Category Archives: ccw

The Petit Protector Ring Guns: The ultimate ring pops

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Throughout history, one of the most popular reasons to carry a weapon about your person has been protection against bodily harm, but many also carry to guard against the robbery of personal items—wallet, shoes, watch, wedding ring. While many chose to carry a concealed handgun to keep their valuables on their fingers, once upon a time the jewelry itself may have been their firearm. Enter the Petit Protector.

In the early 1800s saw the height of the Industrial Revolution, in which factories and mechanization took hold of the country and the human imagination. Frankenstein, one of the first depictions of science fiction, was written in 1818. People were fascinated with the latest technology and this definitely held true for firearms as there seemed to be a race to produce oddball defense gadgets.

At the time, personal protection guns were all the rage. The derringer, the pen-gun, the cane gun, and many other things we see as James Bond-style AOWs today had their origins in small shops across Europe and the US during this period.

The ring gun, a revolver mounted to a piece of hand jewelry, was the next logical step.
Read the rest in my column at GUNS.com

Why you bring a gun to a knife fight (NSFW)

 

Remember that reactionary gaps kiddies!

 

A tip from Uncle Chris

 

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Combat Gallery Sunday: Some of the Best Pulp Fiction Covers..from Mort

Mort Künstler is one of the most respected military art masters in modern US history. Odds are if you have ever stopped and admired a Civil War painting, it may have come from Mort.

You may recognize his art from this painting of the CSS Hunley just before its last mission

You can almost feel the tension in the air for those brave submariners on this human powered submersible

You can almost feel the tension in the air for those brave submariners on this human powered submersible

Or in his more modern works such as this one of the Alaska Air National Guard

Guarding for polar bears while your C130 on skies unloads supplies. I'm cold just looking at this...

Guarding for polar bears while your C130 on skies unloads supplies. I’m cold just looking at this…

But what you may not know is that he cut his teeth on a whole ‘nother category of military art.
Born in 1931, he started off doing covers for men’s adventure magazines (aka pulp fiction type books) in the 1950s and 60s. Although he often used pen names, some of his better works he signed his own to and they are just really great stuff.

Nothing like a M1 Garand, a M1918 BAR, pineapple grenades, and belts of 30.06 LMG food to put some swagger on your cigar

Nothing like a M1 Garand, a M1918 BAR, pineapple grenades, and belts of 30.06 LMG food to put some swagger on your cigar

With that in mind, what follows is a few of his works from back in the pulp days. You see a lot of Tommy Guns, and a good bit of guest appearances from BARs, M1s, M3 Grease guns, Short Magazine Lee Enfields, and of course, Luger P08s.

Enjoy!

the luger has been a staple of pulp fiction for decades as seen in this 1950s illustration by Mort Kuntsler mort 11 mort 10 mort pulp 9 mort 8 mort 6 mort pulp 5 mort cover mort pulp 4 mort pulp cover mort pulp cover 2 mort pulp cover 3

The Sheridan Knocabout Pistol: This .22 is no toy

Today everyone remembers Sheridan as a player in the airgun market, with many of us having cut our teeth on one of their pump .177 guns as youngsters. What not everyone knows, however, is that the company at one point tried to move into the actual firearms market and in the 1950s came up with a 22-rimfire pistol that was well received for what it was: the Knocabout.

Founded by Mr EN Wackerhagen, Racine, Wisconsin-based Sheridan Products started in 1945 with the stated purpose of giving the founder’s son a ‘better airgun than anything then on the market’. Soon their Super Grade, Bluestreak, and Silverstreak models of pneumatic air rifles were the glimmer in the eye for both kids and dads alike. Why such cross-generational interest? The Sheridan products had been designed by a gunsmith, rather than an airgun maker, which gave them the feel of actual rifles.

In 1951, the company was looking to expand and decided that a safe bet would be a rimfire pistol. At the time, semi-auto target pistols by Colt, Smith and Wesson, and a new upstart known as Ruger, were popular. The best way to compete with these makers was to offer a ‘beginner’ level pistol, for a good price.
Read the rest in my column at GUNS.com

sheridan knock out ad 1953

Saw on gunboards today….

“For sale only 16 rnds. Fired through it like new. Sorry no box or paper work . WIFE SAyS it has to go before I shoot up the house. It’s a sweet shooter smooth action and will never let you down just ask my pets they hide whenever they see it . Really looking for 22lr.”

 

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5 Famous One Shot Stops

So, we’ve all heard stories of people walking away from a fusillade of bullets unscathed but the truth is this is not often the case.

In fact, more often than not, just a single well placed round does the trick. Guns.com looks at five cases where one single shot ended the fight and made history.
Read the rest in my column at GUNS.com

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Bear Vs AK74 on Alaskan Trail

Do bears go (well you know) in the woods? The inevitable answer is always yes. Moreover, sometimes, hikers cross paths with these animals, and that is when things can really go from bad to worse in no time at all. Just as one Alaskan hiker who carried just the right piece of insurance.

Read the rest in my column at firearms talk

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The CZ75 Full Auto Machine Pistol: Czechmate

Ever since 1975, the world has come to know and love the sleek and downright elegant CZ75 combat pistol. This Czech designed and produced firearm has been cloned probably more than any other modern gun with the exception of the M1911 so chances are you are familiar. One variant you probably haven’t gotten your grubby little hands on though is the full auto one, and that’s a shame.

Czechoslovakia (now the Czech Republic) always had a more Western tilt than other Soviet satellite states. This can be seem clearly in their history of firearms manufacturing.

The Czech firearms super factory of Česká zbrojovka Uherský Brod (best known simply as CZ) had long been a maker of top shelf firearms that earned the old Communist State of Czechoslovakia hard foreign currency. By 1991, with the end of the cold war and the coming of capitalist freedom to the region, the Czech Republic divested itself of the CZ munitions works and the company began life on its own two feet, as a private entity.

Looking to help push new products out into the world, that could include Western countries without import restrictions, the company looked at two of its bestselling products, the CZ75 pistol and the Skorpion vz61 submachine gun and came up with a novel way to have the first become a new and improved version of the latter. In the early 1990s there was a certain niche market out there for high speed 9mm machine pistols such as the Glock 18 and Beretta 93R, but the CZ’s dated Skorpion design was chambered from the ground up for .32ACP.

Hence: a CZ75 that could sting like a Skorpion.

Read the rest in my column at GUNS.com

Why yes, that IS a 2nd magazine used as a forward grip...

Why yes, that IS a 2nd magazine used as a forward grip…

The Joy of a Broomhandle Mauser

In military service for more than a half century with some of the most unlikely of people, the C96 Mauser Military Pistol began a new era of semi-automatic pistols on the modern battlefield.
In the 1890s, most if not all handguns in the world were revolvers of either single action (Colt 1873) or double action (Smith and Wesson) type. These types of guns equipped gentlemen officers, travelers, and law enforcement personnel around the world. This was fine, but in Germany, there was a team of three brothers by the name of Feederle that felt they could do better.
Read the rest in my column at Firearms Talk.com

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New Sig P227

SIG Sauer has finally listened to its American fan base and introduced a double-stack 45ACP pistol. Based on the lines of the classic P226 series, this new P227 can very well be a perfect SIG for the US.
More in my column at Firearms Talk

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