Ruger brings back the old pistol caliber carbine concept

After a decade-long hiatus, Ruger announced last week the return of a pistol caliber carbine series to their catalog with lots of updated features.

The new PC series provides a compact and lightweight carbine aimed at plinkers and the home defense market with a wide-range of magazine well adapters to accommodate a variety of users. The handy takedown carbine ships capable of accepting Ruger SR-series or the new Security-9 series pistol magazines right out of the box, while a Glock 9mm well is included for those who already have a stockpile of those mags. Already have a Ruger American Pistol in 9mm? They offer that magazine well for sale separately.

The gun also has swappable left and right charging handles, a fluted threaded barrel (1/2-inch-28TPI), and lots of other goodies.

More in my column at Guns.com.

A foggy New Year

Went for a Polar Bear dip on the First to celebrate making it out of 2017 alive. But back in December on a foggy winter’s night I roamed around and soaked in some sea smoke.

A couple of 87 foot WPBs at the Coast Guard station with the smoke rolling in. They are the fire-damaged USCGC Brant and I believe the Razorbill

Also saw this guy chilling out in a standoff with a sea serpent. Greetings from the 228!

Greetings, 2018

Yet, I always feel a century or two behind…

 German sentry welcomes in the new year, 1918. Photo colourised artificially

German sentry welcomes in the new year, 1918. Photo colourised artificially

Of Japanese Barlow knives

Here we see a little pocket blade I like to carry from time to time, making a cameo on an outing for some California roll at the local sushi bar.

The higonokami ,also referred to as the Japanese carpenter’s knife, was born in 1896 in Meiji-era Japan when a man named Tasaburo Shigematsu brought back a knife from the Kyushu province and asked a knife maker named Teji Murakami from Hirata in the Miki region to manufacture it.

A blacksmith is said to have added a simple lever (the chikiri) to a minimally-designed pocket knife to aid in opening and closing the blade and to set it apart from other knives. “Higo no Kami” in Japanese means, “Lord of Higo,” in honor of the Lord of the Kyushu area of Japan, where the knife originated.

The legit ones are trademarked and come in the slim gold and blue box seen here. The paracord was added aftermarket.

Higonokami proved to be successful and a tradesman’s guild was formed to oversee the manufacture of the knife– akin to the Barlow in popularity in the U.S.– marked with the name of the famous samurai Miyamoto Musashi. Once a staple of every youth and tradesman in the Empire, their popularity has waned.

Trademarked higonokamis such as this one, were last made by Motosuke Nagao, established in Miki, descending from four generations of blacksmiths. Today the last of the guild in business is Nagao Seisakusho who sell these knives through Iwachu primarily for export these days.

The knives share a common characteristic:

– A handle made out of a folded sheath of brass stamped with kanjis detailing the name of the maker and the steel of the blade: a sanmai with an aogami edge (blue paper steel), very much like a “reverse tanto” in profile.
– The presence of a chikiri (the lever) on the blade, to open the knife.
– The lack of a locking system.
– The fact that the blade, Warikomi steel, entirely disappears in the handle when the knife is closed.

The characters on this example say “Registered Trademark : Sword Master ‘Miyamoto Musashi”‘

It is very much like the classic German Solingen Mercator “cat” K55K knife, known for the image of the running feline on its folded sheet metal handle. Like the Higonokamis, these have has been around for over a century and are currently made by Otter-Messer.

Donbass days, Kalash nights

Via MilMag in Poland, here’s a picture of equipment carried by one of the Russian soldiers from the 234th Black Sea Guards Paratrooper Regiment fighting in the Donbass, Ukraine. He participated in the fights over Luhansk International Airport and Krasnodon town in 2014.

-An old-school 5.45mm AK-74 rifle with an RPK-74 45-round magazine, and GP-30 underbarrel grenade launcher.
-8 standard 30-round magazines, 5 VOG 30mm grenades for the launcher, 2 F1 fragmentation hand grenades with fuses.
-2 tourniquets, one pressure bandage.
-On the top: an RPG-18 “Mukha” disposable 64mm anti-tank launcher (the LAW-ski!)
-A flare, a smoke grenade, imported Swedish Morakniv knife, a multitool (Leatherman?), Petzl headlamp and a flashlight.
-Sawing kit, 2 packs of Seven Oceans emergency dry rations, scotch tape, a pen, some misc. papers, a carabiner, safety pins, and the most important item of them all for any infantryman – spare socks.

Russians/Soviets have long been a fan of carrying tourniquets/IFAKs on their Kalash, going back  to the old Afghani days:

The Bomb Brothers

Found this recently and, if you are into Civil War history, 19th-century naval conflict, or mine warfare, it could be of interest to you.

Though slim, it covers George and Gabriel Raines, the Confederacy’s “Bomb Brothers” and inventors of the Raines Patent “Landmines and Torpeado’s.”

George ran the Confederacy’s Torpedo and Mine Bureau while his younger brother Gabriel managed the Confederate Powder Works at Augusta, Georgia, which produced some 3-million pounds of powder during the conflict. Raines patented Keg “Torpeado’s and Subterranean Shells” were used to great effect during the Mobile Campaign 1864-65 (Damn the Torpedoes!) and the book has an appendix that covers each use of mines during the war.

You should get a blast out of it!

Confederate Torpedo #817 recovered from Light House Inlet, Charleston SC

And just like that, it was gone

Below is a 10-inch (254mm) Watervliet M1888MI rifle on an M1896 disappearing carriage at Battery Jasper on Fort Moultrie Sullivan’s Island during World War II, as manned by the U.S. Army’s Coastal Artillery. The battery was named after SGT. William Jasper, 2nd South Carolina Regiment, who, during the attack of the British fleet on Fort Sullivan in 1776, heroically restored to the fort the flag which had been shot away by a ball from a RN ship.

Per Ft. Moultrie NPS:

Battery Jasper on Sullivan’s Island was completed in 1898 and boasted four 10-inch guns mounted on “disappearing” carriages. A 55-ton counterweight moved the gun to its firing position en barbette. The recoil from firing the 571-pound shell lowered the gun behind the protective, 80-foot thick embankment where it could safely be serviced and reloaded. Though it took 43 men to load and fire a gun, a skilled crew could aim and fire it every 30 seconds. The 10-inch disappearing could fire an armor-piercing shot 8.5 miles.

Today, there are no 10-inch guns at Battery Jasper. They were taken out of service and scrapped for the war effort in 1943. However, visitors can tour one of the gun positions and follow the steps the crew would have taken to fire one of these impressive guns.

A horseman with double Roots

Unidentified soldier in Union uniform with gauntlets, shoulder scales, and cavalry “Company K” marked Hardee hat holding both two Colt Model 1855 Root sidehammer pistols and cavalry saber. Ambrotype/Tintype in LOC collection.

Colt factory superintendent Elisha K. Root’s sidehammer revolver was very popular with individual soldiers in the conflict while Colt made some 17,000 Model 1855 carbines as well over a nine-year period in several barrel lengths and caliber options.

Ruger bringing affordability to the 9mm CCW game

While no one was looking, Ruger slipped two really sweet 9mm’s on the market, a $200-ish single stack compact and a $300 double-stack midsize, both of which I’ve touched on for Guns.com.

The new EC9s, a no-frills version of their LC9s series, is a single-stack 7+1 9mm polymer-framed striker-fired pistol with sights machined integrally with the slide. Billed as about an inch taller and an inch longer than the .380ACP-chambered LCP, the newest 9mm in Ruger’s stable tips the scales at 17.2-ounces with a 3.12-inch barrel and 6-inch overall length.

Best of all, the MSRP is $299, and a quick search shows dealers already taking pre-orders in the $220-$230 range. This puts the new EC9s in the same size envelope as S&W’s new M&P9 Shield 2.0 and the Glock 43, a point Ruger subtly pokes at in their email announcing the new gun.

Then there is the Security 9 in an ode to the classic Ruger Security-Six revolver of the 1970s and 80s, the newest double-stack in the company’s catalog has a 4-inch barrel and 7.24-inch overall length.

Unlike popular striker-fired competitors in the $379 MSRP neighborhood, the Security 9 uses a hammer-fired system evolved from the one found on the LCP and LCP-II line but includes both a bladed trigger safety and a manual frame-mounted safety.

Additional features of the Security 9 include an accessory rail, front and rear cocking serrations and dovetailed sights with various color options available. The alloy steel slide and barrel, aluminum chassis with full-length guide rails, and nylon frame give the pistol a 23.7-ounce overall weight. The gun ships with two 15-round mags

I will be sure to check out both on the range at SHOT.

From Maine to Turkey

From Bath Iron Works:

An aerial shot of the shipyard from 1979, with four FFGs at the pier and two more under construction on the inclined ways, a DDG in dry dock and Hull 401, the future Resolute (MA 326) container ship, on the waterfront.

Of the 71 FFG7’s built, 30 were made by Todd on the West Coast, 6 by Bazan in Spain, 8 by China Shipbuilding in Taiwan and two by AMECON in Australia. This leaves a grand total of some 25 crafted by Bath, which designed the program in the first place. Those under construction at Bath in 1979 included USS McInerney (FFG-8), USS Clark (FFG-11), USS Samuel Eliot Morison (FFG-13), USS Sides (FFG-14), USS Clifton Sprague (FFG-16) and USS Estocin (FFG-15), so they are likely the craft in the above. As for the destroyer, yard records show the Adams-class USS Conyngham (DDG 17) was undergoing an overhaul at the yard until 22 August 1980 (job #1031).

Odds are about half of the warships in the above photo are now sharing dock space in Turkey.

Morrison is currently TCG Gökova (F 496) in the Turkish Navy while her sister Estocin is TCG Göksu (F 497) and Sprague is TCG Gaziantep (F 490).

Of the rest: Sides was scrapped in 2015. First of the “long hulls” McInerney is serving the Pakistanis as PNS Alamgir (F-260). Clark is in the Polish Navy as ORP Gen. K. Pułaski (272). The destroyer, Conyngham, was scrapped in 1994.

SS Resolute, ordered by Farrell Lines of New York, was picked up by MARAD when they went out of business in 1986 then later picked up the name American Resolute on a bareboat charter. Placed in the James River Reserve Fleet at Fort Eustis, Virginia on June 26, 2000. “It was maintained there in a militarily-useful retention status for several years; however, with the abundance of cellular containerships in commercial trade available for military sealift, the need for a reserve containership diminished quickly. Resolute was considered for conversion into a training ship between 2003 and 2005, but that effort was superseded. Resolute was removed from retention status in 2008.” She went to the breakers in 2009.

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