2008, at 23:13:26 (ZULU)
If he wins the nomination who is his #2? A conservative Republican or his buddy from Connecticut.
JLU
Joe Udelhofen
Oconomowoc, WI, USA - Saturday, February 2, 2008, at 23:59:49 (ZULU)
I know exactly what you are talking about... sometimes what is needed to some a problem is to givee them an overdose of what they think they want.
If Bush wanted to really do something to make up for his screw ups - and do something for his his country, he and Chaney would resign.
It would leave Pelocy as Pres, kill Hillary and Obama and all the other democrats and liberal Republicans, and Pelocy would founder so badly in one year that even her party could not protect her - and the conservatives (the real ones) would sweep the '08 elections.
-
'lito
.
CatShooter
Spring has sprung, da' creek has riz, I wonder where dem kitties is? - Sunday, February 3, 2008, at 03:42:33 (ZULU)
jc
jc
Cordova, TN, United States - Sunday, February 3, 2008, at 05:54:01 (ZULU)
I just finished doing a thorough clean on an MP5SD it looked like it hadn't been worked over in a while. It was so bad I Had to pound the pins out for break down. It's much better now, well everything except the Suppressor, the carbon build up is appalling. My buddy and I were talking and he said back in the day before there were concerns about HAZMAT and everything that they used to just put it in diesel and let it set for a while and that did a good job on breaking down the carbon.
Since I have been on the job they have told us not to do anything with the suppressor, but as we all know the more its used and the more build up of carbon there is the louder it becomes. We are in a situation where it needs to be as quiet as possible, Does anyone have a suggestion on how to break down and flush out the carbon?
I was thinking about setting it in diesel overnight and then shaking soapy water around in it to flush the broken carbon out and finishing with some alcohol to flush out the water and try to prevent rust.
Would this work or should I try something else? I need to get this done in the next couple days if possible.
Morgue
Mourge
Overseas, - Sunday, February 3, 2008, at 10:25:32 (ZULU)
NSN 6850-00-543-7801 Cold tank carbon removing compound.
After a few hour soak even grungy 100,000 mile pistons come out
clean.
Rinse with solvent & Hot Water or Steam !
Just a thought.
Caution as it eats up most Plastic & Rubber parts as well as Skin.
Regards,
Joisey Steve
Steven Dzupin
Ridgewood, New Joisey, US of A - Sunday, February 3, 2008, at 13:21:54 (ZULU)
I know absolutely nothing about suppressors so bear with me. In the days of corrosive primers we used boiling soapy water on M-1 Garands and then rinsed them in boiling water. They dried quickly and then we would oil them. The same works on black powder stuff. I would probably try diesel then boiling soapy water. After that I would rinse them in boiling water followed by the alcohol. If they weren't dry enough after the alcohol you could always give them a few shots of ether; but make darned sure all of the ether has evaporated before you fire them. Compressed air would probably be a necessity if you used any ether.
Cheers,
Doc
Doc Holloway
The sunny Ozark boonies, MO, USA - Sunday, February 3, 2008, at 13:22:33 (ZULU)
I expect it's like the stuff Steve referred to. Works great on AR/M16 parts, too.
After cleaning, I drop a drill bit that's as close to the bore diameter of the suppressor down it, to make sure that there aren't any loose particles in the way.
I clean mine about every 500 rounds, but it doesn't really need it that often.
Lindy
The Northern Occupied Territories of Mexico, Texas, U.S.A. - Sunday, February 3, 2008, at 13:50:15 (ZULU)
Hank
Sunday, February 3, 2008, at 16:47:06 (ZULU)
Diesel(real diesel, DF2) is OK, what's working is the additive package they put in diesel to maske it a proper fuel. JP8 doesn't get that, so it won't work as well. If the armorers have the solvent tanks, those work great too, but I never saw any. S/F....Ken M
Ken M
Sunday, February 3, 2008, at 18:12:40 (ZULU)
Mourge,
I've used MEK quite a bit, and never had any skin issues. DO NOT use it in an enclosed area. That is not the kinda shit you want to mess around with. Breathe as little of it as possible. No need for a respirator, just don't use it in an office size room. I used it to clean some spilled enamel paint off of spanish tile in a smaller foyer, and got noticeably buzzed in minutes.
You might ask the guys at silencertalk.com about this.
Travis Morgan
Wichita, Ks., U.S.A. - Sunday, February 3, 2008, at 19:15:58 (ZULU)
medicjim
Sunday, February 3, 2008, at 19:17:19 (ZULU)
http://www.inchem.org/documents/hsg/hsg/hsg108.htm
Decomposition of carbon terachloride forms phosgene, carbon dioxide and hydrochloric acid.
The unheated vapour is a hazard too.
Carbon tetrachloride vapour is invisible, heavier than air and spreads along the ground.
Work with carbon tetrachloride should be carried out with adequate ventilation. Breathing the vapour and skin contact should be avoided. Chemical protective clothing, masks and gloves made from materials that provide a high degree of permeation resistance and eye protection should be used. Note that rubber is not a suitable protective material since carbon tetrachloride migrates through it.
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Sunday, February 3, 2008, at 21:12:00 (ZULU)
Joe M
Monday, February 4, 2008, at 00:33:03 (ZULU)
Appreciate all the replies, Commercial products are ni on impossible to get out here and its a small group out in the middle of BFE and if we didn't bring it the odds are we aren't going to get it if you know what I mean.
Is the Cold Parts Cleaner anything like carb cleaner? I use Carb Cleaner to clean the $hlt out out of the 240 and the mk 48... I didn't think about trying it on the can, I was thinking along the lines of the least carossive method possible.
You ever notice that most of the things companies make to work on engines does wonders when you are cleaning your gun, got to love that. I am going to have to pick up some of that Chem-dip Lindy refered to, seems like a good tool for the shelf.
Ken,
Add LOTS of water and a bunch of Islands and you put it in the x-ring...
Doc,
I didn't even think about taking the extra step to boil it, thanks for the tip
Joe,
I would love to hand it off to someone but they are going to run into the same problem, only they may just say to hell with it and use the closest chemical compound and then where would we be...
Gents thanks again,
Morgue
Mourge
Overseas, - Monday, February 4, 2008, at 02:26:32 (ZULU)
WR Moore
Monday, February 4, 2008, at 03:53:54 (ZULU)
Morgue, 10-4, if you've got SIPR or higher, drop me an E-mail and we can BS on the covered side. I work for EUCOM, not PACOM, but if you need some research done, I can probably help you out. Given our current charter and your presumed mission, it's something I can easily justify to my bosses. S/F....Ken M
Ken M
Monday, February 4, 2008, at 04:36:20 (ZULU)
Actually, they warn about carbon tetrachloride and aluminum (and other "reactive" metals).
I believe they would only possibly use aluminum in the outer enclosure of a suppressor, but more typical metals are steel and titanium.
I'm more worried about protecting the end-user.
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Monday, February 4, 2008, at 16:32:28 (ZULU)
Just returned from SHOT. It was awesome, what little I saw. Left early, my wallet was swiped. Being in Vegas with no ID, CCs, or $$ is kinda tough.
Bravo: Material has been destroyed, you're safe. Please send me your current snail-mail addy. I'll return the incriminating photos of you and the MagPul dudes.... :8-p
InSain: Sorry I didn't get back with you Saturday, Bravo took care of me, and you were "busier than a one-armed paper hanger". It was great to see you (for the 30-seconds or so). :8-)
As usual, there was no shortage of "Tactical T.W.A.T" teams. The winner of "Miss Tactical T.W.A.T SHOT-08 " was the gal in the Aimpoint booth. There was more traffic in that booth than the Holland tunnel. I guess it worked for them, the right combination of DNA and silicone can be a 'good thing'.
Duman
Monday, February 4, 2008, at 18:29:31 (ZULU)
Gents,
A good bud GAVE me his 550B along with his tumbler and other reload stuff (deevorce!). Question is that it's been in storage for a while and has some "rusty" oxidation on the operating shaft and maybe on some other small pieces, not gone through all the stuff yet.
Try to wipe off the surface stuff then spray with a dry lube?
Have had single stage presses and used a Dillon a time or two, but any advice on bringin one back to life?
Scott F.
Hillbillyland, MO, - Tuesday, February 5, 2008, at 06:31:03 (ZULU)
Bravo was on hold on line two as the first call came in. Heheh. He probably heard my grin thru the phone...
And, like I've been telling his biomom--the Drills made him write home that first time---if only with the addy. It should be in the mailbox any day now.
There literally was not enough time for me to ask the first question to figure out how best to meddle...darn it!
Looking at it all--I set up the perfect private. If I had another 10 years, I would have set up the perfect platoon daddy; 3 more years a good PL; 12, a great field grade...but it now occurs to me: My job was citizen. I was lucky in that I influenced a private. What comes next is on him and the leaders he falls under. I'll always have his ear--but parting with the other ear was an unexpected loss. Boy to man. It seems like a process until it becomes an event. Whoa.
And to drive home the point of time passing: I'm watching "Hard Days Night" (beatles for those under rocks) made the year I was born.
The Who said back then: " The Kids are alright.."
I raised a para. No shit.
His Godfather will be proud as hell. Mick, the original neanderthal; no poets or artists here, dude. (inside joke--a condition for his excepting the honor))
Joe M
Tuesday, February 5, 2008, at 07:26:35 (ZULU)
Joe M: I want to have my kids love me, but it's not important that they love me. It's important that I love them. I want to put myself between my kids and the world, but all I can do is to make them strong. It sounds like you did your part.
CDC'
Tuesday, February 5, 2008, at 10:14:48 (ZULU)
SSG Mac
Tuesday, February 5, 2008, at 10:16:19 (ZULU)
Scott F - surface rust on fine tolerance moving parts can be removed using hydrofloric acid. The stuff is very, very toxic and you must not allow it to touch you (I'm not joking AT ALL). OK, ready for the amusing part... you can pick it up at the local grocery store, packaged in a small brown bottle with the brand name "whink", in the laundry aisle listed as a spot remover. Once you've removed the rust, apply oil immediately, as the spots will re-rust within an hour if you don't protect them.
click my name or paste this link to see product packaging
http://www.alwaysbrilliant.com/aa/aspx-products/1-310/2-52768/SC-FROOGLE/bb/Wink%20Rust%20Remover.htm
medicjim
Tuesday, February 5, 2008, at 14:47:55 (ZULU)
Marius
Tuesday, February 5, 2008, at 18:48:23 (ZULU)
Seriously, I just bought one in similar condition, tore it down, cleaned all moving surfaces with fine steel wool. Finished with thin film of gun oil, it works fine. If some parts are pitted with rust, have Dillon send new parts. Shouldn't take more than an hour or so.
medicjim - HF ?!? Ugh. "wink" must be a really weak solution, otherwise they couldn't sell it in a bottle (glass).
Duman
Tuesday, February 5, 2008, at 21:52:21 (ZULU)
Glass is a poor container choice for HF. Probably some kind of plastic is what is used for Whink.
I would probably pick something like Naval Jelly instead (although it has sulfuric acid, so it's not a free ride either).
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Tuesday, February 5, 2008, at 23:17:50 (ZULU)
CDC said it best: Love them, and the rest follows.
Rust: I was always partial to naval jelly, if a light scrubbing with a bore brush and gun solvents wasn't working.
In the 80s, we agitated for some MP5SDs, without much thought to anything but the quiet cool factor. Not being careful what we wished for, these showed up almost "at the ramp" for a combat op. The logheads were pissed that we passed on them (trained as we would fight with CARs). But I recall two things: Something that heavy oughta throw more than de-fanged 9mm ball--say something like a 20mm round:)) Underpowered and overweight were not cool factors; the other thing was versatility---none to be had; you either got close or watched the show. For a quiet kill with the same range---why not a sidearm? Now a SAW with a big ol' can---now that would be fun:))
The hard part of being "retired" is adjusting my thinking: I tend to look at things in terms of expendable, durable and end item. Tactically, I think in terms of extended ops, though I am "based" now. The result is I do not stock up on things that I should be stocking up on, and because I am fixed---my choices in firearms doesn't need to be so utilitarian anymore.
Bravo gets a kick outta adjusting these stray thought processes:))
Joe M
Tuesday, February 5, 2008, at 23:47:57 (ZULU)
S/F
Finger
Jim Reifinger
Pearsall, TX, USA - Tuesday, February 5, 2008, at 23:50:10 (ZULU)
The SF types might yawn some, but I have a few 'self taught' features that might even wake them up...
medicjim
Wednesday, February 6, 2008, at 00:38:02 (ZULU)
Charles S. Hunt
San Antonio, Texas, USA - Wednesday, February 6, 2008, at 02:01:55 (ZULU)
Fixed installation - Dude, you have an armory! :-)
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Wednesday, February 6, 2008, at 02:29:21 (ZULU)
Sir Wes: The long awaited is on its way:)) Priority US mail---you should see it before the weekend. Batteries are included, if only cuz I forgot until the tape job was complete.
Joe M
Wednesday, February 6, 2008, at 02:43:09 (ZULU)
Looks to be work safe as far as I've seen so far.
http://www.redvideo.us/
medicjim
Wednesday, February 6, 2008, at 02:55:34 (ZULU)
Bad Idea...LOL
I have a mental picture of craters large enough to lose a set UPS double bottoms.
Take Pics please?
UnPat
UnPat
Wi., USA - Wednesday, February 6, 2008, at 10:18:28 (ZULU)
Hmm... personally Joe and Jims Course sounds like a good time... dangerous BWG... but oh so fun...
Was talking to a buddy of mine and he has a TRG-S in 338 LM, as I understand it, its essentially a TRG42 in a regular stock vs the tactical stock the 42 comes in. I looked around found it for just under $1200. Add the muzzle break and a bipod and you are looking at around 1500 probably. Still steep but no where near as spendy as the TRG42 or a AI...
After talking guns with another buddy for a couple days he told me this morning that he ordered one today... I am so bad... BWG...
Cya gents
Morgue
http://www.sako.fi/oldmodels_trg-s.php?m=7
http://gagnonsports.com/merchant2/merchant.mvc?Screen=CTGY&Category_Code=_SakoTRG
Mourge
Overseas, - Wednesday, February 6, 2008, at 15:22:12 (ZULU)
I don't blow stuff up in my arson course, I also do no store highly energetic chemical components. Course prep involves a shopping cart and a trip to the local Atlantic and Pacific Tea company (A&P) grocery. How could that be dangerous?
I really don't need the ATF at my doorstep wanting to confiscate my vinegar and baking soda <g>.
medicjim
Wednesday, February 6, 2008, at 17:54:51 (ZULU)
"HK [sic] their customer service is last to none. Love the product,
hate the company."
Duman
Wednesday, February 6, 2008, at 18:00:24 (ZULU)
HK makes no sense anymore, if they ever did. They offer nothing you can't get elsewhere from people who actually want to support their product. "HK: Because you suck, and we hate you."(not my quote)
SHOT review:
BKS(and crew) and Mike Miller are still outstanding human beings. BKS is like a Texas LE version of the Energizer bunny. Unable to link up with Bravo or Duman, sorry to hear about your wallet. Some miserable loathesome **** lifted my swag bag while I left it on the floor and played with guns. All he got was paper and some Nosler 280AI brass. Still, it pisses me off and I spent the rest of the show running "bear bait" ops hoping to have an excuse to maim someone.
Couple new chassis/stock systems for the 700 are looking very promising. Mike can probably say more about one of them.
The JAE chassis system for the M14 looks very good, still no solution to the optics mounting issue, aside from a M25 reciever where the clip slock assembly is replaced with a 1913 rail and the receiver ring is drilled and tapped.
Lots of support for the 338LW is coming. Brass and bullets are on the way from several sources. Winchester is going to be making 416 Rigby brass/ammunition, so 338 LW is probably not far behind.
Gas piston M16 type rifles are coming from all angles. Buyer beware, do your research before buying.
Lots of nifty NV/TI gear. Better info from a more .mil show, I'll probably hit those this coming year.
Lots of new flashlights from everyone. HID is the new high end tech, still very large and $, but if you want 1000+ lumens, it's the only game in town. Still think incandescent light is better for weapons lights, LED just isn't "natural." It does work much better underwater however, too bad none/few of these guys make dive lights:)
S/F.....Ken M
Ken M
Wednesday, February 6, 2008, at 19:41:57 (ZULU)
This one is working out nicely for me...
http://pelican.com/lights_detail.php?recordID=2010
I use it in fires and as a dive backup. I've been trying to break it for a year or so now....no luck.
medicjim
Wednesday, February 6, 2008, at 19:59:48 (ZULU)
Ken M
Wednesday, February 6, 2008, at 20:15:17 (ZULU)
One of the brighter new kids on the block :-)
http://www.wickedlasers.com/lasers/The_Torch-74-0.html
$300
Currently being reviewed by The Guinness Book of World Records, The Torch is the world's brightest and most powerful flashlight. It is easily capable of melting plastic, lighting paper on fire within seconds, and if you want, frying an egg or a marshmallow on a stick! At 4100 lumens, The Torch is 100 lumens more powerful than The Polarion Helios, the former most powerful flashlight. Incredible? Watch The Torch in action.
Batteries and Universal Charger included with purchase.
Technical Specs
Name: The Torch
Lamp Output: 4100 Lumens with an Adjustable High Efficiency Reflector
Dimensions: 57mm x 230mm
Power Supply: 12x2/3A 1500mAh Cells 14.4V
Battery Lifetime: 15 Minutes
Bulb Type: 100W Halogen
Expected Bulb Life: 2000 Hours
Casing: Aerospace Grade Aluminum
Tail switch: On/Off Button
Warranty: 6 Months
http://crave.cnet.com/8301-1_105-9862625-1.html
The $300 Torch's 4,100-lumen beam is twice as powerful as a competitor dubbed "The Beast" that goes for $7,000.
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Wednesday, February 6, 2008, at 22:36:38 (ZULU)
http://www.cfrlights.com/
Several dive light offerings.
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Wednesday, February 6, 2008, at 22:49:07 (ZULU)
One of the guys at the AmericanSnipers.org table described InSain as, "... running around like a Texas ferret." I'm not sure there is such an animal, but it fit.
Sorry I missed you, Tony, Mike, and some others. When I realized I was hosed, I figured the best thing was to head home ASAP and begin the process of acquiring new docs. What I didn't realize at the time, though, was there would be hundreds of miles of blizzards to drive through. That sucked moosecock.
I had the opportunity of watching a gal spin out and go over the edge, off the highway. I drove her car through the snow and sagebrush, and back onto the highway. A few hundred yards farther down the road, it would've been a couple hundred feet down into rock piles. Turns out she was heading to C-Springs, returning to duty. I thanked her for serving, and didn't see her again. She had this annoying habit of calling me 'sir'. A very polite young lady.
Duman
Wednesday, February 6, 2008, at 23:47:57 (ZULU)
Someone will get hurt with a few of the products from those "Torch" guys. Some of those lasers they sell will torch a retina quite rapidly.
Duman
Wednesday, February 6, 2008, at 23:58:42 (ZULU)
My buddy who I thought ordered one ran into a problem. It seems Berretta isn't listing it as an item for sale in the US. I talked to my dealer and he is going to contact his Berretta Rep and see what the deal is.
my buddy found a place in Canada that sells them but when he contacted them he was told that they wouldn't ship to the US unless he ordered 2... since he doesn't need 2 he is stumped unless he can find someone who wants the other TRG-s.
Anyways if any of yous are interested hit me up and I will put you in contact with him.
Morgue
Bravo, My inbox ate your last email while I was trying to respond... hitting the points I remember from the email but probably going to miss a couple.
Edited to add :
Gents if you like to get out and about and like packing your rifles in something you should look into is an Eberlestock backpack. The big ones are just to big for stocking with it but if you are hiking in setting up camp and then hunting from there it might work. I have used both the Phantom and the gunslinger and I have nothing but good things to say about it. When I changed Locations recently and had to choose which drag bag got to come and which ones to leave, it wasn't even a contest.
http://www.eberlestock.com/Tactical%20Master.htm
Mourge
Overseas, - Thursday, February 7, 2008, at 02:31:26 (ZULU)
Sharon
Larry J. Porter
Boonies of the Panhandle, Texas, USA!!!! - Thursday, February 7, 2008, at 03:45:12 (ZULU)
1. PistolRaffle - ticket number 511. Winner has been contacted. Don't write and ask me what your ticket number is - LOL. You should have an email with those in it.
2. Mike Miller - get out of the Berkely CA area. They're mentally ill out there. The dirtbag mayor and those crackpot protesters wanting the Marines to leave, blocking the recruiting office. Sorry folks - free speach does not mean mental illness..... (rant off).
We were busy with the garage/shop this year, so no shot show for us. Sorry we missed it. Ima doing the electrical, wiring, alarm, any audio/video, etc that we might want/need... Get your suggestions in now - or don't gripe when you visit - LOL..
Take care all,
Ken
Ken Hunter
Nokesville, Va, Keep America - God Fearing, Armed and Free!!!.. - Thursday, February 7, 2008, at 11:52:56 (ZULU)
When I put up my shop a few years back I had the power company run a separate 200 amp service to it. For general lighting there are eight fluorescent fixtures. They're controlled by four switches so I can use only what I need. I put a 110 outlet every six feet. I have two 15 amp 220v outlets for power saws and a 50 amp 220v outlet for an arc welder. Should have put the welder outlet closer to the overhead door so I could have used it outside. I ran speaker wire to the upper back corners for my sound system and co-ax for an eventual TV antenna. The security system I left to the pros. I forgot to put a phone jack next to my bench so I now have to run a line from the other side of the shop. All-in-all I've been quite happy with everything. YMMV.
Cheers,
Doc
Doc Holloway
The muddy Ozark boonies, MO, USA - Thursday, February 7, 2008, at 13:57:01 (ZULU)
Ken M, good seeing you again
On the stocks they show lots of promise. I ahve two right now I am messing with to see how they do. Going out today for first tests. These are by Scott MCree, hell of a nice guy, and he takes abuse well. LOL
On Jae M14 stocks, best I ahve used for M14 with scopes.
They have new Remington oen that has promise and I should have one to test soon.
AI has new M14 stock but have not messed with it.
Mike/Undude
Mike Miller
ca, - Thursday, February 7, 2008, at 16:02:44 (ZULU)
It's funny, the first post I happened to read just now was Lito's idea about Bush and Chaney resigning to leave Mrs Nancy to run the country. That's a hoot but like jc said, it's definately got potential. I actually like Bush, and wish he could stay, but I know there's no way he would get re-elected even if he could run again. I'll probably take fire for that statement, but that's nothing new.
Morgue I'm still gona go with the 42. I don't need another hunting rifle. I don't need another tac either but I want one more. ha Is there any difference other than the furniture, could the "S" be bought and the 42's stock or a MACbros or other high end type be added after? That's a money saving thought to ponder.
Jeff Cooper
Gadsden, TN, - Thursday, February 7, 2008, at 19:39:48 (ZULU)
Jeff Cooper
Gadsden, TN, - Thursday, February 7, 2008, at 20:11:56 (ZULU)
The lasers that are public "allowed" are very limited in power. Further limits are made by the manufacturers themselves, "just to make sure".
Also, invisible lasers, like the ones that are used in rangefinders are even more limited, because the public can't see them.
If you are being pointed at with a "Laser pointer" you see it, and can close your eyes or turn away.
The lasers on that website are not very powerful - and they are in the visible range.
As far as flashlights that can catch paper on fire - there's no law or restrictions on the output of a flashlight.
I have a 100 watt quartz flashlight, and it'll light up a house a mile away.
See... I didn't yell at you ;)))
-
Romney quit today!
Looks like it's McCain, whether we like him or not.
I'm listening to him now - he's making a lot of promises that sound pretty "right"... more so than he has been in years - maybe he finely "got it"??
I'm gonna vote straight "Anarchist party"!
Where's my black trench coat???
;)
-
'lito
CatShooter
Spring has sprung, da' creek has riz, I wonder where dem kitties is? - Thursday, February 7, 2008, at 20:42:07 (ZULU)
After McCain (from AZ) campaigned (in CO) for gunshow background checks, I lost respect for him. Useless legislation for soccer moms and squirrel kissers.
As far as the lasers, I was thinking of this one:
http://www.wickedlasers.com/lasers/Elite_Series-69-3.html
when I commented about "torching an eyeball". At 150mW, is this eye-safe? Blink reflex safe? It's been a lot of years since I've looked at laser safety stuff....
Duman
Thursday, February 7, 2008, at 21:19:59 (ZULU)
Me too (a lotta years). I have a call into the institute of laser safety stuff.
Class 1 - The real low power power stuff, like the little laser pointers for $5 that you buy at Wally World...
... the laser rangefinders (Like the Bushnell and Leica) are Class 1 lasers, and they are pretty much harmless, unless you are felony stupid (you can kill yourself with a butter knife!!)
Class 2 - lasers are more beefy, and MUST be visible so unintentional viewing cannot happen - if you get hit in the eye, you can't keep looking at it, so there is a built in safety factor.
Class 3 - require special training and are less than 0.5 watts.
Class 4 - lasers are more than 0.5 watts, and require special training and protective goggles, warning signs "Laser in use" etc.
I have a 2 watt pulsed Ruby laser (it weighs ~90 pounds), and it will blow a piece of Formica out of a kitchen counter top... so these puppies can burn skin and do some serious damage.
And I have a Military laser rangefinder, and according to the Army, it is hazardous at 1,200 meters to the un-aided eye (not using bins or scope). It puts out enough power in a single pulse to suck down a large battery in 40 to 50 rangings, while the little Leicas will run on a standard 9v battery for a year or two.
I don't know what the cut-off point between class 1 and class two lasers is, and between class 2 and class 3... these 150 milliwatt lasers are probably in the class 2 category.
When (if) I hear back from the safety institute, I'll post it.
Here is something about the class standards that talk about the transition in classes... and there is another "professional conference " scheduled soon to revise these standards.
Part of the problem is that lasers and their use changes as fast as computers, so what is kinda safe now, is either really safe, or really bad, next year.
Go here:
http://www.hps.org/hpspublications/articles/ansiz136.1.html
-
'lito
CatShooter
Spring has sprung, da' creek has riz, I wonder where dem kitties is? - Thursday, February 7, 2008, at 22:11:54 (ZULU)
I don't see this working out.
CDC'
Friday, February 8, 2008, at 01:14:34 (ZULU)
Lito: the mil lasers were generally ~100MW, ander had "class IIIB" stickers on them. I often wondered where the scale put these things. The atillas had a 50mw aiming laser with a 150mw illuminator laser opposite. It also got the IIIB rating.
This whole laser conversation reminds me of that flick "Real Genius." Only here, I'd expect someone would be living in a gunsafe...
This primary season is like watching a train wreck in excrutiatingly slow motion. It started out horrible, and is getting worse with each drop out.
Joe M
Friday, February 8, 2008, at 01:41:03 (ZULU)
I remember "Real Genius". Fun movie.
Reminded me of a "The Mad Scientists Club of Mammoth Falls" stories. (I'm dating myself now...)
I vaguely remember:
The Strange Sea Monster of Strawberry Lake (1960)
The Secret of the Old Cannon (1963)
The Great Gas Bag Race (1964)
Boy's Life magazine.
http://www.madscientistsclub.com/
Who says nostalgia isn't what it used to be :-)
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Friday, February 8, 2008, at 01:55:07 (ZULU)
CDC', I agree with you and JoeM. This is gonna be an interesting ride.
JoeM - "Real Genius", with Val Kilmer? If it's what I'm thinking of, he mentioned his 'work' in "optical phase conjugation". I remember reading an article on it, back in the 80's during the heyday of "star wars". It was a theoretical method for targeting laser systems on 'bad birds' coming down. I wonder if the physicists ever got it to work.
Duman
Friday, February 8, 2008, at 02:25:34 (ZULU)
That reminds me of a Chinese curse: "May you live in interesting times."
CDC'
Friday, February 8, 2008, at 02:36:37 (ZULU)
Had a great conversation with Bravo today. Nice to have a friend that checks up on you when you're on the binnacle list. We decided (once again) that the current field of candidates is going to leave us voting for "the best bad choice". Standby, I think it's going to be a hell of a ride the nest 4/8 years no matter who wins.
Wife is convinced that we carry on like a couple of "old women". Told her that's not possible 'cuz we talk about "important stuff"...;-)
Joe M., Good to talk with you and I'll be waiting for the package to arrive. Will give you my opinion as soon as possible.
Semper Fi,
Sir Wes
Wesley R Howe
Salem, OR, 97304 - Friday, February 8, 2008, at 03:45:29 (ZULU)
http://www.fas.org/spp/starwars/program/abl.htm
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Friday, February 8, 2008, at 06:22:08 (ZULU)
Bravo and I were also speaking about this recently.
I have been voting for the lesser of two evils for so long, I can't remember voting for someone I really liked since Reagan.
But they keep sinking lower and lower each four years.
I guess it's like rotting food - eventually it gets so bad that you gag on it and can't get it down.
I'm probably at that place now - there isn't one candidate I can think of pulling a lever for.
-
'lito
CatShooter
Spring has sprung, da' creek has riz, I wonder where dem kitties is? - Friday, February 8, 2008, at 08:50:06 (ZULU)
Not for Prez. And we're facing real challenges. Lots of them.
CDC'
Friday, February 8, 2008, at 10:48:52 (ZULU)
The website my buddy tried to order from hadn't been updated since 05. The salesman he talked to said that Sako no longer makes the TRG-S. I will have that confirmed tomorrow but at this point it looks like he is going to have to go with an alternative.
Just wanted to let you know that if you were interested in an "S" you are going to have to find it on the used market.
He was looking at the AR-30 but didn't like the lines. It looks like the next closest alternate is the TRG42, he found one for around 2300.
Later gents,
Morgue
Mourge
Overseas, - Friday, February 8, 2008, at 10:58:41 (ZULU)
For the money (~500-750), these things had slick actions, Sako barrels (nuff said), aluminum bedding blocks, a Sako trigger that ignores all corporate law advice, and a decent propietary rail (that would be reason enough to stay away for some since the better rings are hard to come by). But they shoot!!!!
I never knew for sure---but I figured these were dumped because they were just as good as the model 75s for half the money:)) Now, the model 85s are on the shelves, and I am waiting for the 75s to discount. I'll probably grab a couple when they do---one wood, one synthetic if I can stomach that ugly two tone POS stock...
Joe M
Friday, February 8, 2008, at 11:52:44 (ZULU)
Yeah, sorry about getting your hopes up. Bad intel, took multiple calls to get that one worked out. When its all said and done, I keep looking at that Surgeon action you pointed me at a couple years ago. I go back periodically to drool and the more I drool the more I look... its a process that can end badly :D especially for the wallet... I just have to remind myself thats ALOT of ammo and a new scope, LOL... Though I don't know how long that will last...
We've been searching around all the online sales sites. The prices are ugly. They are asking on a couple sites for a package TRG for over 4k... and one of the packages was a TRG-22... and it didn't even include a scope... if I had been mid drink I would have ruined the computer(good thing its works laptop)
catch ya'll later gents
Mourge
Overseas, - Friday, February 8, 2008, at 12:06:48 (ZULU)
"- there isn't one candidate I can think of pulling a lever for."
That conjurs up an image of "Blazing Saddles", the gruesome hooded-guy (with a lisp) pulling the lever on the gallows.
Duman
Friday, February 8, 2008, at 16:27:56 (ZULU)
Morgue Guess it's back to the TRG 42 for me. I didn't realize that the AI's were as much as they are. I'm figureing 8K for the 42 plus everything I'll need to get it up and running like I want it. Hope the wife doesn't see this. She knows I'm getting one, but has no idea of cost.
Jeff Cooper
Gadsden, TN, - Friday, February 8, 2008, at 18:38:34 (ZULU)
(not for the current crop of political assholes...)
Go here:
http://coburn.senate.gov/public/
There is a bill to ban carrying concealed handguns (by the good guys) in national parks.
Considering the number of unarmed hikers and families that have been murdered by the BG's in national parks (not counting the cougar attacks) it would seem that being "heavy" in a national park "...would be a good thing"
But oh, no... I got an e-mail from Sarah Brady, and they are stirring up the usual bullshit and they want to ban CCW in national parks, and one of the reasons is that CCW will cause an increase in poaching!!!
HA! Gotta love those liberal assholes.
Go vote!
-
'lito
CatShooter
Spring has sprung, Da' creek has riz, I wonder where dem kitties is? - Friday, February 8, 2008, at 20:35:20 (ZULU)
Jeff - I doubt any working mil-spec rangefinders are available for "civilian" purchase, new or surplus. The bureaucrats likely would be too worried about someone causing or sustaining an eye injury from the invisible laser.
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Friday, February 8, 2008, at 22:21:58 (ZULU)
'Lito caught my attention today via email wonderin where the hell I was..So I thought I'd better stop by the ol' roach motel, DDR&LJ in hand, and get back acquainted with ya'll.
It's been a busy half year for yours truly. Life and work were going well in the UK, livin the dream, when an opportunity again fell in my lap. One of those ops that keeps you up all night every night. I put some hard thought into it, and decided yes, this is the way I want to go. Again, one of those once in a lifetimes, and I'd had one with the Scotland gig all ready. I don't know how, very fortunate perhaps. But decided yes, it's time to move back to the US. That was in August/September. I gave my resig letter to Border Barrels, thanked them for the time, parted on good terms, and spent October-December moving and vacationing.
Flew back stateside second week of December, and the company said spend some time with family over the hols, so I did. They flew me into Orlando 7 January, which is the day I stepped foot into Knights Armament for good.
It's pretty kick arse here that I will be supplying the barrels for the rigs to the Army snipers. Might not sound like a lot, but we're coming full circle here and hitting close to home. Dad is ex Army sniper, 1-14th 4th inf 'dragons teeth' sniper team, and americal sniper back in 'Nam. I've always been proud as shit of his accomplishments there and him coming home alive. He lost a lot of interest after the war, tried to forget his days over there for a lot of years, sold all his medals in garage sales and shit. I always brought it back to the surface, researched a lot of stuff he didn't want me to know, and I wanted to know everything. He did some cool shit over there, and wanted him to always know he should be proud of it. When I told him I would be outfitting the US army snipers with their barrels on the SASS rifles, I think he almost cried. Think he was half proud. So youse Army snipers are in for some good gear, because there is no way in hell a system I'm part of will let you down. What Knights produced before was good, it's about to get better. It's a whole new ball game now. And that--is no shit.
So that's what's been up the past 3-6 months. JR moved to a warm place, and he's likin it. Saw my first space shuttle launch yesterday..I peed a little. That is one hell of a long range shot. Livin right off Indian River, if I get palsy and take a left instead of a right, I'll be right in the drink, so I'm getting some knowledge on saltwater fishin to pass the time, maybe buy a cork hat just in case..should have rod and reel w/bait tomorrow..It's been real good, company treats the people well, town is just small and big enough at the same time, it's all good.
Enjoyin life, and that's what it's all about..
Later
JR
Brevard County, FL, - Saturday, February 9, 2008, at 00:41:54 (ZULU)
This company (which I'll not name yet)seems to be all right. Normal long-distance corporate snafus, but the personnel and the company values seem to be all right for anyone with personal integrity. I'm tired already, though. I haven't had to act like a noncom since 1985. Takes a few days to get back in the groove. Looks to be a kick-ass contract, though. More later, I need to take my Ibuprofen and crash. Oh, my aching feet....
Charles S. Hunt
San Antonio, Texas, USA - Saturday, February 9, 2008, at 01:48:10 (ZULU)
My Mil laser doesn't have a 3b label on it. It's a AN/GVS-5, and it requires a dark filter to cut the power way down on it, if used near friendlies.
I understand that the new military lasers are eye safe, but I don't know that for sure.
-
JR...
Welcome back - now stop talkin funny!
-
'lito
CatShooter
Spring has sprung, Da' creek has riz, I wonder where dem kitties is? - Saturday, February 9, 2008, at 01:51:34 (ZULU)
Gentlemen: (Non shooting post) When my kids were tiny, I didn't let them watch tv. They read books. My daughter (13) and my son (11) are upstairs reading "A Midsummer Night's Dream" aloud and having a blast. The language is no barrier at all. There was something about "Hippolyta" and my daughter laughed. My son told her that Hippolyta was Queen of the Amazons and the comparison was a compliment.
That beat my pair of Jacks.
CDC'
Saturday, February 9, 2008, at 01:53:08 (ZULU)
Talk funny, aye, dinna ken whae ye ken.
Hey man, it works for chicks..:P
See De Sea:
Don't let the tikes watch the MSND version on TV..will be a big let down..It's a story which can be considered kind of vulgar at times, and best left to the imagination you get in books.
Stateside politics:
Shite. As per..but when I got my FL license, she asked if I wanted to register to vote..Thought that was cool, what party she asks? the all nighter..ok Republican..I don't know. NOT Democrat basically. She said she figured as much? how? So then florida primaries are up and I can't put my vote in but I start paying attention. McCain. As big an asshole as he ever was. Not conservative, he's wishy washy on things I hold dear as conservative. Viet vet, POW, I don't care, he's playing that card and that's not right. What's he doing for us now. Nothing. Career politician. Huckabee..Nope. I can't have a Huckabee prez on my watch. He was just born with the wrong name. Mitt Romney, ok he's sort of conservative like I'd like, but no balls, he dropped out.
God damn is it going to be in my lifetime I see both a woman and/or a black man elected to the presidency? I got nothing against neither gender or race, but does it not look like a set up..aint coincidence. They're playin us.
Hillary with her health care NHS style full med, that is shite. Ask me, I lived in the UK with their 'free' (my ass) health care. Worked a charm, the fuck. The UK would actually like to rid itself of the NHS system but are so into it for so many years they can't..Sound familiar youse VA patrons? Bullshit. If they want to show globalised health care, look at our version, Veterans affairs.
All I want is a government that applies the same rules to everyone according to the Constitution, lowers my taxes, leaves me the hell alone to do what I do best. I like as little governance as possible.
later
JR
JR
Brevard County, FL, - Saturday, February 9, 2008, at 02:21:26 (ZULU)
Welcome home. I'm sure you'll be able to pick up the language as well as the exchange rate in no time.
Cheers,
Doc
Doc Holloway
The muddy Ozark boonies, MO, USA - Saturday, February 9, 2008, at 02:43:50 (ZULU)
Welcome home, to this side of the pond. If you head west, let me know, the beer's on me.
BTW, do you have any updates on Pete Lincoln? How's he making out with the business? Haven't heard anything from him in awhile.
Duman
Saturday, February 9, 2008, at 05:05:03 (ZULU)
What am I missing? I thought it was already illegal to carry in national parks, I know it is in PA state parks. You can have it in the vehickle but not on your person, if I unner-ferstanicate. I voted and it looks like the good guys are in the lead, but since when does fact or opinion come into play when an agenda needs fulfilled? I`m just now getting into the travel trailer scene and planning a trip out thar west soon and I`d sure like to know when I`m breaking the law while I`m protecting the family. Just want to keep track in the journal. No longer makes any difference to me, just like the election.
Steven S. Racer
somewhere in Dillsburg, PA, - Saturday, February 9, 2008, at 06:23:41 (ZULU)
Lito: These IIIB labelled items were the newer things that replaced the PEQ2 and PAQ4s. The PAQ4 label only said "exempt" IIRC, I was curious about power and what-not (I usually do not read the fine print on army gizmos). The Atilla had black switches that inserted into slots on the unit for combat use; and there was a set of blue switches that, when inserted, rendered the unit "eye safe" for training. I do not know how reliable the training thingies were--but the full power mode was impressive. It would put a dot out farther than a 5.56mm could travel, heck, the illuminator would light up a swath farther than you could shoot:))
Yeah...I remember the Denali (park) firearms' prohibition; what a crock o' shit. If attacked by a bear, you must take it like a man:)) I never understood the logic in that rule. If poaching is a concern, outlaw that. Wait...didn't they??? So, if poaching is illegal; hunting on posted land is illegal; hunting out of season is illegal--why would you make self defense illegal? Dumb. But when I asked rangers "why" firearms are not allowed--they invariably told me that "hunting here is illegal." So, I ask, why do YOU carry a gun? Protection was the answer...and there it is. None ever made the connection.
Joe M
Saturday, February 9, 2008, at 08:07:42 (ZULU)
See the DDR&LJ made me type funny(Lito, that's some potent stuff!!). at that time 1/14 was assigned to 4th ID, not brigade like I typed, think they were 3d brigade then, and like you said reassigned back to 25thID tropic lightning end of 1970. Anyway, yes the history is interesting, always lookin for more, especially from '69-71..A few years back I'd gotten ahold of his ex CO, now Brig Gen(ret) John T Quinn. He'd have to be old by now..Thought he was living in Florida here, might have to look into that..When 1/14th was disbanded in Dec 1970 is when dad went to Americal div and finished out Vietnam, then back to the states to Ft Knox then Hunter Liggett. I used to know this stuff better.
Dew-man,
Yeah, Piggie Pete is doin well last I'd heard from the scoundrel a couple months ago. Think he thought life would slow down a bit when he quit his full time job, ha!!!He's doin well, and real busy..
later
JR
Langholm, Dumfriesshire, Scotland United Kingdom - Saturday, February 9, 2008, at 10:04:28 (ZULU)
Welcome home JR.
HDR
OK, - Saturday, February 9, 2008, at 17:35:18 (ZULU)
Glad to hear things gettin sorted.
Email inbound
UnPat
UnPat
Wi, USA - Saturday, February 9, 2008, at 22:33:09 (ZULU)
Another silly question. Can un-corrected vision affect ability to properly focus a scope. I know.......this is getting tedious....
Dang it, Bolt out!
Bolt
Still optically challenged, NC, - Saturday, February 9, 2008, at 23:31:05 (ZULU)
I was curious what if there would be any interest in maybe adding a section in the ammo and handloads so people can add their favorite receipes. Something that those of us who are just starting to get into can use and reference that are from people we recognize and trust vs going to some new site and having to get a feel about a hole new crew.
I've been talking to a couple of guys about what powder they are using and got to thinking that it would be cool to have some place that people could add what they are using for quick reference.
Just something to think about. I am not talking about the amount of powder persay just something as simple as someone putting out the bullet weight, caliber and their preference on powder.
I don't know how hard it would be, if its plausible or any interest but just thought I would toss it out there.
If this has been hashed over in the past my bad, chock it up to some time on my hands and too much pondering.
Mourge
Overseas, - Sunday, February 10, 2008, at 10:30:20 (ZULU)
Not a bad idea, but there are other sites more specifically focused on handloading. Example: http://www.handloads.org/
Rod's current favourite .308 Win LR loading:
155g Lapua Scenar w/moly (Silverjacket)
Lapua brass
Varget to just below powder compression (use long drop tube or vibrate powder to settle in case)
WLR primer
Seat just short of chamber throat - VLD projectiles don't like large jump.
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Sunday, February 10, 2008, at 14:12:00 (ZULU)
A beeeuuutiful day and winds 30-40mph within the next couple of hours.
Rod........
Like your idea. I've got a 32" Lilja 3-groove, 1:10 twist 308 barrel that's giving me fits trying to find the right load. None of my standard Varget, 4064 or RE15 loads are working with 190's or 175's. I'm going to try H4350 next to see if a slower powder might help. I have a shooting bud that had the same problems with a 32". He cut 2" off and now it shoots. I'm considering a hacksaw in the near future.
Optical madness......
Going to the back porch for a couple of hours to see why the hell I can't focus these damn scopes. Going to put on my night driving glasses to see if that helps. My eyesight isn't quite bad enough to wear glasses all the time but my eye doc gave me a bifocal prescription for up close and night time stuff. On-coming headlights and road signs at night give me a fit without glasses. He also gave me a script for iron sight shooting glasses but I haven't made up my mind on which frames to get (plus they are reeeeeaaalllly expensive).
Wind blown Boltster, out!
Bolt
Too windy to shoot.........., NC, - Sunday, February 10, 2008, at 14:28:44 (ZULU)
Calculated Table
Range Drop Drop Windage Windage Velocity Mach Energy Time Lead Lead
(yds) (in) (moa) (in) (moa) (ft/s) (none) (ft•lbs) (s) (in) (moa)
0 -1.5 *** 0.0 *** 2750.0 2.463 3190.0 0.000 0.0 ***
100 -0.0 -0.0 3.2 3.0 2578.2 2.309 2803.8 0.113 19.8 18.9
200 -3.7 -1.8 13.0 6.2 2412.8 2.161 2455.6 0.233 41.0 19.6
300 -13.5 -4.3 30.2 9.6 2253.5 2.018 2142.1 0.362 63.6 20.3
400 -30.0 -7.2 55.6 13.3 2100.2 1.881 1860.5 0.500 87.9 21.0
500 -54.5 -10.4 90.0 17.2 1950.9 1.747 1605.4 0.648 114.0 21.8
600 -88.1 -14.0 134.6 21.4 1808.4 1.620 1379.4 0.808 142.1 22.6
700 -132.4 -18.1 190.4 26.0 1673.4 1.499 1181.1 0.980 172.5 23.5
800 -189.1 -22.6 258.6 30.9 1545.8 1.385 1007.9 1.167 205.3 24.5
900 -260.4 -27.6 340.5 36.1 1426.8 1.278 858.7 1.369 240.9 25.6
1000 -348.8 -33.3 437.2 41.7 1319.4 1.182 734.3 1.588 279.4 26.7
Bolt
Wind update in..., NC, - Sunday, February 10, 2008, at 15:42:10 (ZULU)
Or just check out the local AO Safety emporium. I buy my "magic glasses" myself at the same time I get new work specs. Paid $104 for standard trifocal aviators.
Political county-http://www.washingtontimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080210/COMMENTARY/13901790
WR Moore
Sunday, February 10, 2008, at 15:59:46 (ZULU)
This stuff is going to melt.
I'm a bit apprehensive.
CDC'
Sunday, February 10, 2008, at 16:11:48 (ZULU)
In alaska, roads became rivers. Even the higher elevations suffered this effect. Blake loved this time of year, he thought the "splash" of slamming a lake on the orad was a hoot (he was 4 at the time).
But the run off problem was solved with a snowblower and a plow blade ahead of time. Once it starts the thaw, the combination of packed snow, daytime melt and night time freeze will make dams that will hold a shitload of water. Blow thru them now while it is relatively easy--and keep the run off paths maintained thru future snows, just as you keep the path and driveway maintained. In fact---take a close look at the approach paths to your house. If they run downhill to your house---get rid of them if they cannot be diverted down hill and away on a steeper path. Unless you want a basement swimming pool:)) On the "uphill" side of your house, you can also pull the snow back off the foundation five feet or more, and build a berm up in a horseshoe around that side of the structure--as the melt goes, this taller, more dense structure will melt more slowly, and form a dam of its own--in the form of a levee protecting your house directly along with the diversion channels.
All of these things were just 'what you did" in Alaska.
With snowfall here this year, I am thinking of doing some engineering myself so I can keep the paths to my fields from washing out. I've been plowing my backforty paths so I can get to the firewood--and now i have rivers pre-dug in exactly the places I do not want rivers!!! Complete with levees leading straight to my main trails. My snow base is only maybe 28" still accounting for melt off and evaporation (windchill is -40 this minute, which is cold enough to evaporate snow--a process that was new to me when I first heard of it)---so, this is enough to worry about--and more is forecast.
Good luck dude. I think that a little pre-engineering will solve the worst of it though. Now, the downhill neighbors will need this same advice: Make the water follow the path of least resistance---and DO NOT let that path be the one you used all winter to and from your house! Heheh.
This is called common sense in Alaska---but common sense that came from "the first time" it bit you in da butt:))
May not be a bad idea to get a high volume pump and some hoses now too. Once the snow starts melting--the prices will go up significantly.
Joe M
Sunday, February 10, 2008, at 17:25:15 (ZULU)
I'm surprised that cutting a heavy 32" brl to 30" would make it achieve desired accuracy. I *can* believe that there was a crown issue. Bad resonance is a possibility.
I believe it was 'Lito who mentioned using a Dremel carbine cutter (ball or cone) as a low-cost means of quickly recrowning a suspect rifle barrel. I would try that first before getting out the hacksaw.
4350 would be a good choice for .30-06 and heavy projectiles. I don't see load data for .308 Win, 4350 and heavy projectiles. I would speculate that there is insufficient case volume with that combination in .308 WIN.
http://data.hodgdon.com/cartridge_load.asp
This is what Hodgdon lists for their powders in .308 Win 175g:
Bullet Weight (Gr.) Order BW Powder Bullet Diam. C.O.L. Grs. Vel. (ft/s) Pressure Grs. Vel. (ft/s) Pressure
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
175 GR. SIE HPBT 175 H414 .308" 2.800" 46.0 2484 40,300 CUP 49.0 2629 50,100 CUP
175 GR. SIE HPBT 175 Varget .308" 2.800" 42.0 2583 42,600 CUP 45.0C 2690 48,600 CUP
175 GR. SIE HPBT 175 BL-C(2) .308" 2.800" 43.0 2517 39,200 CUP 46.0 2706 50,300 CUP
175 GR. SIE HPBT 175 H335 .308" 2.800" 38.0 2390 38,800 CUP 41.3 2592 50,100 CUP
175 GR. SIE HPBT 175 H4895 .308" 2.800" 40.0 2489 39,100 CUP 42.7 2647 49,000 CUP
175 GR. SIE HPBT 175 Benchmark .308" 2.800" 38.0 2400 40,100 CUP 41.5 2590 50,800 CUP
175 GR. SIE HPBT 175 IMR 4007 SSC .308" 2.800" 45.0 2489 46,100 PSI 48.0C 2666 56,500 PSI
175 GR. SIE HPBT 175 IMR 4320 .308" 2.800" 42.0 2471 44,000 PSI 45.7C 2687 57,600 PSI
175 GR. SIE HPBT 175 IMR 4064 .308" 2.800" 41.5 2500 45,200 PSI 45.6C 2728 59,500 PSI
175 GR. SIE HPBT 175 IMR 4895 .308" 2.800" 41.0 2463 42,800 PSI 45.0C 2704 57,800 PSI
175 GR. SIE HPBT 175 IMR 3031 .308" 2.800" 38.0 2427 42,000 PSI 41.3 2653 59,100 PSI
(always re-check load data, don't take my word for it).
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Sunday, February 10, 2008, at 18:24:56 (ZULU)
Badger ordnance 20 moa base and rings and a leupold 10 x 40 mark 4 m3 mil dot.
I plan on shooting Black Hills 175gn match bullets or a reload equivilent. I'm thinking of using it in some long range or long range tactical matches.
Nomally I would just go to the matches and see what other shooters are using but my wife(bless her heart) told me to go out and get what I want. I'd like to get a rifle before she forgets she said it;)
Does anyone see any flaws with this set up? Will the standard rings work or will I need to go higher?Will I have to change the bottom metal to a detachable mag set up?
Thanks
Ben
steven sabins
Bryan, Ohio, USA - Sunday, February 10, 2008, at 19:09:53 (ZULU)
Somewhile ago Master Rick B. spoke of a 4.5-14 M3 that his bunch were getting to play with. I now see taht they are available to us civie pukes ($1400!). Anyone played with 'em yet and are they worth the chance in upgrade over my 3.5-10 M3? I do like the thought of a little higher top end in magnifriction...
Seems about the perfect thing for my porpises.
Scott F.
Hillbillyland, MO, - Sunday, February 10, 2008, at 20:00:42 (ZULU)
Kudos to your eliminating TV from your children's lives. I've not owned a TV for over 11 years and our little guys have never had one in our home, purposefully reading, crafting, shooting (BB guns so far), working livestock, and generally living in the outdoors. Never will I allow that rot and filth to permeate their minds. They'll be subjected to that in their day to day lives when they get older. Their self-sufficiency and ability to maintain in this eroded future will hopefully carry them through.
Love of God and country will carry the day.
Scott F.
Hillbillyland, MO, - Sunday, February 10, 2008, at 20:55:01 (ZULU)
Scott F: You should not buy such nice glass for your dolphins:)) Besides, porpoises would be better off with a speargun. yarhar.
Joe M
Sunday, February 10, 2008, at 20:55:51 (ZULU)
re: common sense and Alaskan weather.
Reminds me of a comedy routine about being a new arrival in Calgary, Alberta. "Why didn't someone tell me not to wash my car in the driveway in the winter?".
Other readers - if you don't get it, 'fess up and we'll let you in on the punch line :-)
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Sunday, February 10, 2008, at 22:20:10 (ZULU)
Man all yous luck folks with Snow... I would trade this rain and humidity for snow in a heartbeat BWG...
Rod,
Thanks for the link, Its just one of those things. Maybe its just me, I would rather go to a link here that has the basic information from someone who i have talked with and know a little bit about vs going to another site...
Mourge
Overseas, - Monday, February 11, 2008, at 00:05:06 (ZULU)
Glad to help on the load data thing.
Downside of the cold weather is that it's tough to shoot in the snow and ice. We get warmer spells here during the winter, sometime just long enough to clear enough of the snow and ice from the range roads to permit access with a sedan.
I can remember an IPSC match that was partly held outdoors in -15C weather, that was interesting. Shoot a paper target, get a cloud of patches (glue doesn't work very well in weather that cold).
Different practice session years ago in -15C weather with the AR15 pattern rifle. Rifle worked fine, my legs and feet were starting to get cold. That was my epiphany that I *really* needed better cold weather clothing. Denim jeans and cotton socks just weren't doing it :-(
I now know that polypro, Thinsulate, polar fleece and GoreTex are your cold, wet weather friends :-)
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Monday, February 11, 2008, at 01:03:51 (ZULU)
Looks like Premier Reticles will be coming out with their own optics pretty soon. A variable (3 X 15) with FFP and (of course) a Gen 2 reticle. More to come.....
While I'm at it....
I need to pick up a set of .223 dies for AR loading (nothing competition level). What ya'll recommend? Small base any advantage?
Mk4
Texas, United States of America - Monday, February 11, 2008, at 01:09:28 (ZULU)
Your 'washing the car' joke struck an old memory....
I was five years on the force and we were called to a single family home on fire at the top of a large hill. The engine connected to a hydrant at the base of the hill and we fought the fire.
To pump a water system over a mountain, you need to use some extra pressure....this hydrant was running at around 110 psi... our relief valves were set for 90psi back then.... the engine had been losing water for hours....
I found the black ice the hard way....and slid quite a distance down the hill, coming to rest right in the middle of the cross-street at the bottom of the hill.... Good thing for reflective clothing, it took me a couple of minutes to finally get some wind back in my lungs and crawl off the road.
good times.
medicjim
Monday, February 11, 2008, at 01:31:24 (ZULU)
Its a deal...We got hit w/a storm last week wednesday that dropped an inch an hour....its all yours.
UnPat
UnPat
Snobound, Wi, USA - Monday, February 11, 2008, at 02:30:57 (ZULU)
I like the Redding dies with the carbide expander button upgrade for rifle reloading. Midway and others sell them. They're tight enough that I haven't felt the need for small base dies. I've reloaded lots for .223 in AR15 pattern rifles.
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Monday, February 11, 2008, at 03:06:04 (ZULU)
The problem with washing a car outdoors in cold winter weather is that the residual water freezes the doors and locks shut.
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Monday, February 11, 2008, at 03:07:15 (ZULU)
I built it. My landscaping can handle water but this is a lot of water and it is close to the house. Something will work; something always does.
On Saturday a hunting buddy and I climbed around in the local mountains. We were hunting predators and watching deer. My backyard has more snow/(sq ft) than the the upper levels of the mountains. It snowed, froze hard then the wind picked way up. The conditions were ideal for forming snow drifts at the lower elevations. That happened four or so times. Lucky me.
On the bright side, we built a snow cave and two sled runs.
Lemons to lemonade. The wife took photos.
CDC'
Monday, February 11, 2008, at 03:22:23 (ZULU)
Outstanding... I would trade the 4-8 inches of rain we have had in the last 3 days for a a few feet of snow. The question is how are we going to work the trade :D
Mourge
Overseas, - Monday, February 11, 2008, at 03:28:26 (ZULU)
UnPat: Hey, Morgue's one of my few "friends." We gotta do right by him---let's throw in Doyle, Madison, and the department of revenue along with our weather to sweeten the deal:)) And, since I'm married, he keeps the LBFMs:))
Scott, the 4-14x loopy came on the M107s, and it was a decent piece of glass for the cost to me (free). IIRC, these were all M1 turrets. But, if 1400 is what they go for, I would suggest NightForce 5.5x22x50mm; you can shop around these for less than 1400 (but not much less). The NF scope is the best scope in my safe, and I like the MLR reticle; lines aren't so bad if you are slow as i am at mil'ing stuff. And there are 1/4 mil increments top and right in the reticle for extra precision---also good for my "Bolt" eyes. Oh, I couldn't resist the aquatic mammal dig...
Joe M
Monday, February 11, 2008, at 03:41:29 (ZULU)
The carbide expander is something I hadn't considered. However, if I'm using Hornady One Shot for lube, that should take care of the case mouth lube...I'd think?
That's usually my process, lube, size...then polish.
Were you talking about the "S" series Redding?
Mk4
Texas, United States of America - Monday, February 11, 2008, at 03:56:04 (ZULU)
On your .308 loads try 46-46.5 grn of VV N550 with the 190 SMK's. Works great for me. YMMV.
jc
jc
Cordova, TN, United States - Monday, February 11, 2008, at 05:10:49 (ZULU)
Ya hadda mention Doyle, didnt ya? Man...Thats just cruel and unusual punishment.I want the guy outta office as bad as you but I just couldnt trade him to Morgue.Oh...Thats harsh....I am tryin to think of someplace we could swap Doyle off too,but even the worst places are too good...I dont have any use for the LBFM's either so he's gotta keep them.
Morgue,
Between this lot and the vacant lot next door there's 2-1/2 acres 18in deep,more than enough to make all the snowmen ya want too and it was -5F(no w/c factor)the last time I took the dogs out.-23F w/the w/c....That should turn all the water you got into a real nice hockey rink,and turnin the headlights on High Beams:)Joe might have more snow and lower temps over by him.
UnPat
UnPat
Wi, USA - Monday, February 11, 2008, at 06:40:12 (ZULU)
The advantage of that is you don't have to worry about lubing inside case necks at all. Which means you don't have to worry about removing any lube from inside case necks either. I also found that a dry neck with the carbide expander was *much* easier to resize compared to a lubricated neck with a conventional expander. That avoided stretching the brass length too.
I was thinking Redding:
Full Length Die Sets For Botttleneck Cases
Full length die sets for bottleneck cases contain two dies. The full length (FL) resizing die contains a decapping rod assembly with a neck expander (size button). The seating die (ST) includes bullet guide, built-in crimping ring and the proper seating plug.
\\
The Redding S dies with the interchangable neck rings are interesting, but you will then need different neck rings for brass with different wall thickness. That becomes an issue if you are using more than one manufacturer's brass. It also is less helpful if you are dealing with case necks that have been distorted inwards beforehand. That is more likely to happen to brass that was previously fired in a semi-auto, like say an AR15 pattern rifle...
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Monday, February 11, 2008, at 06:53:33 (ZULU)
Scott F: It sounds like you and I are of like mind. A couple of years ago, my son's teacher had her students name thier favorite tv show. My kid drew a blank. He didn't have any idea what was on, and didn't care.
CDC'
Monday, February 11, 2008, at 10:23:16 (ZULU)
Thanks Rod, CDC. Thats the info (and the "why") I was looking for.
--
BTW, take a look at a new rifle stock.
(click)
Mk4
Texas, United States of America - Monday, February 11, 2008, at 14:32:28 (ZULU)
I set 'em up, you knock 'em down....
By the way, The 4.5-14 I was ho-hummin about had the single turn knob which is the only reason I'd go that way anyhow. Might be better to do a 6.5-20 TMR for $900 bucks (through a buddy)and get Kenton knobs. This is for my 7WSM. 1/4 clicks don't do me no good 'cause my "more precision" resembles a good turkey load.
CDC,
Chilen's are home schooled too, thank God. Heard an interview not long ago with a teacher that didn't know the situation for nor the title of the Revolutionary war. Had a unit study not long ago for our homeschool co-op. Civil War. 9 and 10 year old kids reciting the Gettysburg Address. My 7 rear old knows more about Lincoln than most high school history teachers...
Scott F.
Hillbillyland , MO, - Monday, February 11, 2008, at 15:36:47 (ZULU)
I made a prototype 'cobra' rig, like yours. Note: prototype == first attempt == "it sucks". But, I'm undaunted... there are tons of possibilities.
BTW, if you get a chance, drop me a photo of your vest/rig. I'm putting mine together, and need some ideas. The Blackhawk vest is a corset.... kinda feels funny, putting it on. :8-\
Duman
Monday, February 11, 2008, at 23:39:40 (ZULU)
Jeff,
You're not the only light geek out there. The folks at this thread: http://www.ksccw.com/site/showthread.php?t=4173 have been discussing them for quite a while. I like a good light, but once they get to $100, I start losing interest.
JR,
I'd LOVE to have a viable black candidate. Then, all the losers that blame their failures on a racist government can stop claiming things would be different if they had real representation. Or, alternately, when they have a black president, and still lack ambition, they can start in on how the pres. is a "sellout", simply because he didn't start a program to give all the peopleon welfare plasma t.v's and spinner wheels!
Cold weather:
I had to go move the horses yesterday from a pasture next to the lake. I thought I was cold until later that night, when I talked to my uncle, who was in Minnesota. After talking to him, I was nearly warm!
Travis Morgan
Wichita, Ks., U.S.A. - Tuesday, February 12, 2008, at 01:24:28 (ZULU)
Post a pic of your vest. I'm interested...or send it to me and I'll post it. If'n its okay.
--
Travis,
Thanks for posting the link on the "Lights For Ccw And Law Enforcement." That's been a fascinating read. Interesting what Watchmaker had to say about the current crop of LED and how the military isn't jumping on the LED bandwagon...yet. "Watchmaker" seems to know his stuff.
Here's the link again.
(click)
Mk4
Texas, United States of America - Tuesday, February 12, 2008, at 02:37:35 (ZULU)
UnPat
UnPat
Wi, USA - Tuesday, February 12, 2008, at 10:31:49 (ZULU)
Keep in mind, watchmaker is giving advice on which unit to buy for a specific need... "outdoor, short duration, potential conflict". I own a $25 G2 Surefire Nitrolon for that purpose and it's quite good.
medicjim
Tuesday, February 12, 2008, at 14:15:11 (ZULU)
I understand what you mean about getting load data from someone you know, but there's some pretty good information here non the less.
Steven, I'd recommend you give the Cor-Bon ammo a try. It's been more consistent in my .308's than Black Hills.
Edited to ask, how do you make the link go to your name, so I can just say "click my name" like all the cool guys do?
Tony Burkes
Alvin, Texas, United States of America - Tuesday, February 12, 2008, at 15:07:13 (ZULU)
For "click my name", just paste the URL into the URL box in the SC posting menu (just below the password).
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Tuesday, February 12, 2008, at 16:29:16 (ZULU)
Tony Burkes
Alvin, Texas, United States of America - Tuesday, February 12, 2008, at 21:01:50 (ZULU)
I'm gonna hear crap on this one but I like my lee collet's and deffinately go with carbide or something that is modern "doesn't need case lube". That's a step that should have been long gone by now.
Hey!!! I want my spinnered plasma too. Reverse discrimination. That's what they called it in Memfrica when the white firemen got left behind in promotions due to affirmative action. Personally discrimination is discrimination not sure how it can be reversed. It's defination doesn't include a color or race etc but that's what they called it on the news. Just caught me as funny. The G2 is a great cheap light. Mount one on your pic hand guard with a cheap 1" Weaver Ring. Going to check out the lights link now before wife gets home and catches me buying stuff on internet.
Jeff Cooper
Gadsden, TN, - Wednesday, February 13, 2008, at 00:53:07 (ZULU)
I think you are missing my point, because I am probably one of the least bigoted or pigheaded people you have never met. What I am saying is to me it looks like the Demoncrats have set this up for the 'feel good' crowd.
Hillary has an agenda, everyone remembers(I think it took a week for it to sink in), which is why she's getting her butt kicked right now. Obama speaks well, but doesn't say much. I don't know what his ideas are, it's a lot of well spoken rhetoric.
This has to be the biggest set of losers I have seen running for president. And that is disparaging, at this crux of our history, we can't produce anyone viable in either party. We need to clone Ronnie. Bring back some grace, dignity, and a set of cajones to the white house.
JR
JR
Wednesday, February 13, 2008, at 01:29:55 (ZULU)
I have a Lee collet die I use for a .308 Win bolt gun, but they're not a good choice for a semi-auto or a lever action.
I believe the original query was about dies for AR15-pattern in .223 Rem.
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Wednesday, February 13, 2008, at 02:15:17 (ZULU)
When I was in Gardez, I realized that my service ceiling on the 58D would be about 1000' UGL---that is "under ground level," harhar. Tell me about climbimg out of ice: Isn't that the part where you extract yourself from the wreckage???
JR: We just need to identify every stressed out postal worker in the land, then write-in them for all federal offices. No offense to any postal workers with anger issues: My use of the cliche was for purely humorous porpoises:))
Well, at least the dolphins laughed...
OK, Morgue: Where do you want the next 8 inches of snow delivered? It'll be on my fields by tomorrow night, and I need to move it quick-like to make room for the next round this weekend:))
My only qiestion to global warmers: Who collects the tithes?
Joe M
Wednesday, February 13, 2008, at 03:07:55 (ZULU)
The winner of the LTW raffle to benefit americansnipers.com is now in possession of the prize pistol and most of the rest of the package (Chris Reeve knife, Leupold binocs, etc.). We got $36,020 for americansnipers.com out of it, and that's the BAD news.
The bad news, you say?
OK, here's the GOOD news, we're doing it again, LTW is already getting started on a raffle package for, once again, americansnipers,org. Gonna draw the winner at SHOT next year in Orlando.
Will advise when tickets be ready!
Thanks to the guys at americansnipers.org for making this an easy sell and being so easy to work with and-- basically-- just so danged tireless and dedicated. That really got and kept us going full bore on the project. Looking forward to doing it again, this time the project will be lead by LTW 'smith Stan Chen.
Ned Christiansen
3R, MI, - Wednesday, February 13, 2008, at 05:54:17 (ZULU)
Jon
Jon Kujawa
Wednesday, February 13, 2008, at 16:58:01 (ZULU)
Rod Right now I don't reload for my M4. My Lee's are for my .308 also. What problems do they cause in the auto's? Because with ammo prices doubling or more since I bought my last few cases of surplus, I was contemplating buying some and starting to reload for it? Also I neck size only for all my guns, but they are all bolts except for the affore mentioned. I know I'll have to full length resize for the auto. Is that the problem?
Next topic Ok, why is it that I have to hear about this rifle over the phone from a buddy of mine that is about as far removed from sniping as you can get and still own long guns. http://www.remingtonmilitary.com/m24a3sws.htm Morgue!!! Where were you on this one buddy? LOL I haven't even heard it mentioned. Does anyone here have any experience with the M24A3? If so give me the "low down". Someone hit me with some G2. What's the scuttle but about it? While we're on Remington, can someone tell me where I can get a Remington Military Tango Series I w/clip point?
Jeff Cooper
Gadsden, TN, - Wednesday, February 13, 2008, at 17:23:51 (ZULU)
a fist full of throddle and a belly full of yoke.
Nothin' on the altimeter but the maker's name, and that was covered in blood......
Ice is not nice...
My uncle made his mark just short of the runway in Coffeeville, KS loaded up with ice.
Kevin R. Mussack (Andys' Dad)
Miami, FL, US of A - Wednesday, February 13, 2008, at 19:32:10 (ZULU)
Full-length resizing for the auto is indeed the issue (and is needed). Bolt guns are another matter.
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Wednesday, February 13, 2008, at 22:36:13 (ZULU)
Back in the late 80's(?), there was a flight from Indianapolis to Chicago with a group of GM executives. They never made it. Straight into the ground from several thousand feet. Wings had iced up. Made a really, really small hole in the ground. Occasionally it's shown on those "accident invesigation" shows.
"Sublimation Kills"
Duman
Wednesday, February 13, 2008, at 23:39:24 (ZULU)
Huh?
Ah-ha! It's like a cyclic, only different:))
Rotorwingnuts; gotta have one per;)
Joe M
Thursday, February 14, 2008, at 00:19:43 (ZULU)
We just had a guy here in Kansas in the last few days use a plane to drill a hole in the ground. Be safe, guys!
Travis Morgan
Wichita, Ks., U.S.A. - Thursday, February 14, 2008, at 00:21:06 (ZULU)
On a related subject. What's the deal with the Wolf Ammo. What do the bi-metal and steel cases do to your chamber? I read on another site some guy saying something about them messing up the barrel, but I couldn't see how that could be. I could see how they could be bad for the chamber and throat area though. Has anyone got experience with them and high volume shooting?
Two things that aren't any use to you; the sky above you, and the runway behind you. Joe, do you mean a nut to fly the rotorwing? lol That's been my opinion, but I've only got about 200hrs of whirrly bird time, and no rating. When I was learning they always yelled at me for calling the peddals, rudder peddals.lol Its the same thing but different. :-) Everybody else thinks that the cropdusters are the nuts. That's usually the first or second thing people say after I tell them what I do for a living. That or "I love to watch you guys, you guys have got to be crazy!"
Jeff Cooper
Gadsden, TN, - Thursday, February 14, 2008, at 16:31:16 (ZULU)
When reloading for a semi-auto, it's important to think-thru the workflow. Time and motion is everything, since it will be repeated a whole *bunch* of times. Discard notions of weighing individual powder charges unless you have copious amounts of unallocated free time. With a good powder measure, weighing is wasted under (say) 400 yds.
The time killer is the brass prep, not the loading itself when dealing with bottleneck rifle cartridges.
Power tools for any trimming/chamfering is critical. Dedicated tools are even better, but pricier. Giraud trimmer or similar is my next upgrade if I feel compelled to trade more money against time.
I use a spray lube which speeds up the resizing process, and gives me pretty even coverage too.
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Thursday, February 14, 2008, at 18:19:55 (ZULU)
For .223, I'm using a Lee Loadmaster with the Lee Double Disk kit in their Deluxe Powder Measure for loading. W748, H335 and now IMR4896 as powders. (IMR4896 is a non-canister-grade powder that I jokingly think of as IMR4895SC. It's like IMR4895 with shorter granules, which lets it meter better. There's a story that goes with that if anyone cares.).
I'm using a single-stage press for brass prep, since that simplifies cleaning the lube off the case after resizing. (I use dry corn cob in a vibe tumbler to remove case lube in batches).
That also permits me to use a headspace gage on each resized case before it gets reloaded, which helps ensure functional reliability later. The alternative is to adjust the die so that it produces "generous" headspace for some of the brass. Since I'm using brass from mixed sources, this is more critical than if I was using stuff only fired in a single rifle.
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Thursday, February 14, 2008, at 18:31:49 (ZULU)
Wolf ammo is weak in velocity, not even close to M193. That hurts terminal effectiveness. They used to be coated with clear lacquer that gets soft when very hot, and will gum up your chamber. Eventually, you wind up with a case stuck. Supposedly they now have a teflon like coating that holds up better. The lacquer is not an issue with the 7.62x39 round/AK pattern due to it's steeper body.
I also have seen a few broken AR15 extractors in class where we were shooting copious amounts of ammo. The steel case is hard on extractors.
I would rather reload than shoot Wolf. YMMV.
Looks like Millett has a pretty nice new scope out, the TRS-1. Too bad they totally shot themselves in the foot with 1/8 minute clicks instead of 1/4 or 1/2. If it weren't for that, I would have ordered two of them today considering they are priced in the Super Sniper range.
Geoff M
WI, USA - Thursday, February 14, 2008, at 21:56:12 (ZULU)
My mother, OTOH, has that figured out: she let me in on her insight, "...he's the anti-Christ..." Heheh. Well, can't blame her for noticing that he is all inspiration with zero perspiration.
Too bad he understands marxism far better than the constitution...that kind of oratory with a libertarian underpinning is what this country desperately needs. Ron Paul, decent message with no delivery...Obama--decent delivery with no message. Our education system, inherent intellectual laziness, and celebrted self interest has led us to this point.
I think I'll go sharpen my battle axe II....
Joe M
Friday, February 15, 2008, at 02:10:15 (ZULU)
The guy goes from Illinois State Senator to U.S. Senator from the great - if befuddled - state of Illinois, does TWO undistinguished years then decides to accept a grateful nation's highest office.
The guy has been packaged and sold like a teen idol. He may be an empty suit but he's fashionable.
CDC'
Friday, February 15, 2008, at 03:30:51 (ZULU)
Jeff Cooper
Gadsden, TN, - Friday, February 15, 2008, at 07:43:18 (ZULU)
I told my daughter no dating before she's 25yrs old... she already has that "Daddeeee!" thing down at 11.
SSG Mac
Friday, February 15, 2008, at 09:49:58 (ZULU)
And, it is that time of year: She is selling GS cookies. These things sell themselves, really. I have a email that she and her mom drafted up---and I could send that to anyone interested. It has an attachment with pictures and an explanation of different ways to support troops overseas with shipments of cookies with specified donations.
Anyway--if anyone is interested, email me off the roster mail, and I'll forward her email with clean attachments to ya.
New guys---forgive my blatant commercial outreach:)) Some folks here remember Peanut from a difficult time some 6 years ago. Our little survivor wants to earn her way to summer camp--and has a goal of 800 boxes. Normally shy with strangers, she has sold 200+ boxes at walmart, the grocery store (where the manager asked her to please refrain---and she promptly sold him six boxes:)), altel phone company---anywhere mom drags her--she seems to sell a dozen boxes:)) The kid is stepping up. When i told her to put us down for 6 boxes of her choice---she picked one of each to send to the troops. Good choice, i thought...
Joe M
Friday, February 15, 2008, at 13:55:34 (ZULU)
Joe send me email at DMMDNLN at AOL.com
Where I can send 40.00= 10.00 for shipping, to for cookies for your daughters drive. I will send address where to ship them.
I suggest a bunch of others here do same thing. Remember this girls Daddy was gone for a long tiem protecting our freedom.
Mike/Undude
Mike Miller
Ca, - Friday, February 15, 2008, at 17:27:19 (ZULU)
>"I told my daughter no dating before she's 25yrs old... she already has that "Daddeeee!" thing down at 11."<
HA!... I told Ruggus Rattus that he can drive at 40, and start dating at 45 (IF I approve of her ;). HE has the "Waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaah" thing down pact. ;)
-
'lito
CatShooter
Spring has sprung, da' creek has riz, I wonder where dem kitties is? - Friday, February 15, 2008, at 23:18:21 (ZULU)
Joe M
Friday, February 15, 2008, at 23:55:33 (ZULU)
I was in line for security screening at Raleigh/Durham airport this morning with 20 or so young men and women carrying there new ruck sacks. It made me think about Blake so I thought I would ask how things are going.
By the way All of them looked so DAMM young. I bet most don't even need to shave.
JLU
Joe Udelhofen
Oconomowoc, WI, USA - Saturday, February 16, 2008, at 00:09:56 (ZULU)
Count me in for the same amount of fatness as Undude. send the info to akushnir at mac dot com.
Icing really sucks, on our SAR excursions in the winter, we always get a bit of ice build up when hovering over the water for extended periods of time. Sucks cuz we have to pull the intake screens when we do that and are usually waiting for a bird to go right down the chute.
S/F
Kush
Kush
Havelock, NC, - Saturday, February 16, 2008, at 05:06:39 (ZULU)
Count me in. longrange454 at yahoo dot com
Gary Kaney
N.W., ILL, - Saturday, February 16, 2008, at 11:31:10 (ZULU)
Guys, prayers please: the job of a lifetime seems to be coming my way. If it comes to pass I'll most likely meet several of you, and a lot of others you know. God opens and closes doors for us, He's in control and I'm content (but I still made my wife pinch me in the car yesterday to make sure I wasn't dreamin') One thing: taking this job would mean the end of my military career... I'm pretty sure it's worth it.
Damn, did I just write that?!?
Mac
SSG Mac
Saturday, February 16, 2008, at 18:30:26 (ZULU)
You got my mouth watering for those chocolate coconut caramel majobs... so count me in for some too... I had to look'em up they are the Samoas, melt in your mouth good, well unless you hate coconut.
After much contemplation and go around I am going to leave the 1917 as is, maybe do a little touch up on it. Instead I am going to pick up a steven and rebarrel it to 338 for economic reasons I am going to base it off a 300 winmag. Its going to be one of the first things I plan to order after I get back and take care of a couple other prior commitments.
Mourge
Overseas, - Sunday, February 17, 2008, at 02:47:28 (ZULU)
Joe: Tell Peanut that I'm in.
CDC'
Sunday, February 17, 2008, at 03:36:23 (ZULU)
Off roster email inbound.
UnPat
UnPat
Wi, USA - Sunday, February 17, 2008, at 03:57:25 (ZULU)
Good choice on the 1917 and Stevens 200 projects. It's cheaper and easier to move in the direction of the simpler modifications when you have options. Tons of support and parts for variations on a theme on the Stevens 200. Barrel changes are "easy", getting feed rails to work for a different cartridge body is hard.
When a shooting buddy was looking to build a long-range .308 Win bolt gun, I encouraged him to use the Stevens 200.
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Sunday, February 17, 2008, at 13:48:06 (ZULU)
If you want to borrow my barrel swapping tools let me know.
Jody Calhoun
Saraland, AL-Heart of Dixie, USA - Sunday, February 17, 2008, at 15:29:29 (ZULU)
from
avi
avi
haifa, israel, is - Sunday, February 17, 2008, at 20:57:50 (ZULU)
Gents: An email is forwarded to all; if you do not receive it like now, send me a quick note.
edited to add: Its the original angie-peanut email/ flyer with the address and checks payable to "G.S.s" --picture of the cookies and all that; if you sent an email to angie's account--you received this one.
I just pulled a ton of emails from the roster today:)) New orders!
Joe M
Monday, February 18, 2008, at 02:27:16 (ZULU)
Between that and my own 27 year old daughter getting hitched on the 29th of this month, trigger time is going to go hell in a handbasket. Just hope I can make some matches in the next couple of months. I'll be going mainly to socialize cause I dang sure won't be shooting well if I don't get my arse behind the trigger more.
Wish me luck, Bolt headed to bed and out!
Bolt
Interesting times in........, NC, - Monday, February 18, 2008, at 03:26:25 (ZULU)
Jeff Cooper
Gadsden, TN, USofA - Monday, February 18, 2008, at 04:47:48 (ZULU)
Interesting times indeed.
Joe M
Monday, February 18, 2008, at 06:20:11 (ZULU)
The folks in Bekeley, Ca. seem to be the kinda lowlifes that would hang banners and build a mansion for the first son of a bitch that wanted to invade our country.
Makes me want to fucking puke.
Wonder who they're gonna call on during the next natural disaster? I hope none of them ever need an airlift, evacuation, or a Mexican revolution put down.
Travis Morgan
Wichita, Ks., U.S.A. - Monday, February 18, 2008, at 10:20:40 (ZULU)
Joe M: If Serbia/Kosavo gets too out of hand, the Euro-wee-wees can threaten the use of the Ultimate Weapon: The Strongly Worded Statement.
It scares the piss out of me just thinking about it.
Bolt: Best wishes on working with the little guy.
CDC'
Monday, February 18, 2008, at 10:34:04 (ZULU)
I'm not sure if this is an official method, and I'm not sure if the laws where you live are different. I'm just sharing what I know.
medicjim
Monday, February 18, 2008, at 13:54:29 (ZULU)
Cut it to 18.25" and give yourself at least 1/4" more than 18" to be on the safe side.
Remember Randy Weaver - his was 17 and 7/8", and his wife and son died because of it.
-
FieldComm...
Bravo and I have been chatting about Field Comm radios for the last week, and some new stuff is available to the civilians.
Uniden has some FRS radios that have all the private call and encryption/decryption stuff that has been around for a while, but they have just come out with a set of radios that any user in your group can hit a button and move the whole group to a new frequency (of 22 freqs).
This means that your group can change frequencies every sentence if necessary... so if you are on a S&R, and don't want the public to get in the way, or the "media" to follow, this is a "good thing".
http://www.uniden.com/products/index.cfm?cat=family%20radios
Look on the right side of the page and click on the numbers below.
GMR1588-2CK, GMR1595-2CK, GMR1558-2CK and GMR1048-2CK
also... spread spectrum has come to the low price hand held talkie... with SpredSpec, 100,000 users can use the same band at the same time, and not interfere with each other... and it is monitor PROOF!!!
No one can intercept SpredSpec... and the prices are in the reasonable range of $80 to $130 for a pair
http://www.trisquare.us/index.htm
The Uniden radios work in the 460 Mcs band and the SpredSpec radios work in the 900 mcs band.
Radios in these bands have ranges of from one to two miles in New England woods, to ~15 miles out in flat prairie (line of sight).
I like the idea of being able to change frequencies fast, or have radios that are not monitor-able.
I'm not paranoid.. well, maybe a little.
Ok, ok... I can see the black helis out the window, and they ARE out to get me, and I want to be able to talk to my crew on the sly ;)))))
-
'lito
CatShooter
Spring has sprung, da' creek has riz, I wonder where dem kitties is? - Monday, February 18, 2008, at 16:36:05 (ZULU)
from memory: BATFE says cocked action, measuring rod from breach face to muzzle. 18" is the (US federal) legal limit for shotguns. Most mfgr spec 18.5 to ensure some margin. Also means you can later re-crown w/o sweating creating a dreaded "sawed off" shotgun.
If I was cutting, I would add some extra for just that reason. Measure twice, cut once doesn't just apply to carpentry :-)
There is also a (US federal) 26" overall length spec too. Not usually an issue with a semi-auto and a "normal" stock.
Shorter barrel can be a function issue with a semi-auto and lighter loads (gas pressure level and duration). If it can function ok with a longer barrel and light loads, it will probably be fine with a shorter barrel and heavier loads.
As for the contour, most shotgun barrels are made with choking integral to the barrel. If you chop them the choke goes away. Likely means you'll be created a cylinder bore. If that is acceptable then it should not be an issue.
probably several threads here on this very topic:
http://www.thehighroad.org (or click my name)
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Monday, February 18, 2008, at 16:48:37 (ZULU)
I'm ashamed to say I haven't finished it, but I've been caught up studying for licenses. Every time I get one, someone offers a job that requires another. All these jobs are for next winter, so I figure I might as well get all the licenses I can. I want to make sure I have the right one for the best job still on the table next fall. I'll be a flying, school bus, hazmat, triple trailor, container driving fool before it's all over. As long as it's not in instrument conditions I can get it there. Oddly enough, the instrument rating is the one that I ought to get the most. If I had that, I could go to work in Columbia on the DEA's drug erradication program. According to my friends that work there, the rumor is that they'll be transitioning from 802's and OV-10s' to A10's sometime in the future. How they're gonna convert them to spray planes is beyond me, but I'd love to be there when it happens.
Is anyone sure about the shotgun overall length law? Laws are laws and and I don't want to get busted for either one, overall length or barrel length. I'm planning on cutting the stock too. Does anyone know of an after market manufacturer that makes 11-87 barrels that are 18 1/4 and have screw in chokes. 21 is the shortest I've found without being rifled for slugs.
Is anyone here good with Photoshop. I'd like to get a picture put together of an AT802 that looks like it's pulling three gas trailors. I can send you the pictures of the 802 and probably the trailor if you can put them together. It'd be great for the office wall and my business card. I need to incorprate a school bus and Trailways in there too. LOL Next stop Tanks, Ships, and Subs.
Eddited to add: Thanks Rod, You got that in while I was typing.
Jeff Cooper
Gadsden, TN, - Monday, February 18, 2008, at 17:37:20 (ZULU)
Back in the day (late '80s) I got a terrifying lesson on signal intercept. I came away from the experience seriously paranoid about radiating in ANY spectrum. My ambition became to be the groundpounder version of a nuke sub: a hole in the woods that could only be identified as the abscense of a signature.
News of the new radios is welcome, but if I thought someone where looking for me, I'd still maintain radio silence (and probably powered down).
...Back to planning the next cache;))
Bill
SSG Mac
Monday, February 18, 2008, at 18:01:16 (ZULU)
You don't say what brand or model shotgun. If it's a Remmie 1100 I know it will function with a 21" bbl. because I have one in 20 gauge and a pal has one in 12 gauge. Both are unmodified factory bbls.
Cheers,
Doc
Doc Holloway
The sunny Ozark boonies, MO, USA - Monday, February 18, 2008, at 19:43:30 (ZULU)
There are alot of guys asking about you on 6mmbr.com,was there some sort of a problem?
JK
Jon Kujawa
Monday, February 18, 2008, at 21:26:44 (ZULU)
Jeff Cooper
Gadsden, TN, - Monday, February 18, 2008, at 21:27:52 (ZULU)
There are people who can locate transmitters using spread spectrum modulation techniques. Encrypted same-same. You don't need to be able to decode the transmission to find the transmitter - or the receiver.
Your digital watch emits radio frequency energy too, as does every other digital device.
Fortunately, our current foes are relatively unsophisticated with respect to elint.
We are unlikely to be so lucky with all of our potential future foes.
The question is not whether I'm paranoid, but whether I'm paranoid enough.
Lindy
The Northern Occupied Territories of Mexico, Texas, U.S.A. - Monday, February 18, 2008, at 21:45:49 (ZULU)
Now that you are back, we ain't gonna let you go - we need someone to beat up and pick on ;))))
Yeah, I was getting tons of real nasty e-mails from a bunch of jerks that got caught in their own BS. When someone tells me that their 223 is as fast as a 22-250, they better duck - and there are about 8 or 10 guys that didn't like getting their weenies caught in the screen door.
They started e-mailing me with ugly remarks that had nothing to do with shooting - seems that they thought the site belonged to them.
I got tired of the nastiness - it wasn't about shooting... just nasty name calling.
There wasn't enough good stuff going on with that site, so it wasn't worth fighting over - a lot of info that is passed on to the new shooters there is pure, unadulterated...
... bullshit.
I'm surprised that someone misses me - usually, when I leave a site, they throw a party with free eats and beer ;)))
-
'lito
CatShooter
Spring has sprung, da' creek has riz, I wonder where dem kitties is? - Monday, February 18, 2008, at 22:43:43 (ZULU)
JK
Jon Kujawa
Tuesday, February 19, 2008, at 01:23:27 (ZULU)
He's definitely a piece of work!
I had a 40-XB/ss in 22-250 that I shot out on dog towns, and my once love affair with the 22-250 has long ago burned out.
So I sent the riffle back to Green Faerie for a new 6mm Rem (aka .244) barrel - got a call that it will be here in a week or two.
This has been a good month. I got the Rat, and a new stick all at the same time.
The barrel is being drilled for one of those loooong Unertl 2" Ultra Varmint scopes (good ones are going for $1400 on eBay now).
So this is one of my spring projects.
The Rat and I are filing the emancipation papers on Thursday, and dropping off copies to the "Ex" on Friday... so she will have a weekend to stew over them before she can call her lawyer - there's nothing she can do about it (HA!... Double HA!!).
This year I will get back to serious shooting again.
This summer, I'm thinking of finely doing a book on shooting stuff. Not the "same ol same ol", but something that covers the crap that the others don't and peels back the layers of BS that keep floating around. There will be a lot on shooting optics, and loading (without loads). I don't know if there is a market for it - maybe it'll be good to just get it off my chest.
Buy the way... some years back, the Tasco Super Duper Sniper Scope, (now by SWFA), was reputed to have been bought by the Navy for the SEALS. Something about a deal that the SEALS got 65% of the scopes made, and the "public" got the rest.
A few weeks ago, I had cause to check this out, and called the Navy "Contracts and Procurement" offices, and gave them the "contract" number that SWFA keeps sprouting out.
When I asked the head of the Navy "Contracts and Procurement" office, she asked what the contract was for, and I told her that they were for Tasco sniper scopes... she just giggled!
Turns out that the contract number does not exist in the Navy.
It further turns out that the Navy never bought any of the scopes - the lady checks the contract number, and it matches the number group that is assigned to DARPA.
A few were bought by DARPA, which is a govt evaluation group (kinda like "Consumer's Union"), and they found that the scopes sucked.
So... if someone offers you the SWFA Super Duper Sniper Scope - that is used by the real Navy SEALS, pass on it!!
-
'lito
CatShooter
Spring has sprung, da' creek has riz, I wonder where dem kitties is? - Tuesday, February 19, 2008, at 02:34:58 (ZULU)
I'll take an autographed copy...
Sharon
(Good on ya & Ruggus Rattus!)
Larry J. Porter
Boonies of the Panhandle, Texas, USA!!!! - Tuesday, February 19, 2008, at 03:00:36 (ZULU)
Put me on the list for a book if you decide to do it. I could make good use of an actual "been there-done that" book.
Jody Calhoun
Saraland, AL-Heart of Dixie, USA - Tuesday, February 19, 2008, at 03:04:20 (ZULU)
Life is a game...play to win:)
Joe M
Tuesday, February 19, 2008, at 03:31:52 (ZULU)
+1 on the book :-)
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Tuesday, February 19, 2008, at 03:32:53 (ZULU)
+1 more on the Book
Joe,
couple emails inbound to the appropriate email.
Jody,
I appreciate the offer to let me barrow the tools, a good buddy locally (SD) was saying he had the kit to work'em over if I am remembering rightly, so I think its covered but I will let you know for sure. again its appreciated.
Rod,
You were saying that getting the feed rails to work on a different cartridge might cause some headaches, would this be the case if all that is being done is necking a 300 winmag up to a 338 winmag?
Thanks gents
Mourge
Overseas, - Tuesday, February 19, 2008, at 04:21:59 (ZULU)
Finally decided to let Marius know that I could no longer remember my password and get back on line here. He was very understanding and only mumbled something about old age. :)
Doing the same old same old but with new ranges, more students, and a revamped course.
Joe M. - You get my return email, I have had problems with bounce back here lately and never know. Kosovo could be a bad precedent, think in terms of someplace closer wanting to become a free state or return to "mother" country.
Will drop by more often to see what is going on. You guys be sure and continue to play nice now. :)
Rick B./Longrange1947
Fayetteville, NC, USA - Tuesday, February 19, 2008, at 04:58:47 (ZULU)
Good.
CDC'
Tuesday, February 19, 2008, at 05:28:50 (ZULU)
Good atcha!
1947 - HA!, I knew you was a young puppy all the time!
Did you hear that our famous resident killer, "Tigger-twenney-too" has given up his sniping for hire business (aka "I will snipe people for food" ;), and has gone to nursing school?
God help those poor folks that go to the hospital in Idaho... but then maybe he is gonna be a nurse in a "Nursing home". where he can clean the drooling oatmeal off of the bibs ;)))
And to think... his lawyer never got in touch with me about that law suit :(.
Drop by more often.
-
'lito
CatShooter
Spring has sprung, da' creek has riz, I wonder where dem kitties is? - Tuesday, February 19, 2008, at 09:29:33 (ZULU)
I need a scope for my 243. Any comments good or bad about this scope, i've got a line on one at a good price.
Gary Kaney
N.W., ILL, - Tuesday, February 19, 2008, at 13:13:19 (ZULU)
I got that rifle done that I was talking about last year,heres the link
http://www.websitetoolbox.com/tool/post/6mmbr/vpost?id=2166544.
Also I to would like a copy of the book.
JK
Jon Kujawa
Tuesday, February 19, 2008, at 14:26:59 (ZULU)
Feed rails becomes an issue when the cartridge *body* dimensions are changed. Neck up/down changes would be much less of an issue, except on feed ramps. Since feed ramps tends to be a barrel artifact, they would be updated if you're changing the bore diameter.
Ditto on bolt-face dimensions.
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Tuesday, February 19, 2008, at 16:37:19 (ZULU)
So, WTF is the issue here for us? A-stan, for one: NATO does occupy 3/4s of the country for us. If there is a war in the Balkans, and the euroweenies run out of pointed criticisms and UN resolutions and decide to actually (god forbid) do something meaningful---expect the a-stan mission to quickly dwindle, leaving us holding the bag. There is a cascade effect, and the hit will be on our treasury--which has its hands full maintaining the liquidity of the US banking system right now. BTW, we have troops in that new country as well---troops we'd be hard=pressed to reinforce. And would anyone really push for a stand in this region? Think WWI for a minute...and think about facing Russian troops as well. They too already have their foot in this door.
Yeah, this seemingly meaningless little province has the potential to cause all manor of disproportionate trouble for the world. The entire ingredients at play will make one hell of a stew of miscalculation. Like i said--it is worth watching. The folks who jumped up (us included) to recognize the new proclamation have staked out a position they may regret. At stake here is an entire foreign policy intitative called promting democracy: If we cheer a movement one day, then sit on our hands and watch it get crushed the next--we have no further credibility anywhere--including the middle east, and AQ will surely use any hesitation to make their case. |At a time where we are stepping away from the surge, this could effect the relative success of that---see? Lots of pitfalls here, and wider than meets the eye.
FWIW, an easy case can be made that anti-war/ pacifist movements can and do cause wars thru encouraging those who may have been more cautious. If the Serbs and ruskies decide that public anti-war sentiment is a factor--they will launch. Heheh. Put that in your peace pipe and smoke it, herr Ted K, D. Durban, Nancy, Reid, Osamabama et-al; show them bad guys our lack of resolve and desire to cut and run! That oughtta deter them! Hahahaha. Now that is irony! And youz guys know how much i love irony!
Onthe "who the hell knows" column: Pervez lost his coalition in parliment, the opposition (two main parties) got the majority in early returns. That effectivly divides Pak on whether or not the terrs are good or bad, and changes how effectively they can deal with them. Their nuclear arsenal adds to the excitement, eh?
But damn...this has "suck" written all over it. The relatively tame announcement of Castro stepping down gets all the media--and it is the least worrisome thing going on anywhere.
Rick: I got your emails--I was waiting until i had something important to say (being retired, that takes a while) before I bugged ya again---out of concern that your time is precious these days. I'll get ya an update out on Blake, his goals, and why he is angling the way he is for an assignment.
I've been shooting my .44 too much lately...but dang, it is a tackdriver! Quite possibly the most fun handgun in the house:))
Joe M
Tuesday, February 19, 2008, at 17:11:17 (ZULU)
"Breaking the Phalanx" was a heretical book a decade ago. Now, while studiously avoiding the connection--the army has done what was recommended. The phalanx still exists (just look for any GO slots that went away), but the new structure has lessened divisional importance and time will continue this. As the autonomous briigade was once the stuff of controversery, so too is the viability of the Air Force as a separate branch of service; that discussion is simmering around DoD backchannels as we speak. Largely brought on by the experiences of the GWOT--the AF does not play well with others on so many levels. For those who think this is the "usual rumors"--ask the guy who wrote 'Phalanx what he thinks of sea-changes.
But to stay on topic: A quick doctrinal look at the new sniper MTOE and deployment within the TF would be enlightening. Are they pure DS or GS? Mixed? Funding separately or from their dedicated unit? The good, the bad and the ugly; someone with knowledge could write a good article for our library here:))
Hey SSG Mac, Rick: Youz guys got any input? Mac was an ACR guy--he has seen this new army somewhere before, eh?
Joe M
Tuesday, February 19, 2008, at 18:59:15 (ZULU)
Limited input to give on this. Things ARE changing, but it seemed to me to depend a great deal on the Field Grade in charge. There are a lot of Field Grades learning the usefulness of snipers and thier capabilities, but there're just as many who still don't have a clue (about that and other things).
Two years ago when I last observed this directly the snipers were still decentralized to the various units. In my own org the only representation was generous DM training in all the line units.
I'm very interested to hear what ohters have to say on this.
Bill
SSG Mac
Tuesday, February 19, 2008, at 22:00:51 (ZULU)
IIRC, the NRA Firearms Fact book says the barrel of a shotgun is measured from the barrel tip to the action, not to the bolt face, since the length of the cartridge can vary in the same shotgun. In a rifle, it's from the end of the barrel to the bolt face with the bolt closed. You might check this out at the NRA website, or BATF.
With the possible trouble you may find yourself in, why not buy a short barrel from Brownell's?
Duman
Tuesday, February 19, 2008, at 23:46:03 (ZULU)
I couldn't imagine going from the top of the game to wipin' ass in 2 years..Nothing against it, just couldn't imagine it..:P Definitely not my gig..
Got an email incoming sometime to you regarding a few things, all good..One thing involves the pressure cabbage, ha..
Just been playing with the new remmy triggers today..Not sure what I think of them, much the same, but, I don't know..Why couldn't they have come up with a better design on the bolt stop and release..I haven't worked one over yet, but have one rifle set aside can probably do so. Anything in particular should be watchful for? I'd like to adjust it to the 'next level'..
Nothing new here, weather's been good. Headed up to Daytona last weekend for a spell, and it were mayhem. Traffic report said leave now or you'll never get home, so took their advice came home and got some fishin done. Caught a lot of seaweed, so if I were a vegetarian would have done well. Couple small snook as well, let them back to the briny to get bigger. Nice thing it was only about 40 feet from my front door. Watched part of the race at the local..Think I enjoyed the craftsman truck race Friday more, though the end of the 500 was ok..Rednecks got a kick out of it anyway.
later
JR
Brevard County, FL, USA - Tuesday, February 19, 2008, at 23:46:26 (ZULU)
JR
JR
Wednesday, February 20, 2008, at 00:58:41 (ZULU)
<I cannot believe I am doing this...defending a prospective 'skirt'>
A male RN pretty much can go anywhere and pull in 70K...you can work a year in Alaska, one in Hawaii, maybe try out one of the Virgin Islands... the cert has some portability to other nations as well.. not a bad place to land after two years of school... and the potential to build on it is endless... the best gig I've seen is Nurse Anesthetist... the guy I talked to worked from 8-3 on weekdays and was pulling very good $$
I went through exactly the same amount of training and more clinical time to get Paramedic (much more abuse too)... I regret the decision now. RN would have been a much better long term backup.
medicjim
Wednesday, February 20, 2008, at 01:47:27 (ZULU)
From ATF web site:
http://www.atf.gov/firearms/nfa/nfa_handbook/chapter2.pdf
"The length of the vast majority of shotgun barrels is measured from the muzzle of the barrel to the face of the breech on a line parallel to the axis of the bore."
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Wednesday, February 20, 2008, at 01:58:31 (ZULU)
Been busy. Lotsa homicides here lately.
Port Arthur, Texas. What a shit hole.
But !!! ... Made 76 THOUSAND DOLLARS for GI Joe at Shot.
God bless Bruce and LouAnn Robinson.
Hope you are all well.
out
brian k. sain
Wednesday, February 20, 2008, at 02:10:55 (ZULU)
Ya dun gud!
Larry J. Porter
Boonies of the Panhandle, Texas, USA!!!! - Wednesday, February 20, 2008, at 14:37:43 (ZULU)
There were some posts a few weeks ago about high powered laser pointers.
I had asked around and left a few messages, and got a call back a few minutes ago.
There are NO restrictions on purchasing lasers... you can buy a 1,000,000 watt laser if you have the jack!
Most of the little hand held class room laser pointers are 5mw (milliwatt) but the ones that were talked about on the thread were 350 milliwatt - that seemed high to me, but it turns out that they are legal (though they are very hazardous to the eye, if looked at directly).
If anyone has that website, I would appreciate the url again, I lost all my (5,000+) bookmarks in a crash of this shitty Windows 'puter :(
-
'lito
CatShooter
Spring has sprung, da' creek has riz, I wonder where dem kitties is? - Wednesday, February 20, 2008, at 14:51:35 (ZULU)
The link was: http://www.wickedlasers.com/
We had some laser welders at Hydra-Matic, they were made by Spectra-Physics. I think they were in the 5KW range, we used them for welding clutch housings for transmissions. When everything was tuned, they made beautiful welds. Of course, the laser system (at that time) was nearly as big as a house.
Duman
Wednesday, February 20, 2008, at 16:20:47 (ZULU)
Might be worth checking out.
Jon
Jon Kujawa
Wednesday, February 20, 2008, at 17:24:44 (ZULU)
Which leaves me with a mental image of Wile E. Coyote, genius, huddled over his ACME Laser 5000 do-it-yourself kit.
Joe M
Wednesday, February 20, 2008, at 20:22:31 (ZULU)
I'm envisionong a high enough powered laser in a LRF that you could bombard the other guy's scope and blind him. Why THE HELL don't our guys have something like this? It'd be cool if it was hot enough to singe the hair off a coyote's ass.
Travis Morgan
Wichita, Ks., U.S.A. - Wednesday, February 20, 2008, at 21:00:55 (ZULU)
We do have lasers. So do the Soviets, Chinese, and several others. It is an insidious weapon, and is probably banned by several treaties/agreements (for what that's worth). Many glasses/goggles now have some form of "laser protection" statement, but Lito would know more about that stuff.
There has to be a real good reason to deploy a weapon like that, because payback would be hell.
Duman
Wednesday, February 20, 2008, at 21:11:12 (ZULU)
Trust me, with the price of all the good commercial stuff,
you don't want to be bothered.
If the price bothers you, you can get cheap HK from here:
http://www.dealextreme.com/products.dx/category.911
Cheap applies to both build quality and price.
30mw green $25
Don't know about US import regs, so don't order a bunch of units in a single order you can't afford to lose...
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Wednesday, February 20, 2008, at 22:04:21 (ZULU)
My guys kick ass.
DUMAN: Dude ... did you get your wallet business straightened out?
briank. sain
Wednesday, February 20, 2008, at 22:16:22 (ZULU)
If you think that ANY RF transmissions can't be monitored and decrypted, you're "unwise." A few monthes ago, some DOJ/DOD type dude made some statements about people having to shift their expectations of privacy. If you get past the outrage and read between the lines of that statement, you can make some broad assumptions about the state of our intercept/decrypt capabilities.
That oughta get the tinfoil hat crowd good and spun up:)
So I guess nobody has done any 7.62x39 heavy(180+gn) bullet stuff? I bought 4K of Yugo 175gn FMJBT's(M118SB equivilent) for practice ammo and it might make interesting suppressed Hague legal ammo.
S/F.....Ken M
Ken M
Wednesday, February 20, 2008, at 23:02:59 (ZULU)
Yeah, I reported the wallet lost/stolen to the convention center apes. They acted like it never happened before. Got everything cancelled and re-issued. I wanted to stay longer, but thought it prudent to get home, and start the process of getting squared away.
Duman
Wednesday, February 20, 2008, at 23:29:41 (ZULU)
Go ahead and nominate this leftist neophyte, you morons. Unless McPlain is brain dead, he will win. damn. The game is stacked: We lose no matter who wins...
Joe M
Thursday, February 21, 2008, at 01:26:05 (ZULU)
Forgot who but somone came by and told me you had gone.
We were short handed and I only had six guys.
Too much for me to keep track of.
When I asked ... he said you had already bailed ... what a f23cked up trip pal.
Sorry.
See you next year?
brian k. sain
Thursday, February 21, 2008, at 03:22:32 (ZULU)
As to the point of your question Joe, the snipers need to be placed just as the recon assets are placed, under the S2/3 with full support and intel. They should be an asset that can be sent out in DS missions to support an operational unit whether that unit is a Platoon needing over watch, a company in the attack, or a movement to contact. The control is exerted by the operational unit and not the "mother unit". They can be used in GS missions as force protection for the unit overall but care must be taken that they are not misused and soon become glorified body guards. The DMs can give some DS to the squads in some missions but there is a lose of capabilities in many cases where DMs are used when they should use snipers and vice versa.
"I know there are good video feeds on youtube on how to make a laser."
Metacafe also shows how to start fires with the little classroom pointers by taking the safety off of them. Oh yeah, Wile E. Coyote alright. :)
Travis/Duman - The Soviets employed and still do under Mother Russia a counter sniper weapon that is a low yield laser until it detects a lens reflection, at which time it will go ballistic. They have had them since the 70s that I know of. While there are treaties that ban this stuff from use does not mean it ain't. Do not look at Electro optical gear if you can recognize it.
Joe - Even the MSM is starting to wake up to the emptiness of the Obama campaign. There are now political cartoons and pundits already starting the "what the f**k were we thinking" portion of awakening. I find it humorous that a guy only talks about change and how we can all get along if he is elected and all the sheeple jump on board. Oh well, that is what happens when the main population have ceased to have life experiences due to TV and computers. They live vicariously through the lives of make believe actors. And those very actors, who live in a make believe world, seem to act as if their opinion is more important then yours.
Dam, long post sorry guys. STFU now. :)
Rick B.
Fayetteville, NC, USA - Thursday, February 21, 2008, at 04:04:28 (ZULU)
Had a friend (who was attending SHOT) purchase a set of the new challenge coins for me from your booth. I'm scheduled to connect with him at an IPSC match on Sunday.
Congratulations on the successful funds raising event.
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Thursday, February 21, 2008, at 04:26:10 (ZULU)
"joe" is used to describe troopies; any confusion over my label is coincidental:))
In the glacial way of the army, the sniper platoon will develop one LT into a reasonably knowledgable guy, and the Squad Leaders will be used, eventually, as SMAs augmenting supported unit HQs...much like the impression a certain Marine friend gave me on their methodology. A ballsy BC may even give this Squad Leader veto authority over the supported CO's employment tactics, or at least to make damned sure the Captains know the BC's absolute faith in the SL's abilities to deploy these assets. The SL is of course the senior sniper himself on the team--though not necessarily deployed unless shorthanded (ok, so that means "always).
I heard this new structure from my son's recruiter--and thought that maybe it will help fix some of the issues we've kicked around since forever. I think this is a great start--and not just from a planning and training perspective.
Of course, the downside is "owned" vs "borrowed" troops. Think Ranger companies in Korea---meat for the grinder and other unsavory suicide missions.
Don't discount that "throw away|" mentality--I know of an instance where Patreusthe Great almost fell into that trap. Heheh, why risk a 500 man battalion when you have an A-team lying around? Too funny:)) The Captain was neither amused nor intimidated, and the greatness of this particular GO is his willingness to hear dissent and weigh the arguments. Not all my commissioned breathren are given to such weakness:)) And that is the problem...
Joe M
Thursday, February 21, 2008, at 04:43:50 (ZULU)
Mourge
Overseas, - Thursday, February 21, 2008, at 05:52:10 (ZULU)
Joe M: "The Captain was neither amused nor intimidated, and the greatness of this particular GO is his willingness to hear dissent and weigh the arguments."
Iliad Book 14 [Agamemnon - facing defeat - conferring with his commanders]
""But come now, let's agree
to what I propose. Let's drag down those ships
drawn up in line closest to the surf
and pull them all into the sacred sea,
moor them there with stones in deeper water,
until the coming of immortal night—
which may prevent the Trojans' fighting.
Then we can shift the other ships. To flee
from ruin, even at night, brings no shame.
It's better to escape one's own destruction—
to run off—than let it overtake you."
"In response to this, Odysseus scowled and said:
""Son of Atreus, how can such words as these
come from your mouth? I'm finished with you.
I wish you ruled some other army,
some useless men, and were not our commander.
Zeus sees to it that from our youthful days
to our old age we must grind away
at wretched war, till, one by one, we die.
Are you really willing to leave Troy,
city of wide streets, for whose sake we've borne
so many evils? You'd better keep that quiet—
another Achaean man may hear the news,
learn what you’ve proposed in words no man
should ever let pass through his mouth at all,
no man whose heart has any understanding
of what's appropriate to say, no one
who is a sceptred king whom men obey—
as many as those Argive troops you lead.
From what you've said, I think you've lost your mind.
In the middle of a fight, you tell us now
to drag our well-decked ships down to the sea,
so that, though Trojans may be winning now,
they'd get what they most pray for realized—
the complete annihilation of us all.
For once we drag our ships into the sea,
Achaeans then will never go on fighting—
the whole time they'll be looking over here
and pulling out from battle. Then your plan,
you leader of the army, will destroy it."
"Agamemnon, king of men, replied:
""Odysseus,
that harsh rebuke of yours has stung my heart.
But I'm not the man to tell Achaea's sons
to drag our well-decked ships into the sea
if they're not willing. But show me someone
with a better plan than mine—young or old—
I'll welcome it.""
That's a leader.
CDC'
Thursday, February 21, 2008, at 09:56:20 (ZULU)
So collecting snipers together in a platoon (company?) formation under the R&S Bat is the current move, and you guys see this as the way to go? It sounds to me a lot like the Vietnam era organization. Not that that makes it bad, just that there's president. There'd be advantages obvious even to my eyes, but let me ask a steering question:
I've been concerned before now that the Army is once again organizing to fight THIS war, and loosing it's capabilities for a different type (or scope) of engagement. Currently we're all about fighting the Small War, which is a good capability in itself, but what happens if we get into an all-up war with someone that has staying power? (Lite, mobile formations are great until you NEED an ACR)
Reference the sniper's org, how does that play in a different type of conflict? Joe, CDC and you other commissioned types, shouldn't the Service schools be teaching SOMETHING about task organization beyond counting how many trucks you've got warm bodies to man? (They've got the kiddies for four years, and yet I keep having to teach map reading. 2LT+map=BAD JUJU)
The book, Shooter, describes the Marines employing snipers in the offence as dispersed force multipliers with the lead elements. Does this play into the consolidated structure we're talking about?
I'm asking this to spur (Cavalry!) further analysis & comment, not to critisize (except for LTs and maps).
SSG Mac
MOLON LABE, - Thursday, February 21, 2008, at 12:02:17 (ZULU)
Teaching LTs how to read a map is no different than teaching privates. You show them a map, a compass and a protractor. Then you explain how they work. Then you send them off to a unit and the NCOs take over the long process of making them "get it." By doing it, over and over, they eventually catch on to the difficult-to-teach art of "seeing" terrain from the map. No school is long enough to do that, nor can it be. It is the same for everything else (unit budget management, training management cycles, PT programs, maintenance managment, concepts of defense, raids, ambushes, deliberate attack, envelopments, blahblahblah)---at what point do you say "enough" with an expensive school house, and fall back on your institutional knowledge?
Now, the school house class that is missing is where the young LT is told in no uncertain terms that he is going to learn the rest from his NCOs within his platoon, or he will be an idiot who shall fail. IMHO, that cannot be overstressed--and it is rarely mentioned.
"yet I keep having to teach map reading.." NCO common gripe--just insert "markmanship, tactics, or any other procedure" as needed:))
More needs to be done to keep the idea that training cannot be done at the school house to everyones satisfaction---the unit absolutely has to be a part of it. Money and time...where do you draw the line?
But it would be easier if everyone knows that the NCO is his teacher. That is not emphasized enough in the commissioning phase, and it sure as hell needs to be.
Heheh, on my way out of Iraq the first time, I had a choice of either training whole units (reservists) for deployment, or teaching a handful of future LTs at an ROTC department. My first thought on ROTC was to be the guy who beat the NCO's critical role into their heads. But then I went the wrong way with the "bigger" impact idea. AC/RC was a bad idea all around for me; it was like stepping in shit only to realize that you were in the middle of a cess pool. Many active and reserve refugees from deployment fought their way into this.
Speaking of that: A survey of FG officers at senior service academies (War college, CGSC, etc) was released on political attitudes. The news was over how little faith there is in the civilian leadership (particularly congress). But for me, the news was this: ONLY 10% OF THE RESPONDENTS DEPLOYED TO IRAQ OR STAN!!!!
WTF? And, otherwise, only 30% had combat experience of any kind (meaning a few weeks worth in prior engagements). How is this possible? With any luck, these snuffleluffaguses will die of old age fast and make way for the warrior class to take over:))
And another thing: How can these asshats have an opinion on their president's handling of a war if they never played???
Good lord...
Joe M
Thursday, February 21, 2008, at 14:03:47 (ZULU)
Whoah,...not me. I was enlisted and that was a long time ago.
CDC'
Thursday, February 21, 2008, at 14:42:04 (ZULU)
Joe, OK, you called me out on that one: age-old gripe of NCOs everywhere (Roman Legions & forward). In a larger sense NCO knowledge=Institutional Knowledge=History. All the above have been taught as irrelevent in our Publick skools.
As for that survey, it reflects the Army growing top heavy with non-combat functions & personnel. ALL human institutions tend to get top heavy over time, and the frightening thing is... we're better about reigning it in than 90% of the rest of the world. Go figure.
I've long ago given up on the fight to keep Poges out of the Service: can't be done. I'd just be thrilled if they'd leave the Warfighters the hell alone. ...Yeah, I know: if pigs had wings...
You know... THIS IS A GREAT BAR!!!!!
SSG Mac
MOLON LABE, - Thursday, February 21, 2008, at 15:41:53 (ZULU)
It is indeed great.
Gents,
Do any of you have any experience with E.R.Shaw barrels? A Savage 110 barrel replacement kit is only $189 from Brownell's. That gets you, in addition to the barrel, the barrel nut wrench, "GO" and "NO GO" gauges, bore cleaning paste, and gun oil!
Cheers & thanks,
Doc
Doc Holloway
The sleet covered Ozark boonies, MO, USA - Thursday, February 21, 2008, at 18:44:05 (ZULU)
Jon Kujawa
Thursday, February 21, 2008, at 19:14:20 (ZULU)
Huh. Based on my observations, what passes for leadership is a mixture of careerism and posturing, in a continuous popularity contest. (Tongue firmly planted in cheek.)
BTW, is that the original text of the Illiad, or has it been modernized? I'm not sure I can find my copy....
Duman
Thursday, February 21, 2008, at 20:31:36 (ZULU)
Joe M
Thursday, February 21, 2008, at 22:34:12 (ZULU)
I'm a new guy here who has been following your recommendations on reloading for the past couple of years. However, I don't recall you ever recommending any particular powder measure to use.
I have been reloading for pistol on my Dillon RL550 for years and I am gearing up to begin reloading for my 308 bolt gun and 223AR. I was planning on getting a Redding BR30 or will any quality powder measure suffice, since you have to throw low and trickle up to get accurate weight charges anyway?
Mike Pietrasik
Buffalo, New York, USA - Friday, February 22, 2008, at 00:21:12 (ZULU)
I've been very busy moving my family into the family estate, to keep Mom from losing it.
Those of you that use tobacco, please quit. This is no way for a warrior to die.
We have a new internet provider so our e-mail is now mikelsam at cox dot net.
4eyes
Siloam Springs, AR, USA - Friday, February 22, 2008, at 00:40:10 (ZULU)
Yeah - I have had problems, and it surprised the hell out of me.
Before I moved here and built the walk in safe, I had to keep my rifles locked on foam cases.
The foam holds moisture, and when stored in the case, you can get a very faint coat of rusty dots that are tiny.
The first gun I saw in on drove me crazy.
I left the cases open so they could air out. Then I sprayed the foam with G-96 spray oil and coated the guns in the same stuff.
I would suggest that you get lots of packets of the sillycone desiccant drying agents and put them in the case too.
Someone told me that the rusty dots were because the foam has residual chemicals in it... I can't say if that's true or not, but I put a layer of cloth (wrap the rifle in a folded towel) to keep it from touching the foam.
I don't trust the stuff anymore - it only happened to one rifle,but I am paranoid about it now.
-
Mike...
I have three Redding measures - the BR 30, the BR 3, and the little 10x... they are all very good... and a have three Hornady measures - they don't look as pretty as the Reddings, but they are just as accurate.
If you are going to throw lite and tickle, it doesn't make any difference. With ball powders, they all throw less than a 1/10, and with stick, they are all about +/- 0.1 or 0.2 grains, so pick the one that looks nice, or that matches your furniture ;)
-
'lito
CatShooter
Spring has sprung, da' creek has riz, I wonder where dem kitties is? - Friday, February 22, 2008, at 00:41:38 (ZULU)
Homer. The Iliad. Translated by Murray, A T. Loeb Classical Library Volumes1. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1924.
Click my name.
CDC'
Friday, February 22, 2008, at 02:24:42 (ZULU)
Joe M. - Yes I feel it is the best way to run this show with the present number of snipers. IF I were made King for the day I would put two sniper teams per Company, a sniper squad at Bn, sniper Section at Bde and a Sniper Platoon at Div, at a minimum. Not Sniper King so can only wish. The Centralized system aids greatly in training. There is one POC for the training and ranges/training areas are laid on and training proceeds. When they are parceled to the Company they have to compete with all the regular grunt training and, since there are few, they come out on the short end. As far as supporting missions, A Co has a sniper team but needs three for this mission. Co B and C do not want to release their snipers as they just "might need them". Turf war, feelings are hurt and more time is expended on BS then on planning, coordination, control and support as needed for a successful mission. Now missions are handed down form higher and snipers are part and parcel with the support package. Planning has begun at the higher levels instead of ad hoc and there is now more coordinated support and planning for the snipers instead of "hmmmmm, how are we going to squeeze these guys in?" As far as owned versus borrowed, that is a command responsibility but that owned or borrowed cuts both ways as stated above.
You also mentioned officers that try to think they know what is needed as opposed to knowing who to go to. That is part and parcel with the old officer question NCO question. An officer is moved around alot to receive a broad, but shallow, knowledge. This lets him know where to go to get the right info. The NCO stays in his job and has a narrow knowledge but with great depth. He knows how to do HIS job. Teh officer is there for conceptualizing what must be done and when it must be done by. He then uses his broad knowledge to go to the NCO that can get it done. That NCO takes said guidance and figures out HOW to do it and Who is best suited to do it, based on his depth of knowledge. There seems to be a slight disconnect now days in that set of military procedures.
On Joes' well being, I have no doubt that malice was never part of the equation, only ignorance. There is no school for this and learning by osmosis is not a good conduit for successful deployment. I have discussed this short coming at length with a number of personnel and no real solution had come out of it as sniping is not a big career enhancing school route. We are lucky in that many times out new CPT taking over the SO troops for our guys will get a slot to our school so has a firmer grasp of the situation. But again there is no school. In the 80s I would do Officer Profession Development classes for the Bragg officers on Sniper Employment and Deployment as well as teach the officers course at SWC. That has all come to an end.
SSG Mac - The Marines have centralized their Snipers for years. There are part of the Bn recon element. Just because they are centralized does not mean that they will not fight at the lowest operational unit level. It does mean that when one element needs more than usual, then they are available. As far as teaching this in the Academies, ROTC, OCS, Basic courses, etc, I would love to see that. Not just Task Organization taught right but actual employment and deployment.
Joe M. just saw your next post, I seem to be redundant with what you have just said. One important point that is being missed by many, a school is a learning environment where the student is exposed to and learns the basics. The unit is a training environment where the warrior trains and the NCO trains him. The difference is in a learning environment the variables are removed so he can learn, the training environment is where the variables are added to bring in realism. This is an important point that keeps getting lost in too many circles, and that includes schools that keep trying to add the "wazoo" because it is so cool. Unfortunately the learning suffers and many become frustrated. This results in a group that receive only partial learning with emphasis on the school house way of doing it. No thinking outside the box and no adaptation to the environment of war.
4eyes - So sorry for your loss, prayers with you and your family.
OK guys, will end this one, again a bit long winded, sorry.
Rick B.
Fayetteville, NC, USA - Friday, February 22, 2008, at 02:56:11 (ZULU)
CDC'
Friday, February 22, 2008, at 04:43:31 (ZULU)
Rick B. - I enjoy your posts, please don't apologize.
One of my favorite books on organizational behavior is "The Fifth Discipline", by Peter Senge. He's a distinguished lecturer at MIT, and last week I had a chance to hear him speak at a local college. His insights are an articulation of a line of thought that has been around for thousands of years, and goes to the core of why some organzations are sustainable, and others are not viable.
Now, back to the show......
Duman
Friday, February 22, 2008, at 05:00:21 (ZULU)
USMC doctrinally: you have a platoon of four 4 man teams at the Bn level, working out of the S2 shop in the H&S Coy. Sometimes they work out of the Weapons Coy, which has benefits and disadvantages also. Very often you have platoons with more teams and/or bigger teams IOT support what they think is going to be the way they operate in whatever area they're in. I've run six men down to two men and it all has it's place, situation dictates.
OK, H&S coy pros: You have access to all the key staff, to include the BC, almost all the time. Your SA is hugely better, you can set yourself up in your own mini-S2 shop with SIPR and UAV feeds and all sorts of nifty shit to do mission planning and such.
Cons: You belong to H&S coy and the 1st shirt, Coy gunny and other folks want you to partake in all the stupid H&S company games that pogues just love to indulge in. You tend to have a buttload of competent NCO's and so you get put in charge of lots of stupid projects.
Wpns Coy pros: You avoid all the H&S drama because Wpns Coy is used to dealing with detachments to all the line units and don't pretend they actually have full time manpower. So you have the ability to do your job, especially in garrison, without getting interupted all the time for "Stupid Shit"(TM)
Cons: You lose touch with what the zeroes are doing and tend to lose control of ops. Your SA goes in the toilet because you have to work so much harder to get intel, you're not living it 24/7 like in the S2 shop. Intel "push" is a great idea but it doesn't work in real life because whatever level the intel analysts are at, they get overtasked at that level with "Stupid Shit"(TM) and can't push down reliably.
OK, there was a concept a few years back to centralize Snipers at the Div level IOT better support training and other things. Good in some aspects, but bad in others. The higher you are, the more outta touch you get and when you do show up, the commander's tendency is to work them like rented mules because they only expect to have you for limited time and they "know" you're just going to go fuck off when you go back to Div. Anyhow, USMC has Recon Bn at the Div level for this sort of thing.
Snipers belong at the Bn level IMO. Of course, I should point out that IMO, all infantry battalions in the USMC should be configured as BCT's/BLT's all the time. For the Army, it should probably be a similar organization, simply at the Bde level, vice battalion. Whereas the USMC need only have a single infantry BCT org, with reinforcing attachments as needed, the Army should probably have light, medium and heavy BDECT's based around helo/airbourne infantry, Strykers and tank/Bradley tms, respectively.
Anyhow, snipers at Bn should focus on being snipers, with a secondary R&S role on an ad hoc basis. We should have a separate scout/recon platoon, also under the S2 section in H&S to do dedicated scouting and reconnaisance. You wind up carrying too much shit as a sniper trying to do R&S, and in peacetime, the battalion neglects your sniper training because revealing yourself via sniping means they lose a R&S asset and they deperately lack R&S assets, due mainly to aforementioned lack of intel push from higher.
Snipers should generally operate in GS to the battalion going DS to companies for specific and limited periods ISO company operations. Attachment to the company should be avoided, as companies will then work you like a rented mule, treat you like a redheaded stepchild and generally misemploy you on top of that. They see you as another fire team with good radios to do "Stupid Shit."(TM) Since you work with the BC and S2/S3 at Bn level all the time during garrison, they may be amenable to listening to you regarding employment. Not so at the Coy level. They will be just familiar enough to have contempt, but not familiar enough to have learned anything. In GS or DS, you always have that communication with Bn to fall back on should you get tasked with "Stupid Shit"(TM) Bn CO's telling their Coy CO's to not be stupid with "his" snipers is a good thing.
Enough for now. discuss. S/F.....Ken M
Ken M
IL, USA - Friday, February 22, 2008, at 06:07:01 (ZULU)
If you want a book recommendation, read "I Claudius" and "Claudius the God" by Robert Graves. You will never look at the world the same.
CDC'
Friday, February 22, 2008, at 06:20:09 (ZULU)
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/chi-cougar_22feb22,0,6390296.story
S/F....Ken M
Ken M
IL, USA - Friday, February 22, 2008, at 07:35:58 (ZULU)
I saw that cat about a year ago. Told the game warden about it and he and he looked at me as if to say "what the hell are you on"
so i contacted the county extension office and they had been following up on sightings, tracks in the snow and even hair samples.
Guys
I picked up that KAHLES scope i mentioned the other day. I cannot believe the clarity that that scope has. As far as i can see it is second to none except maybe a S&B
Gary Kaney
N.W., ILL, - Friday, February 22, 2008, at 11:04:14 (ZULU)
thats what I needed to hear,I think Ill just buy a second gun safe and be done with it.
Or I will lose sleep.
Jon
Jon Kujawa
Friday, February 22, 2008, at 14:28:33 (ZULU)
Schooling could be easily altered to accomodate a MEL-specific level of training for the arcane arts of indirect fires, R&S, anti-armor, and sniping. Infantry OBC is where it starts, and where it gets the most detail (the AMU and the sniper school house are right there alongside), you can easily create an sniper employment course, similar to IMPOC of short duration for those slotted to PL (just as we do for mortar maggots). The whole army could get this reinforced at CAS3 and CGSC--and I'll tell ya---it IS important for transporters and supply weenies to know this stuff! The reasons were more than amply addressed when I was a supply weenie myself here a few years ago---like that O-6 who thought trucks were better used to clear a port of excess containers over something like 5 of 9 infantry battalions being critical on ammo in a war zone...anyway, the point is exactly as you alluded to:
We have squandered our school house hours on crap like ethics and values (either you had them already or you're short for the career)--instead of allowing this time for the basics only. The life lessons come as life is lived! Yeah, we've tried schooling experience! So, what then do we have experience for? Part of this problem is self-perpetuating: We have had several years' worth of spineless niceness refusing to hammer shitbags. I spent two years trying to fix a morally bankrupt LT; and finally had the BC on board with a career ending evaluation, and "sealed his fate" or so we both thought. Much to our surprise, he survived because the new BC supported his appeal and later this same douche caused enough harm to find resignation the better choice over a court martial. That's my direct experience--I could tell you a hundred similar stories I was on the periphery of. My exposure is like single-digit percentages of the whole--so extrapolate yourself a lot of idiots that should be shitcanned but manage to hang in due to the lack of will to be "judgmental" and hold a freakin' baseline standard.
Ken M: The quiet restructuring of the army is following what you've just said it should do. It is a neat process, really, as it started happening as part of a wartinme deployment for many units. They (brigades) got all their "slices" of divisional assets as they always have for collective training events, formed a new battalion and gave it a CO with those "attched" support and service support elements, then deployed, came home...and kept their divisional assets forever more as organic elements. It was one of the most efficient macro changes I've ever seen:))
In a perfect world, snipers would be organic to the company. Until the world is perfected, the best thing is consolidation at the task-force level, with as much habitual support as is possible. At least, that is what youz guys seemed to lead me to believe now. I am ambivilant to consolidations for admin purposes (that is what the restructuring of divisional assets to brigade teams is undoing)--but in this case, I thought it best. I think the pros and cons support it.
Cool discussion....thanks
Joe M
Friday, February 22, 2008, at 15:39:03 (ZULU)
Shaw barrels - like everything else, there are some great ones, and some poor ones that should have not got out. They are the "budget" short chambered barrel. My experience is limited to Rem 700 and Mauser barrels.
Shilen is better, but does cost more. I used a Shaw to rebarrel an older Rem 700 from .222 to .223 (wood stock plinker), because the Shaw's twist was 1/9, and the Shilen (via Brownells) was 1/12. It was a drop in fit (contour) and OK for a plinker / hunting rifle. But I had minor problems with it that never come up with the Shilen short chambered barrels.
I would look at the Shilen Savage barrel if you are really serious. I think the extra money is worth it. But for hunting purposes, you would probably not notice the difference.
http://www.shilen.com/savageBarrels.html
P. Hayden
USA - Friday, February 22, 2008, at 20:23:18 (ZULU)
Denying the Emplacement of IEDs: Let Our Snipers Hunt!
By Brian K. Sain
“The true sniper is not actually, in one sense of the term, a real “soldier”. His nature, job and gifts are too individualistic” (Ion L. Idriess)
These words were written nearly one hundred years ago and are still applicable today.
Unfortunately, individualism in and of itself, flies in the face of contemporary military thinking and for numerous reasons, many commanding officers simply do not understand the huge force multiplier they have … with their sniper teams.
The worth of the sniper in warfare has been proven time and again but these lessons have been largely forgotten after every conflict. That is, until the newest tyrant attempts to rule the world by force and well trained and equipped snipers are urgently needed once again.
This unfortunate cycle of being “caught with our pants down” results in stop gap measures like the designated marksman program, issuing worn out M14 rifles for precision work and pressure being put on the sniper schools to push sniper students through, just to get enough trained snipers in the field.
Many fully trained professional snipers currently in the fight; feel that the designated marksman program with marginal training and marginal equipment is “watering down” the sniper program. They feel that every Soldier/Marine should be a well trained marksman first and the snipers should be left to do what snipers know how to do best. They feel it is irresponsible and downright ludicrous to send guys half trained (at best) to do a snipers job.
The designated marksmen on the other hand (who come from various skill levels and backgrounds) are set on a tread wheel; often being tasked with sniper work, by commanders who do not understand sniper tactics. The commanders assign these men to over watch missions but do not properly equip them for it. The designated marksmen have no choice but to follow orders and do the very best with what they have or with what they can scrounge, inside or outside of their chains of command. Some do a great job and eventually attend sniper school upon their return from theater.
Many snipers believe they would be better served if they had their own command and support elements rather than being treated simply as an afterthought attached to a headquarters company.
But lamentations from snipers to higher for better gear and operational autonomy often fall on deaf ears to officers primarily schooled in commanding battalions of tanks, artillery and mechanized infantry. One comment overheard from an officer defending his position was stated as “Snipers don’t win wars”
That assessment may have been valid with the former “big army” threat of the Soviet Union but may be somewhat arguable given the nature of current conflicts. Tanks and artillery are of limited use in the urban fighting of Iraq where the number one killer of our military personnel is the Improvised Explosive Device, better known as the IED.
IEDs are placed by human insurgents and one of the best ways to combat them is with a corps of well equipped and well trained snipers. Fully supported by their command with common sense rules of engagement and operating upon actionable intelligence (that they often develop themselves) Coalition snipers can methodically hunt these insurgents down and eliminate them (with no collateral damage to innocents whatsoever). The battles for Fallujah and Najaf are prime examples of virtual domination by US sniper teams.
Snipers are by their very nature, hunters; and due to their intensive training, no one knows their capabilities better than the snipers themselves. The same however, cannot be said of their commanding officers in many instances. Many simply have no training in sniper operations, do not understand their sniper’s capabilities and have no idea how to deploy their snipers successfully therefore, the sniper is caught in the proverbial Catch-22.
Sniper missions require trust and autonomy from higher for snipers to be able to operate successfully (sometimes independently) and “do what they were taught to do”. Unfortunately, most E5s are not going to be able to tell a commissioned officer much about how the snipers should be deployed or why the gear the sniper needs is different than the other troops. After all, how could any E5 who has merely attended sniper school possibly know more about sniper deployment than a commissioned officer who has not?
With the advent of the IED and the suicide bomber, many units that previously did not have snipers are now finding the sniper’s intelligence gathering and over watch skills vital to mission success. Since a school trained sniper is usually an infantry MOS, these armor, artillery, and cavalry units are often deploying some form of designated marksman to counter current threats.
Unfortunately, the gear and weaponry required for these men may not fall within the equipment guidelines of the type of unit deploying them. I.e. a Stryker unit may have plenty of budgetary room for their vehicles, or TVs for their CP, but no money for the optics, weaponry and specialized equipment the designated marksmen desperately need to protect the unit from IEDs and suicide bombers. This is because their modified table of equipment may not denote anywhere that the unit even has designated marksmen!
A commonly heard reply to a sniper’s request for gear and operational autonomy usually goes something like “You guys are nothing special and no different than the rest of the troops; so quit whining”.
If this is so, then why are snipers hand picked and sent to one of the most rigorous and demanding forms of training the US military has to offer and taught things other Airmen, Marines, Sailors and Soldiers are not? Why is a designated marksman chosen for his position over someone else if everyone is equally trained and no one is special? Anyone familiar with the sniper program knows that graduates from sniper school are rarely ones you would consider “whiners”. They are however, consummate professionals and perfectionists. That is their nature and one of the primary reasons they were chosen for the job in the first place.
We constantly hear from snipers in OIF how they would be much more efficient if they were allowed to do the things and operate the way they were taught in sniper school. Snipers lament that their commanding officers often love to deploy them to places like water towers or guard towers and force them to take the same routes, to the same hide sites, time and time again. These are tactics taken straight out of Hollywood and suicidal for a sniper team.
On the opposite end of the spectrum, we hear that some sniper commanders are afraid to allow the sniper teams outside the wire alone because if they get killed, higher will have hell to pay for losing men on their watch and having it displayed on the nightly news at home. The snipers feel that they knew the risks they signed on for when they took the job but they can’t very well kill the enemy if they are not allowed off the base without a convoy of protection.
The snipers tell us that because some commanders have no knowledge of sniper operations, some commanders simply do not understand why snipers need equipment that is different than standard infantrymen and these requests are often passed off as “gee whiz” items rather than the absolutely essential pieces of equipment they really are.
One example here is the sniper’s optics. Because a sniper serves as the eyes of his command, quality optical equipment is constantly in demand. Spotting scopes, rifle scopes, mini binoculars and small laser range finders are almost universally needed and are absolutely essential pieces of gear for the sniper. How can snipers or designated marksmen determine if an insurgent is carrying a weapon or determine the insurgent’s activities without optics? We are speaking here of quality, lightweight optical equipment that will not hinder movement and that will not add to an already massive combat load in 120 degree heat. Is the insurgent carrying a rifle or a hoe? Is he using a cell phone or a detonator? Or … is he using the cell phone as the detonator? Modern rules of engagement dictate that the sniper must know these things before he fires. Therefore his optical equipment is critical.
The M49 designation for the M49 spotting scope stands for Model of … 1949! The scopes are falling apart and many have no tripods. M14 rifles are being pulled out of store rooms and issued with cracked stocks and bedding, no optics, rear sight assemblies or magazines! The US military has not officially used the M14 rifle since the late 1960s. When the current parts in inventory are gone, they are gone; and when a designated marksman points these things out as a potential problem he is told to quit whining and get the job done.
The snipers do not need this gear ten years from now. They needed it in hand, ready to go, on September 10, 2001. The Rapid Fielding Initiative is certainly helping and the author personally knows that some of the best logistics people in the United States military are absolutely doing all they can possibly do to fix these problems. But the red tape of the procurement process; the bids and the contracts and the tests and the trials and the massive slow as molasses paperwork, business, money and politics of it all … suffocates even the best of their efforts. The man in the arena is the one who suffers. He needs a spotting scope right now so he can protect his people.
Commanders, if your snipers or designated marksmen ask for something needed to do their jobs more efficiently, chances are they are not whining at all. Listen to them. They wouldn’t risk the heat from on high if they didn’t really need the gear.
There was a time early in our own history when the American people were fighting the greatest power in the world (England) and we ourselves were referred to as insurgents. Will we yet again forget the lessons of marksmanship in guerilla warfare as taught to us by our forefathers such as General Daniel Morgan?
The enemy is real and he is committed and America must remain steadfast. Yet, our snipers cannot operate without command authority to do so. The advent of the IED demands that we properly train and equip our snipers and then … let them hunt! The way they were taught to do and the way they have always done when we have called upon them.
brian k. sain
Friday, February 22, 2008, at 21:14:22 (ZULU)
Thanks. I rather suspected something like that. One of my customers brought me his Savage 110 that he had just re-barreled from 7 mag to .458 Win. mag. with a Shaw kit. He hopes to turn it into a .458 Lott! That boy loves pain. I re-did my old Mauser sporter with a Shilen barrel a couple of years back and I'm still happy with it.
Cheers,
Doc
Doc Holloway
The sleet covered Ozark boonies, MO, USA - Friday, February 22, 2008, at 21:21:14 (ZULU)
"Sir,
I am starting up the sniper section at XXXXXXXX. All of the snipers that had deployed with the unit and returned in XXXXXXXXXXX have left and I have an entirely new group of guys to train.
What I was wondering was if you would have a suggestions of where I could purchase match grade ammo at a reasonable price. We have no match grade ammo for our ranges this year, and it doesn’t look good for next year. My options for this year are use 7.62 belt ammo and de-link the rounds, or buy some ammo for the guys to practice with.
I’m going to use the de-linked 7.62 rounds for a familiarization range this spring. After they get more comfortable with the rifle, I wanted to let them shoot at longer ranges. The ball ammo isn’t going to give them much confidence in the rifle or their abilities though.
Any suggestions would be appreciated.
Thanks,
SSG XXXXXXXXXXX"
brian k. sain
Friday, February 22, 2008, at 21:33:27 (ZULU)
Excellent.
CDC'
Saturday, February 23, 2008, at 03:08:44 (ZULU)
Looks to me like that's the only solution that would solve much or ALL of the problems facing the average deployed sniper.
Mk4
Texas, United States of America - Saturday, February 23, 2008, at 16:27:30 (ZULU)
Jase' and I filed papers for emancipation two days ago, and yesterday, we went and took all of his stuff out of the ex's house.
We caught her off guard, and when she told him he couldn't take the stuff and go, he pushed her aside and took his stuff.
So he is with me 24/7, and we're filling out papers to get him in school.
The legal shit isn't over yet, but he's here and as happy as a clam at high tide... and she is in shock.
It's been a long time coming...
-
'lito
CatShooter
Spring has sprung, da' creek has riz, I wonder where dem kitties is? - Saturday, February 23, 2008, at 20:36:38 (ZULU)
Ken - Got an email with some photos of one of those non existent cats on a guy's deck. Looking in at his kids playing on the floor. :O
Gary - Kahles makes one heck of a good scope and it is on alot of the military weapons in Europe.
Joe - Companies would have organic snipers but the Bn and above would have additional snipers. These snipers would have the intel and be capable of immediately augmenting and supporting the operational units as required. OF course, again in a perfect world where I was King. :)
Snipers and their own command only means that there is a boss a bit higher up the food chain and they must still be attached to a unit for use. This can be even harder on them when they are not from a piece of the organic unit pie. This also makes it even harder for the leaders to learn how to properly use them once attached for a mission. The snipers can not just go running around on the battle field without the local command knowing and supporting. The battle space is apportioned and assigned. Those units assigned that battle space run operations in their assigned block and must know what else is going on or fratricide will, not may, but will occur. It has already happened due to units not coordinating with supported AND unsupported units. Conveys have fired up snipers on watch for IED emplacement. Having their own command could cause even more problems in coordination AND unit jealousies. The one thing that will solve many problems is doing just as stated by Joe M. Train the leaders from Basic Officers through War College on employment, deployment, strength/weaknesses, as well as selection, training and sustainment. Stop the touchy feely crap that is for only CYA. Once this has occurred the support tail will reattach, gear will come forth, and snipers will be trained and sustained for the battle space they are fighting. My thoughts on the matter. :)
Brain - He needs to take great care in buying ammunition to shoot in his training. IT is one of the forbidden items for purchase without a long memo signed by all permitting the purchase.
Kittywhakcer - CONGRATS! Long time coming. :)
Rick B.
Fayetteville, NC, USA - Saturday, February 23, 2008, at 20:40:34 (ZULU)
Lindy
The Northern Occupied Territories of Mexico, Texas, U.S.A. - Saturday, February 23, 2008, at 22:40:20 (ZULU)
Congratulations. An outstanding job well done.
Cheers,
Doc
Doc Holloway
The soggy Ozark boonies, MO, USA - Saturday, February 23, 2008, at 23:37:20 (ZULU)
Congratulations and best of luck on your "new" full-time son.
I admire your tenacity.
Now for all the legal system scum to get their just desserts...
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Sunday, February 24, 2008, at 00:23:55 (ZULU)
CDC'
Sunday, February 24, 2008, at 00:27:00 (ZULU)
Good on ya! I don't know of any one more deserving or who could have done it!
Sharon
Larry J. Porter
Boonies of the Panhandle, Texas, USA!!!! - Sunday, February 24, 2008, at 03:26:59 (ZULU)
Congrats on one hell of an accomplishment.
jc
I'd
Sunday, February 24, 2008, at 07:07:29 (ZULU)
Much congratulations! Have watched for many years (since 1997) and am truly greatful for your courage and wit in this fight. We lost our oldest about year ago (my step-son)in a custody suit where he wanted to live with his father, a four-time felon, and the court gave the felon uncontested custody. Son went from 90% student to failing most of his classes and has realized he has made the worst decision of his life to this point.
Seriously considering filing incompetence charges with the MO Bar for the guardian ad litem and the presiding judge, now retired. Son needs to "feel" a little more to help bring him back to reality,but I can draw some parallels from your situation.
Thank you to you and your son
Lord bless ya,
Scott
Scott F.
Hillbillyland, USA - Sunday, February 24, 2008, at 07:29:42 (ZULU)
Scott, prayers to you & yours.
Everyone, good news: it looks like I've got that job I was trying for. They're preparing the formal offer now, and if it matches what I discussed with them, I'm in. This requires me to let go of my NG career, but I can truly say that I'll be supporting the Nation's defence more in the new job, than as a Cav SSG.
Question for the crowd: of those who use TI quick-cuff slings, who also uses some kind of hand-stop? I'm designing one analogous to the plain-jane anchutz one here: http://www.midwayusa.com/eproductpage.exe/showproduct?saleitemid=635834 (or click) Mine will be designed to mount on a picatinney rail, and have the flush-cup type attachement point. I've seen an awful lot of guys with tactical rigs trying to use a sling hold without any stop, and always thought "That's not gonna work well". What are your thoughts?
SSG Mac
Sunday, February 24, 2008, at 12:00:47 (ZULU)
Another failure.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iwq3Co8UnnI&feature=related
Travis Morgan
Wichita, Ks., U.S.A. - Sunday, February 24, 2008, at 12:23:01 (ZULU)
Jeff Cooper- You want to be real careful trimming the stock on a 1100/11-87. The bolt return spring is in the stock. There's conversions out there that'll let you do a pistol grip, but you lose too much capability for a little kewl. There ought to be a gunshop somewhere around you that can bore the shortened barrel for the Remington choke tubes.
I'd stick with 00 buck, look for the reduced recoil/tactical loads. Birdshot may work at 10 feet (Capstick had a story about someone taking out a lion with #6, someone else can do that @#$.), you don't have a warranty as to the circumstances of your encounter.
WR Moore
Sunday, February 24, 2008, at 17:32:45 (ZULU)
I also forgot to say that my wife is pregnant for the first time,we are expecting august 17,
All of you guys keep your fingers crossed for a boy,I guess it does not matter because he/she is still going to be taught to shoot.
Jon
Jon Kujawa
Sunday, February 24, 2008, at 20:19:54 (ZULU)
How long has the military used second focal plane reticles in scopes in variable power? S&B is first focal, but why did'nt military provide FFP's before? Are the Nightforce scopes SFP and is'nt the Army and Navy using them some also?
Guess my question is I'm looking to buy for my new project and want another FFP in 4.5-14 or 6.5-20 range(Leuppy), but Nightforce is actually cheaper at this point, but SFP. NF that much better to negate the FFP advantage of the Lueppy, optics wise?
Got about $1500 to spend.
Advice??
Scott F.
Sunday, February 24, 2008, at 20:47:20 (ZULU)
medicjim
Sunday, February 24, 2008, at 22:25:02 (ZULU)
Well, I'm entering my final days in training with ArmorGroup for the Embassy ERT teams in Kabul. It's been a month of pure Hell on this 50+ year old body, but I've made it so far. I've had a lot of new stuff, and a lot of old, stuffed in my gullet the last few weeks. the PT was gruelling, but the hardest was having to low crawl so much. I haven't done that in over 30 years. If it comes to that, I'll just take my chances on a bullet. My knees are shot. My elbows are hamburger. Oooof. But, all in all, it's been a hoot. Not sure when I'll be wheels up for the 'Stan, but should be by the 5th of March. Last picture I saw of the place, there was abut a foot of snow on everything. It's weird, but I don't miss police work one bit.
In any case, I'll try to post once in a while from the land of the Afghan warlords. Ya'll take care, and keep your groups tight.
Chuck
Charles S. Hunt
San Antonio, Texas, USA - Sunday, February 24, 2008, at 22:49:58 (ZULU)
Scopes-Meade Optical/Redfield is supposed to be bringing new tactical stuff out this summer, at least according to the Sales honcho. Anything at SHOT?
WR Moore
Sunday, February 24, 2008, at 23:08:15 (ZULU)
CDC'
Monday, February 25, 2008, at 00:36:44 (ZULU)
Medic Jim - They also found out that the math for their new SFSC, which we did not endorse that dam reticle, is off and that fancy range finding reticle is screwed up at longer ranges. They are in the process of reconfiguring as we speak. :)
Chuck - Hang in there and and trust me, you will low crawl and not even feel it when those whizzy thingies come by the head. Crap, you will pull buttons off you shirt to get closer to the ground for that low crawl. :)
Well, got students tomorrow for fun and games. 1000 meters and in some rather awkward positions.
Rick B.
Fayetteville, NC, USA - Monday, February 25, 2008, at 01:55:43 (ZULU)
We recently had a class here - not Army - with all Nightforce 5.5-22 scopes with mildot reticles.
I checked the calibration of the power ring and reticle on several, and found they didn't work - the scope could not be adjusted to a power where ten mils of the reticle covered 36 inches at exactly 100 yards. I couldn't tell whether the reticle was off or the power ring was.
The guys commented that they'd had trouble accurately ranging targets with the reticle, but didn't know why. Now they did.
When they reported those results to Nightforce officials at the SHOT Show this year, they were greeted with skepticism and hostility. Oh, well.
They are now shopping for FFP scopes.
It's easy enough to check, but few people ever do. It's a good idea to check.
Premier Reticles will be introducing a line of FFP scopes in the fall with their label and German - not S&B - glass. Competition in the business is good.
S&B, Nightforce, and, presumably Premier, are/will be available with turrets which adjust in 0.1 mil clicks, as opposed to Leupold, which has, I think, one scope available with 0.05 mil clicks, which is not very useful. Having the scope adjust in the same system the reticle is graduated in makes life MUCH simpler.
Perhaps competition will bring Loopy out of their loopiness.
Lindy
The Northern Occupied Territories of Mexico, Texas, U.S.A. - Monday, February 25, 2008, at 02:22:38 (ZULU)
Rick B.
Fayetteville, NC, USA - Monday, February 25, 2008, at 02:42:49 (ZULU)
Thank you for your quick response. Reported cost on Nightforce FFP's are $2000 and Premier's are $1500 to 2000...so far. S&B, no way, they're advertised at $2500 to $3000. Way outa my minor league ballpark. Guess I'll just have to wait and see what Premier does and save my money. Killin' this ol boy cause he's wantin to shoot his new 7WSM. Gotta be a way to produce better than average glass and not put a scum o' the earth construction worker in the po house.
Loopy's trying to play with the big boy's now...at least in price! Like you said, too bad their product can't be revised.
Scott F.
Hillbillyland, - Monday, February 25, 2008, at 02:55:37 (ZULU)
Joe M
Monday, February 25, 2008, at 20:13:25 (ZULU)
Darren
Semper Fi
Darren
East Bay, CA, USA - Monday, February 25, 2008, at 21:29:01 (ZULU)
Rick B.
Fayetteville, NC, USA - Tuesday, February 26, 2008, at 03:08:54 (ZULU)
CDC'
Tuesday, February 26, 2008, at 10:21:03 (ZULU)
>" 'Lito- Way to go. Keep us posted on your jihad with the local legal system."<
Already there is a new fight going on. When we went to get the Rat's stuff, she was caught off guard.
But Sunday night (when I would have brought him back), she went to the police in her town. They called me and "asked" that I bring him back (HA!). I told him that I have been studying this for a year and I was on solid ground.
He said he was "gonna study up on emancipation (Double HA!!).
On Monday, the Rat and I FLEW down to his doctors office with the school medical form (vaccinations etc). They said it takes 7 days for them to fill it out. So I put on my smiley face and told them that he was ready to be admitted to school today, all except for the medical forms - so she gave me a dirty look, and filled them out.
Then we went to his school, but she had already contacted them and shut them down, so I couldn't get his school records.
But... he can enroll in school without past school records, but he cannot enroll without medical papers - so she took the wrong attack - we have all that is necessary to enroll him.
I went and spoke to the local town sheriff and explained what was going on and to possibly expect her to show up. He said that if she does, he'll come out to the house, look at the papers, and go back to the station.
So she tried to do a block, but missed the only thing I "HAD" to have.
This is getting to be like a life sized chess game.
In the past, when I "did something" that the other side didn't like, they would file motions, and send me threatening e-mails...
... but it's been five days, and nothing.
So either I have the upper hand on this one, or they're having trouble finding a plane big enough for the Daisy Cutter. ;)))
-
Congrats Jon-K.
No more expensive riffles for a while ;)))
-
'lito
CatShooter
Spring has sprung, da' creek has riz, I wonder where dem kitties is? - Tuesday, February 26, 2008, at 10:21:09 (ZULU)
Congratulations!
'lito,
Another chapter in the ongoing saga of "As The Shit Flies"! My fingers are still crossed for ya.
Cheers,
Doc
Doc Holloway
The windy Ozark boonies, MO, USA - Tuesday, February 26, 2008, at 13:38:51 (ZULU)
One of the "Rules of Warfare," have a backup plan as the first plan will go to hell when the figting starts...
Sounds like you are staying 'several moves" ahead of the opposition!
GOOD ON YA!!!
Sharon
Larry J. Porter
Boonies of the Panhandle, Texas, USA!!!! - Tuesday, February 26, 2008, at 14:16:58 (ZULU)
No more rifles for a few years,i was going to order a nightforce NSX but my wife said no.Theres always next year.
Jon
Jon Kujawa
Tuesday, February 26, 2008, at 17:34:16 (ZULU)
"A senior Pentagon official said an Obama swearing-in "will give the Arab street the final victory, the best optics, and the ultimate in bragging rights. They win. We lose.""
So there it is: The ultimate answer to our ages-old question; the holy grail of sniperdom: The best optics! So, to know which manufacturer has the best scope, all we do is wait until we elect Obama, then check out what the terrs are sporting:))
Peanut Update: She sold 860 boxes of GS cookies (give or take a few boxes). About a hundred of those go to troops directly, a whole bunch go "specifically" and there was some 40 bucks donated to shipping costs. What we did not know was "prizes are cummulative"--heheh. She made her goal and will go to summer camp, plus she won a weekend trip for her whole troop, and a busload of goodies. She did a college-dorm door to door for the last 300 boxes over the weekend--something I thought (secretly) would be impossible. Never misunderestimate the crooked grin of a GS cookie salesperson!
On the economy, folks are starting to add up all the little things, like I've been mentioning. The article (click) hits a few red flags, but skips the baby-boomer effect (SSA/ medicare payouts, stock market withdrawals for safer pastures, and pension payouts).
Joe M
Tuesday, February 26, 2008, at 18:19:08 (ZULU)
WR Moore
Wednesday, February 27, 2008, at 12:25:09 (ZULU)
Just checking in...I 've been in the hospital and just got out Monday. Anyone that tells you arthascopic knee surgery is "three days and your back to work" is full of fecal material, IMHO. Surgery, then infection of the leg, recovery, infection re-occurred in the left leg putting me in the hospital for four days. What should have been a few weeks is no rolling into a two month cycle. Lost 25 pounds and a lot of muscle I couldn't afford to lose. Come back is going to be a long and painful process.
Sounds like you had a great time at the SHOT show. One day I'll have to make it to that event. If for nothing other than meeting some more of you guys.
Charles, I know your deployment is rapidly approaching. Good luck over there and WY6.
Joe M., I did get the package, but haven't felt like playing with the contents yet. Will in the next day or so and get back to you.
Bravo, expect a call and I'll bring you up to date.
The elections? You gents have already said it all. If I wasn't to weak to puke...well, you get the picture.
My best to all.
Semper Fi,
Sir Wes
Wes Howe
Salem, OR, USA - Wednesday, February 27, 2008, at 19:23:13 (ZULU)
Pablo: Good stuff. Cut 'em no slack.
Click for a NRA video about gun confiscation after Katrina. It's more interesting than it sounds.
CDC'
Wednesday, February 27, 2008, at 21:00:01 (ZULU)
<<Already there is a new fight going on.>>
That woman ain't right..Shameful and shameless at the same time.
JonK,
<<No more rifles for a few years,i was going to order a nightforce NSX but my wife said no.Theres always next year.>>
Oh man..wouldn't be a good thing here if wife or significant other told me I couldn't buy me gun gear...The hell you say!! hahah..
JR
JR
Brevard County, FL, USA - Wednesday, February 27, 2008, at 22:50:53 (ZULU)
Joe M. - Can't imagine an Obama as president anymore than I can imagine another Clinton. We are all holding our breaths over this election cycle.
Jon K. - Overheard a wife at a gun shop the other day and had immediate wife envy, she walked in and stated she wanted to order her hubby a Shiloh Sharps, Creedmore silhouette if I remember correctly. My wife of 37 years said no to my getting another motorcycle, something I did with my last one I think. :)
Wes - Hang in there, it will only take a "little" pain to get back in the groove. :(
The young studs are in the Field Shoot phase, believe it or not, it snowed today on the range at Ft Bragg. It is all that dam global warming, opps wait! That's right all four global temp trackers have shown that the earth's temp has dropped to levels not seen in years. The Antarctic ice shelf is growing, and Europe is looking at a mini ice age. Sorry got carried away. :)
http://www.dailytech.com/Temperature...ticle10866.htm
Or click my name.
Rick B.
Fayetteville, NC, USA - Thursday, February 28, 2008, at 00:15:16 (ZULU)
http://www.stiguns.com/CA-PressRelease.pdf
Discussed here too:
http://www.thehighroad.org/showthread.php?t=342867
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Thursday, February 28, 2008, at 00:27:01 (ZULU)
Lito: Congrats
Jon K: Congrats
Wes: Get well soon.
Anybody got/shot the Glock 21 SF? Haven't seen one in my neck of the woods and am a little curious if the trimmed grip makes an appreciable difference.
Pat II
Thursday, February 28, 2008, at 01:16:26 (ZULU)
Why can I not talk to someone at Leupold's custom shop and get accurate info on an upgrade instead of hearing it several different ways? Can an 4.5-15 M3 be changed to a front focal plane reticle?
Enquiring minds really want to know...
Oh yea, do I hold my breath on the USSC 2nd Amendment decision?
My head hurts...
Scott F.
Hillbillyland, - Thursday, February 28, 2008, at 01:39:03 (ZULU)
Rick B.
Fayetteville, NC, USA - Thursday, February 28, 2008, at 02:17:19 (ZULU)
Click for the ultimate in Mall Ninja armament.
Travis Morgan
Wichita, Ks., U.S.A. - Thursday, February 28, 2008, at 03:10:19 (ZULU)
"The one thing that will solve many problems is doing just as stated by Joe M. Train the leaders from Basic Officers through War College on employment, deployment, strength/weaknesses, as well as selection, training and sustainment. Stop the touchy feely crap that is for only CYA. Once this has occurred the support tail will reattach, gear will come forth, and snipers will be trained and sustained for the battle space they are fighting. My thoughts on the matter"
How can I make that happen Rick?
Never been one to think small ...
brian k. sain
Thursday, February 28, 2008, at 15:27:02 (ZULU)
Kujawa - Kongratulations.
Wes - Dude, I'm hoping you get better soon to hit the gym, and get healthy for the course in June. If not.... Bravo and I can split up your gear. :8-p
Lito - I helped a buddy through a divorce, several years ago. He's no prince, but I never thought his ex (professional, well paid, beautiful, etc...) would have turned into the mentally deranged animal that she became. With a court system that enabled her.
Duman
Thursday, February 28, 2008, at 15:34:00 (ZULU)
How does cutting off LEO was well as "civilian" sales and service in a jurisdiction play into the anti-gunner's hands?
(I can understand if only "civilian" sales are blocked).
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Thursday, February 28, 2008, at 16:27:13 (ZULU)
Never been one to think small ..."
Start a larger war.
Bring it home with you.
That's about all I think would actually do it.
SSG Mac
Thursday, February 28, 2008, at 17:16:44 (ZULU)
Rick B.
Fayetteville, NC, USA - Thursday, February 28, 2008, at 19:06:07 (ZULU)
I thought I'd share this with you bums.
I got this from the "Ex's" attorney this afternoon. (The biggest custody law firm in that part of the state)
.
---
Dear Paul:
We are in receipt of a partial application for Jason's emancipation, and have met with Cathy several times this week to discuss how best to proceed.
While we believe you are on shaky legal grounds in the filing of the emancipation application, we are prepared to file a complete, mutual withdrawal of all pending motions, filed by you and on behalf of Cathy, before the Superior Court and offer our full cooperation and support of the emancipation petition.
I am attaching a Withdrawal of Action form, which is not signed, and which we are prepared to file with the Stamford Superior Court. If you agree with our proposition to end the litigation in Superior Court and work in a cooperative manner to support Jason's emancipation, please sign the withdrawal and fax it to my office at 203-XXX-6991. We will have Cathy sign the withdrawal and file it with the court today, sending you a fully executed copy, as well as confirmation as to the filing of the Withdrawal.
Please let us know how you wish to proceed.
---
And my reply says...
---
Dear Daniel.
Thank you for your most kind and considerate offer, but it is three years too late.
I will not agree to your offer at this time, or at any time in the future.
In fact I plan on filing several more motions.
I am presently drafting a lengthy motion to reopen "Open and Vacate" the first trial. I want my money back... and a pound of flesh for my pain.
I spoke to Brett Xxxxx in Middletown, and he said that the Motion for Waiver of fees, and the motion to disqualify Jackie, MUST be heard in Stamford, so I will be shortly be reclaiming (in Stamford) my waiver of fees motions, and my motion to dismiss Jacquelyn Conlxx and refer her to the State Bar on ethics and misconduct.
There are also a large number of criminal issues that I have uncovered in the last three years that need to be attended to, and while it has taken me a long time to find the right agency of jurisdiction, I now have the right agency to bring my cases.
By the way... Louise filled for a continuance for the Jan 10th Trial because she claimed that she would be tied up with Dxxxx v Dxxxx, a two week trial in Middletown.
When I got Louise's motion on that Sunday night (the 6th) I simply called Mellisa Dxxxx (I mean, like, DUH???) and asked her if there was a two week trial.
Mellisa Dxxxx laughed and said that it was a one or two day hearing at most... it was finished on the 8th. Louise was a very bad puppy. I don't know if that meets the level of "contempt of court", but I'll let Judge Mxxxx decide that.
My best to you and all the gang (and I mean that literally) at Lxx & Txxxx.
---
It's my turn to draw blood
-
'lito
CatShooter
Spring has sprung, da' creek has riz, I wonder where dem kitties is? - Thursday, February 28, 2008, at 20:11:34 (ZULU)
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Thursday, February 28, 2008, at 21:12:38 (ZULU)
Oh how the WORM turns. :o
Rick B
Fayetteville, NC, USA - Thursday, February 28, 2008, at 21:41:23 (ZULU)
Edited because the computer can’t follow directions :-))
HDR
OK, - Thursday, February 28, 2008, at 22:22:03 (ZULU)
Sic 'em! GRRRRR!
Cheers,
Doc
Doc Holloway
The rainy Ozark boonies, MO, USA - Thursday, February 28, 2008, at 22:35:06 (ZULU)
brian k. sain
Friday, February 29, 2008, at 02:09:20 (ZULU)
The way this election is going ... that may not be too far off.
God help us.
brian k. sain
Friday, February 29, 2008, at 02:20:14 (ZULU)
'Lito,
I sincerely hope that the part about "It's my turn to draw blood." was included in the message. Gut the sorry bastards.
Guys,
Had a pretty good day today. Went to the gun store to piss away the tax return, and, while I was picking up my guns I've had on layaway so long that they've appreciated in value, I was behind a guy in line that was selling his half of the guns in his Dad's estate. He saw me looking, and asked if I wanted any of them. I really wish I'd have had a couple grand to spend, but I had to suffer with just one BRAND NEW Winchester 94 trapper with the saddle ring in .30-30. He gave it to me for what they were offering. $245!
They were really gonna asshole him on it. I had a guy come hunt me up and offer me $100 profit on it while I was snooping around, waiting on them to finish the paperwork. I know I can get at least $500 for it. That's what they said they were gonna price it at.
He also had a really tight brand new Schofield that they only gave him $400 for.
Travis Morgan
Wichita, Ks., U.S.A. - Friday, February 29, 2008, at 02:20:47 (ZULU)
Cut long, deep, wide & continous...
Sharon
Larry J. Porter
Boonies of the Panhandle, Texas, USA!!!! - Friday, February 29, 2008, at 03:27:51 (ZULU)
Catching the updates here over the years was like a slow-motion Rocky-style fight. 11 rounds of losing and set backs, followed by one round of turn about. Heheh. There is a book in this experience---many, many fathers get what you got up front. None I know of ever did what you are doing with any success. My case was a protracted "win" off the bat--a few appeals to limit certain opinions, but straight shot nontheless. Your case reads like Odysseus's journey home.
Wes: get well already! Stop complicating things:))
Travis: I sure hope my son has more respect for inheritance and heirlooms. I do not feel sorry for anyone who fire-sells his dad's given property. It seems like an insult. At least you benefitted.
Headline on a news service:
"CBSNEWS Correspondent Gets 'Zapped' By Pentagon Ray Gun..."
LMAO!
Well, now! I call this a good start; they should also test this thing on ABC, CNN, MSNBC...and dial up the power some:))
Joe M
Friday, February 29, 2008, at 03:54:48 (ZULU)
Joe,
The trapper model looks like a friggin' toy, but I'm hoping the boy will snap to and start liking man stuff. His Dad and that whole family would be content to drool in front of a video game or play fantasy football for the rest of their lives. I'm hoping he'll give me an excuse to give him a mint condition gun pretty soon. I haven't had it for 24 hours, and I'm already wanting to work it over and shoot it.
Travis Morgan
Wichita, Ks., U.S.A. - Friday, February 29, 2008, at 05:08:39 (ZULU)
Pentagon Ray Gun - stun setting doesn't work on reporters who already are :-)
rod regier
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada - Friday, February 29, 2008, at 16:28:57 (ZULU)