Category Archives: gun culture

New: FN 309 Optics-ready Hammer-fired 9mm Pistol

Just in time for SHOT Show, FN has debuted its newest double-stack 9mm pistol: the feature-packed and more affordable FN 309 MRD.

The 309 takes cues from the company’s well-received Reflex series of micro 9s, using a DAO internal hammer operation and direct-mount Shield RMSc/Holosun K/Leupold DPP footprint with adapter plates available for other dots.

The unloaded weight is 18.4 ounces with an empty mag. We found the Reflex in its most svelte form, with 12 rounds of Federal’s Punch JHP 124-grain self-defense loads and no optic, to hit the scales at 23.4 ounces. Shown with a DeSantis Inside Heat, which, although made for the single-stack FN 503, fits it like a glove.

In fact, the FN 309 is basically a Reflex XL, but it is a little bigger, holds more bullets, is $150 cheaper, and uses easy-to-load and more affordable ($20 rather than $50) magazines. Plus, it is easier to rack and very slim, all good things for first-time pistol buyers: the demographic FN is pitching to for this one.

The FN 309
The FN 309 is new for 2026. (Photos: FN)

It has styling similar to the company’s other pistols, but make no mistake, the 309 is its own ecosystem, using proprietary (but inexpensive) 16 and 20-round polymer-bodied magazines. Plus – and this is a win for first-time gun owners and those with reduced hand strength – it requires lower racking force without a gimmick.

The pistol is carry-sized and leans more compact than sub-compact, with a 3.8-inch alloy steel, machine-gun grade, barrel with a recessed target crown. This gives it an overall length of 7.4 inches and a weight, due to its polymer frame, of 22 ounces. The guns ship standard with FN 509 pattern drift-adjustable sights, using an over-molded green fiber-optic front and rounded U-notch rear. Other features include an accessory rail, a reversible magazine release, and multiple safeties, including a firing pin block and trigger safety. Manual safety models will also be available.

The MSRP on the FN 309 is $549, which is likely to be closer to $450 at retailers once supply starts flowing.

The FN 309
We were able to travel to South Carolina last summer to check out the 309 “in progress,” shooting a table full of early production pistols along with a group of other gun media. (Photos unless noted: Chris Eger/Guns.com)
The FN 309
Note the polymer magazines in 16 and 20-round variants, which FN advises will be inexpensive (think $25) at retail. Compare that to FN 509 mags, which run $50-$90 depending on the model. 
The FN 309
The FN 309 is a simple design and field strips without pulling the trigger – a big deal for a lot of users. 
The FN 309
Note the internal hammer-fired operation of the FN 309. 

The gun shot well in initial testing, with the Guns.com crew putting about 500 rounds through a couple of pistols over the course of a couple of hours. A relay team ran 1,160 rounds on a very hot torture test gun without a serious issue, so there is definitely a potential for the 309 to be something FN is proud to have in its catalog.

The gun is pitched as a more entry-level pistol than the company’s duty-grade 509s, which start at $750 for basic vanilla models and run to $1,600 in the more bespoke Edge package guns. Even the 15+1 round FN Reflex XL MRD has a suggested ask of $719.

“Many gun buyers don’t see FN as an option, and we wanted to change that perception by making the brand accessible to people looking to spend $500 on a 9mm pistol,” said Chris Johnson, Senior Product Manager for Pistols for FN America, LLC. “With the FN 309 MRD, we now have a trustworthy, easy-to-use pistol perfect for new gun buyers and those looking to purchase their first FN. For us, it’s not just a new product, it’s FN’s commitment to offering the everyday user peace of mind and FN performance.”

The FN 309 ships with a 16+1-round flush-fit and 20+1-round extended magazine, with options for 10-rounders in restricted states.

We have a review model inbound, so expect to see more on the 309 in the coming weeks.

Plus, if you like this, you are going to love what is announced later this morning.

MK 75 OTO Echoes

The crew of Coast Guard Cutter Northland conducts a live firing of the MK 75 76mm weapons system while underway, on September 20, 2020, in the Atlantic Ocean. (Photo: USCG)

As we have discussed, the MK 75 OTO Melera 76/62C Compact gun has been sunset by the U.S. Navy and USCG after a 50-year-run, with the Ordnance Shop at the Coast Guard Yard taking ownership of the remnants of the program, tapped to support the guns on FFG-7 frigates and 378-foot cutters transferred overseas.

The CG Yard Ordnance Repair Facility recently completed a five-month overhaul of an MK75 gun mount for an international partner.

“This effort is part of a larger Foreign Military Sale Program, which prioritizes robust national security partnerships and U.S. global leadership.

The Yard is the only certified MK75 overhaul facility in the U.S. The Ordnance shop manufacturers and repairs critical components from decommissioned Navy donor guns, since these parts are no longer manufactured. After the overhaul, the weapon is boxed and shipped for transit to the international partner.”

Before:

After:

And packed up for return shipment.

Death in a box!

As to why it takes five months to refirb one of these mounts:

It takes that long because the shop has to remove/ship it, pre test, completely tear down, sand blasted all parts, send part for plating, source or get parts made that are no longer in the stock system, repair all corrosion, overhaul all hydraulic components with new gaskets/hardware, paint / repair everything, start assembling have QI come in for major sub component test, finish assembly, start the ISMAT / ISMEP testing, round 100 rounds, package the system, ship it, install it on new cutter/ship then Test it again on the ship and this is completed with up to a 3-4 man team while training new workers. It’s a big team effort, but rewarding the workers in that shop are really top-notch.

YHM at 75

We’ve been running into YHM cans for over 20 years, making them one of the oldest in the relatively young suppressor business, but the company actually goes back much further

The family behind Massachusetts-based Yankee Hill Machine, which has become a leader in the U.S. firearms-suppressor category, will be celebrating the company’s Diamond Jubilee throughout 2026.

I’ve known the Graham family for years and have stopped in at their booths at SHOT, NRA, CanCon, etc for well over a decade.

The company was founded in an old garage by U.S. Army veteran James H. Graham and Wallace Judd during the Korean War in early 1951. Based in a part of Northampton known locally as “Yankee Hill,” the shop’s name was an obvious one.

For its first decade they were focused on turning out nuts and bolts and custom machining projects, then during Vietnam moved into military procurement, making cleaning rods and related products for the Army’s new M-16 rifles in 1967. By that time, YHM was based in an old 19th century brock mill.

After 1984, when James J. Graham, the founder’s son, took over, things really started to change.

  • 1985 – First Computerized Numerical Control (CNC) machines arrive at YHM
  • 1990 – First YHM-designed firearm accessories made and sold to industry partners (sights, muzzle devices, barrels, etc.)
  • First YHM products are offered for retail sale under the YHM name.
  • 2002 – First YHM website goes live
  • 2002 – YHM attends first SHOT Show
  • 2005 – First YHM-made suppressors are offered on the national market
  • 2007-06 – YHM suppressor line rapidly expands; first national distribution partners join
  • 2008 – First YHM-branded firearm is offered
  • 2006 – YHM team attends first NRA Show
  • 2012 – YHM expands suppressor manufacturing
  • 2013 – Christopher and Kevin Graham become co-owners of YHM
  • 2017 – YHM moves into steel building complex in Easthampton, MA
  • 2018 – YHM is completely CNC-focused for all machining operations
  • 2022 – The YHM Turbo 3 becomes the first company suppressor to be officially rated Gold as part of the National Tactical Officers Association “Member Tested and Recommended” program.
  • 2024 – Chris Graham becomes sole president/owner of YHM 2025
  • YHM introduces the VICTRA-12, the company’s first shotgun suppressor

We’ll be hanging out with YHM off and on through the upcoming year to help celebrate their 75th.

Japanese Type 5: Ode to the Garand

Recently up at auction with Morphys, a very rare and desirable Japanese Type 5 Garand semi-automatic rifle, one of approximately 125 of its type assembled in early 1944.

This outstanding experimental example in standard Japanese 7.7mm chambering, numbered ‘13’ on the underside of the barrel. Action nearly identical to that of a standard American Garand, although the 8-round en bloc clip was replaced with a fixed internal 10-round magazine that extended past the wood line.

Accompanied by an original March 14, 1946-dated capture certificate listing “ONE JAPANESE RIFLE” as the property of Colonel Walter D. Buie, a 1920 West Point graduate who earned two Legions of Merit, first on the staff of the XXIII Corps stateside in 1943-44 and then as commander of the 272d Infantry Regiment, 69th Infantry Division in NW Europe in 1944-45. Post VE-Day, Buie left his post with the 272 and joined the 25th Division as Chief of Staff in the Pacific. Also included was a period shipping crate addressed to Major Walter Buie at Fort Leavenworth and also his wife in N.C.

Someone got a deal, as it sold for $48,000 against an estimated range of $60,000-$75,000.

It belongs in a museum.

Below, a Type 5 (SN 53) compared to a production M-1 Garand in November 1945 at Springfield Armory:

Echoes of Issac Bell

This is one of the coolest things I have ever had a chance to hold.

Sure, you have seen Colt Police Positives.

And you have seen weapon-mounted lights.

But how many circa 1915 Colt Police Positives have you encountered with a Seely Night Sight weapon light (Patent US1029951A) from that era?

Boom:

The light assembly is under the barrel, while the battery and pressure switch are in the replacement grip. The device featured precise craftsmanship, including spring-and-rubber cushioning for the bulb.

They are joined by a fine wire that rests in a shallow milled passage through the frame that looks to have been done by perhaps a jeweler or a watchmaker.

Its inventor, Mr. George A. Seely of San Francisco, seemed an interesting chap and, besides his short-lived “night sight for firearms,” also patented a curious curtain pole, a threshold, a table leveler, a conveyor device, and a stamp affixing machine, among others.

Some lightbox images:

This seems right out of a Clive Cussler Isaac Bell novel. You know, the circa 1914-1950 investigator for the Van Dorn Detective Agency with titles like The Chase, The Wrecker, and The Bootlegger? I mean, it should. The only other example I’ve ever seen of one of these was from the Cussler Collection (formerly of noted collector/dealer Randall Bessler of Carson City) and sold at auction in 2021 for $3,750.

We have it for auction at GDC starting at an incredibly low $2,199 with like a day left, and somebody better get it because if they don’t, well, I may be forced to grab this bad boy for myself and just feel somewhat of a Van Dorn.

Shooting Illustrated Prints Final Issue, Ends 25 Year Run

In my opinion, the only decent NRA pub…

As part of a restructure and streamlining of operations, the NRA-published magazine, Shooting Illustrated, ended its run this month.

The final issue, Vol. 25 No. 1, officially the January 2026 issue, is the last for Shooting Illustrated, capping a quarter-century run.

The end was not a total surprise as the NRA had announced last October that it was ending publication of both America’s 1st Freedom and Shooting Illustrated, along with halting the Shooting Sports USA digital magazine (but not the website), and trimming the publishing of print issues of its two remaining media titles, American Hunter and American Rifleman, to “premium monthly digital editions with quarterly print issues.”

The moves came, as NRA EVP & CEO Doug Hamlin explained, to “create a leaner NRA that allows us to fight harder for our members.”

Shooting Sports Illustrated was unique in a number of ways.

When it was first released in 2001, the NRA offered a choice from four magazines available for free to members (American Rifleman, American Hunter, America’s 1st Freedom, and Woman’s Outlook) while NRAinSights was available for junior members. Meanwhile, Shooting Sports USA and Shooting Illustrated were subscription-only (you had to pay extra for them), with the latter being the only magazine in the organization’s stable that was available on newsstands. This meant that even those who weren’t NRA members would see Shooting Illustrated on magazine racks down to the gas station level. There it was, mixed in with the big boys like Guns & Ammo, the Shotgun News, and American Handgunner.

It long featured Richard Mann’s Bullet column, which first appeared in 2007, and the most recent issues carried Sheriff Jim Wilson, Steve Adelmann, Tamara Keel, Jeff Johnson, Tatiana Whitlock, Guy Sagi, and others on its masthead.

The magazine was only offered to NRA members as a journal choice after 2016.

The most current circulation figures available for Shooting Illustrated, as compiled by the Alliance for Audited Media in 2023, stood at just over 600,000. Comparatively, America’s 1st Freedom had 560,000; American Hunter, some 780,000; and American Rifleman, 1.5 million. So the math makes sense if you were going to snuff out two of the four, which two should get the ax.

The two volumes will be treasured in the collections of firearms enthusiasts. They will join the likes of print issues of Soldier of Fortune, which switched to digital only in 2016, the myriad of titles printed by Paladin Press, which closed in 2017, and even the Guns.com print magazine, which was published in 2023-24. Last November, the news came that the print editions of GUNS Magazine and American Handgunner magazine are ending after 70 years, leaving only digital issues.

Other gun publications have come and gone, then made a resurgence, such as Field & Stream, which recently returned to newsstands, and assorted titles from Harris Publications, which were down and out in 2023, then found a new home with Athlon/Bleecker Street– at least for now.

In 2020, Field & Stream, the outdoor magazine that first appeared in 1871, ceased publication of its print edition but recently reemerged after a three-year hiatus under new ownership– so never say never! (Photo: Chris Eger/Guns.com)

So are print gun magazines dead?

Our friend Ian McCollum opines on that question, below.

CMP Production Inventory status on M1903, M-1 Garand, and M1911s

From the latest CMP Director’s annual report on Production. Keep in mind that the NDAA also included the provision to transfer milsurp pump-action shotguns, which will probably start in 2027. 

Drill Receiver Reclamation Project: The Drill Receiver Reclamation Project is a landmark initiative designed to restore tens of thousands of previously deactivated M1 Garand and 1903A3 drill rifles into safe, functional firearms. With original receiver inventory nearly exhausted (note: CMP continues to work with the US Government to identify options for the return of US-provided M1s from foreign countries), CMP identified this project as a critical way to sustain future rifle production and preserve important historical assets. Extensive testing, engineering oversight, and transparent communication have positioned this program as a model for responsible firearm reclamation and safety assurance.

    • Scope and Inventory: Began with ~75,000 serialized drill rifles (M1 Garand and 1903A3)
      • 10,000 M1s classified as ‘good’ (Category A)
      • 26,000 M1s classified as ‘medium (Category B)
      • 15,000 M1903/A3s in a condition supporting reclamation
      • 24,000 as ‘scrap’ (Category C – deferred due to cost and condition)
    • Partnerships: CMP partnered with Heritage Arms (manufacturing) and Prospector Training of Florida (ballistic testing and validation).
    • Testing: A rigorous validation program included destructive testing and proof loads exceeding 80,000 psi—demonstrating exceptional strength and safety.
    • Production: CMP placed an initial purchase order for ~20,000 receivers across the recoverable categories.
    • Identification: All reclaimed rifles and receivers carry an “RC” item number prefix to clearly differentiate them from legacy products.
    • Customer Reception: Initial market skepticism was overcome through education, transparent documentation, and in-person demonstrations at the 2025 National Matches.
    • Sales Strategy: CMP introduced stripped and barreled receiver sales at low margins to build customer trust and demonstrate quality firsthand.
    • Sustainability: Sales velocity has stabilized, providing a multi-year supply of reclaimed receivers for production and sales.
    • The project inventory will support nearly 2-3 years of sales.
       

CMP 1903A3 Expert Rifle Program: A key component of the Drill Receiver Reclamation initiative is the development of the CMP 1903A3 Expert Rifle, CMP’s first bolt-action rifle to carry the Expert Grade designation. The project utilizes reclaimed 1903A3 receivers from the drill inventory, each carefully inspected and refurbished to CMP’s Expert standards. This launch expands CMP’s product line and appeals to collectors and shooters seeking historically accurate bolt-action rifles.

      • All supply chain inventory has been acquired, and the Armory is staged to begin assembly.
      • Production Start: Scheduled to begin in November 2025, with initial inventory and public release expected in January 2026.
      • Configuration: Each rifle features a new Criterion barrel, new Minelli walnut stock, refinished metal parts, and authentic GI-style hardware.
      • Grading and Finish: Rifles will meet the same cosmetic and performance criteria as CMP’s M1 Expert Grade rifles.
      • Variants: Plans include a scoped 1903A4 model using Hi-Lux M82 optics and potential chambering in .308 Winchester and .30-06 Springfield.
      • Strategic Impact: This expansion diversifies CMP’s product offerings and ensures efficient use of reclaimed assets while appealing to both historical and modern shooters.
         

New CMP M1 Rifle Project: The New CMP M1 Rifle Project represents a return to U.S.-based production of forged, USGI-spec M1 Garand receivers. This is CMP’s first move into commercial firearms manufacturing.  

We have partnered to manufacture parts and components for several years, but never receivers. This program ensures the long-term viability of M1 rifle sales after the depletion of legacy and reclaimed receiver inventories while offering a quality product for those who do not wish to purchase a reclaimed offering.  

For those more interested in performance over collectability, the newly manufactured CMP M1 is the clear choice. It delivers a product that is both faithful to the original design and built to modern manufacturing tolerances and materials standards.

    • Purpose: Ensure long-term rifle production continuity through a newly manufactured, USGI-spec forged receiver
    • Partnership: Multi-year R&D collaboration with Heritage Arms covering 3D scanning, CAD modeling, prototype machining, and validation
    • Prototypes cleared for test batch “T Lot” production in early 2025
    • Testing: Over 100 serialized T-prefix test rifles produced, fired through 16,000+ rounds during developmental validation
    • Numerous iterations and improvements between small lots within the “T” series
    • T Lot proving conclude mid-summer, and preorders were opened for eager customers
    • Founder Series: We received 607 preorders placed in 2025 under the FNDR prefix (231 in .308 and 376 in .30-06), representing the first commercial batch
    • Production Status: Full production underway. Initial Founder Series shipments began in early November 2025.  Standard production units will begin shipping early in 2026.
    • Specifications: Forged USGI Spec receiver, Criterion or Faxon barrel, forged reproduction stainless steel gas cylinder, and new walnut stock. MSRP: $1,950 for either caliber (.30-06 or .308 Win)
    • Future Models: Planned expansion to include M1D, and “Tanker” variants, as well as alternative calibers. Development is also underway on several other exciting variants that will be announced as we roll into the new year.
    • Strategic Value: Ensures a sustainable, U.S.-based manufacturing capability that preserves authenticity while meeting modern expectations for quality and precision

M1911 Pistols: Our inventory and sales of M1911 pistols remain strong. The limit of four pistols per person per lifetime remains in effect for 2026. We do intend to bring in-person sales to the Talladega Marksmanship Park store in the March/April timeframe and to the Camp Perry store in the June timeframe, and before the National Matches. More information on this will be forthcoming after the new year.

First Look at the New 2K11 Comp Double-stack 1911 9mm

Featuring a built-in forward barrel port and matching compensated slide, the newKimber 2K11 Comp series offers a significant reduction in felt recoil while keeping the same popular features as the rest of the series.

Alabama-based Kimber went double-stack 1911 in 2024 after at least a 30-year run in the field of making single stacks. We have reviewed a couple of these excellent pistols since then, and are past the 3K round mark on our original test gun with no hiccups to report, leaving us more than happy to report on the new Comp series.

The guns, launching just in time for the upcoming SHOT Show, will all be chambered in 9mm and available in both 5-inch full-sized (Government) and 4.25-inch Pro (Commander) sizes, shipping with flush-fit 20 and 19-round magazines, respectively.

Each will also be offered in either a black DLC or matte stainless variant, giving Kimber four new 2K11 Comp models for 2026: 5-inch black (669278350783) and stainless (669278350806) and 4.25-inch black (669278350738) and stainless (669278350752) with an MSRP running between $2,345 and $2,499, with the DLC guns hitting the higher end, because of DLC.

The new Kimber 2K11 Comp series 
A sampling, showing that big ol’ comp. (Photo: Kimber)

“The 2K11 Comp is the culmination of years of preparation and hundreds of thousands of rounds of testing to deliver the most fully featured comprehensive handgun we have ever produced,” said Pedi Gega, Director of product development, assembly, and finishing. “The new 2K11 family of compensated models creates the highest class of firearms for the discerning enthusiast and competitive shooter.”

Kimber sent us an SST (stainless) 2K11 Pro Comp model for testing.

The new Kimber 2K11 Pro Comp SST in 9mm. 
The pistol looks great, which is no surprise as the 2K11 series is crafted with superb attention to detail, one at a time, by skilled technicians, not just slapped together. Being a Pro model, its 4.25-inch barrel gives an overall length of 7.79 inches. (All photos unless noted: Chris Eger/Guns.com)
The new Kimber 2K11 Pro Comp SST in 9mm. 
Note the external extractor, ambidextrous thumb safety, and bumped grip safety, which are standard across the line.
The new Kimber 2K11 Pro Comp SST in 9mm. 
Weight is 33.4 ounces, even with a full-length rail on the dustcover of the frame. Note the lightening cuts to the slide, seen previously on Kimber’s top-shelf Rapide series, which provide faster lock-up. 

The most noticeable enhancement to these guns over the standard 2K11 series is the massive 0.16 square inch integrated compensator forward of the front sight. This feature noticeably reduces muzzle rise and felt recoil, plus it creates an incredibly fun and controllable shooting experience.

The new Kimber 2K11 Pro Comp SST in 9mm. 
The integral comp is big enough to double as an ashtray if needed. 
The new Kimber 2K11 Pro Comp SST in 9mm. 
The four new compensated models also feature Kimber’s brand-new carbon fiber grip infused grip module that is compatible with corresponding Stan Chen Magwells. We found the grip to be aggressive but not overly. 

The Comp guns also share the current 2K11 features, such as Kimber’s in-house toolless guide rod, an external extractor, a bushing-less, crowned, and fluted barrel, a GT trigger, and more.

The new Kimber 2K11 Pro Comp SST in 9mm, compared
The Kimber 2K11 Pro Comp SST 4.25 compared to the standard full-sized Black DLC 2K11. 
The new Kimber 2K11 Pro Comp SST in 9mm, compared
And compared with the non-comped Kimber 2K11 Pro SST, which sports a Kimpro Granite finish and Kevlar carbon fiber grips. Released last August, this gun hinted at what the Pro Comp would become. 
The new Kimber 2K11 Pro Comp SST in 9mm, compared
Note the top ends of the Kimber 2K11 Pro SST and Pro Comp SST
The new Kimber 2K11 Pro Comp SST in 9mm. 
The Kimber 2K11 Pro Comp features a cover plate with an adjustable rear sight. A TAG Precision FiberLok 2 front sight with additional red and black fiber-optic inserts is included. All models ship with a TAG Precision RMR adapter plate that takes the place of the rear sight. 
The new Kimber 2K11 Pro Comp SST in 9mm. 
Our test gun shipped with two 19+1-round Checkmate Double Stack Ultra-Hi Capacity 126mm mags. Full-length models ship with a flush 17+1, and two extended 20+1 round mags. The mags, reverse 2011-compatible, are all metal, including an aluminum base pad and steel retainer for maximum made-in-the-USA durability and longevity. Word of caution: they are a beast to fully load. 
The new Kimber 2K11 Pro Comp SST in 9mm. 
The Kimber 2K11 Pro Comp has an easy takedown without tools due to its toolless guide rod system, a feature it shares with the rest of the series.
The new Kimber 2K11 Pro Comp SST in 9mm. 
The aluminum match-grade skeletonized GT trigger has an advertised 3-to-4-pound pull. We found it broke at 3.6, with a short take-up to the wall and a crisp break. Reset is similarly short and is both audible and tactile. Kimber advises that the shoe length has been reduced by 3/32 of an inch, making for a more comfortable overall length. IMHO, the GT is the best production factory 1911 trigger on the market. 

Check out the trigger pull and reset here:

How’s it shoot?

Well, we’ve only had the gun for a couple of weeks and have about 200 rounds through it thus far, so it is a little early to say, but we have experienced no jams and smooth shooting, with less recoil.

Stay tuned for more feedback as we up the round count.

The new Kimber 2K11 Pro Comp SST in 9mm. 
The new Kimber 2K11 Pro Comp SST in 9mm.

The Carter Special, Spotted in the Wild

So I saw this DW piece on how the “ELN plays key role in Colombia’s cocaine economy,” and the cover thumbnail image caught my eye.

Without the titles, you get a better look at the very interesting gatt, complete with Israeli Thermold magazine and paracord sling with brass swivel snaps.

This is not a frankengun; this thing left the factory like this.

Meet the Olympic Arms K23B “Stubby” carbine:

Only manufactured between 2007 and 2020, it was a Mil/LE-only factory SBR offered by Washington-based Olympic Arms. Chambered in 5.56 NATO, it ran a 6.5-inch chrome moly steel button rifled barrel with A2 flash suppressor, forged A2 upper with fully adjustable rear sight, an A2 style post front sight, had no bayonet lug, and used a distinctive free-folding aluminum tube handguard with knurling.

It ran a carbon recoil buffer in the back of the frame and, just 22.5 inches overall, weighed 5.12 pounds. It was offered in two variants, with (K23P-FT) or without (K23P) a flat-top receiver.

It caught some LE/Mil contacts, including at least some (apparently) in Colombia and in Taiwan as seen in this image:

Its last MSRP was $876, although they typically only run $550ish today, plus stamps.

It is, however, sought after by Stargate superfans as it is the basis for the “Carter Special.”

Since you came this far, enjoy this deep dive into fake Colts interdicted in Colombia, which were destined for FARC Guerrillas.

Au revoir, BB!

With the passing of the late, great Brigitte Bardot (1934-2025), who held spicy takes about various religions and was a champion of animal rights, it is perhaps fitting to note her work in steel over the decades, particularly in the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s.

Brigitte Bardot aims an FN Model 1922 pistol as Juliette Hardy in And God Created Woman (1956).

Brigitte Bardot holds a Single Action Army revolver as Catherine Emmerson in Shalako (1968).

Brigitte Bardot holds a Winchester Model 1894 as Maria I in Viva Maria! (1965).

And a gold scrolled Vickers Mk. I in the same film.

Which she uses to good effect, with Maria II– French actress Jeanne Moreau (1928-2017)– working as her feeder.

And with a lit French Modèle 1847 Hand Grenade in Viva Maria (1965)

She indirectly gave a lot of, um, moral support to GIs around the globe in her day. I remember my grandpa, a retired Marine with service across Korea and Vietnam, having an old press photo of her in his “war locker.”

Au revoir, BB!

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