Serbian government: Dont throw out your old handgrenades

It seems that a lot of Serbs are doing spring cleaning and are tossing out their stocks of surplus hand grenades, to which the government is cautioning against.

Per AFP/Reuters:

“The ministry … appeals on citizens not to dispose of hand grenades and explosive ordnance in garbage containers and such places … they should instead call the nearest police station and officers will arrive as soon as possible to take the ordnance away,”

They estimate that as many as 900,000 are in civilian hands.

grenade box

School shooting teams making a comeback

Let us face it; youth that are not exposed to the shooting sports grow up to be adults who don’t hunt. Sadly, for generations, the country’s youth have been left alone to gravitate towards electronic pacifiers and away from the traditions of the clays stand, bench rest, and hunting field.

Why does this matter?

Firearms education and the shooting sports reduce gun accidents and passes on this ancient activity to today’s youth. To keep this age old and time-honored tradition alive, young people need to be educated and involved in safe, regulated hunting and shooting.

Just as recently as the 1960s, most elementary and middle schools allowed local game wardens or law enforcement officials to come into the classes and give firearms safety and hunters education to children. Then by the time these same budding shooting sports enthusiasts reached high school, odds were their was an opportunity to join the campus small-bore or clays club then compete against other area schools own teams. These same youth accompanied their fathers and uncles into the field, first for small game then for larger and anxiously awaited the day when they would get their first rifle or shotgun of their very own.

Then came the counter culture shift of the 70s and the draconian gun laws and media messages of the 80s that vilified not only firearms but also the shooting sports as a whole. This resulted in fewer new shooters, which amplified over time, as those children who did not receive the tribal gun knowledge, became adults who were afraid of firearms.

Many parents today, having no gun history to fall back on other than Hollywood, would never dare give a gift of one to their children. Some states have made it illegal for youth under 16 to even purchase a BB gun.

Well it seems like in some cases, that trend is being corrected.

MIT has a shooting team-- and its really popular (Photo by WaPo)

MIT has a shooting team– and its really popular (Photo by WaPo)

Read the rest in my column at Big Game Hunt Journal

RCAF Hornet does Battle of Britain at 75

During the 16 weeks in the late summer and early fall of 1940, the RAF took on the so-far undefeated Luftwaffe over the skies of the British Isles and inflicted the first true defeat suffered by the Germans in WWII. Those scrappy handfuls of Commonwealth (and a few American, Polish, Czech and French) pilots and accompanying ground artillery were able to down some 1887 German aircraft and forestall an invasion of the UK.

These pilots included over 100 Canadians of the RCAF’s No. 1 Squadron (later renamed 401 Squadron) and the Royal Air Force’s 242 “All Canadian” Squadron, of whom 23 lost their lives.

In honoring these airmen, the CF-18 Demonstration Hornet of the RCAF this year is a 1940 throwback:

“The top side paint scheme is patterned after the early 1940s earth tone and dark green camouflage used on Royal Air Force and Commonwealth Hawker Hurricane Mark IIs and Supermarine Spitfires during the Battle of Britain.”

This year's CF-18 Hornet Demonstration Aircraft, seen here at 3 Wing Bagotville on March 30th, 2015, commemorates the 75th anniversary of the Battle of Britain. Image: LS Alex Roy, Atelier d'imagerie Bagotville. BN01-2015-0189-002

This year’s CF-18 Hornet Demonstration Aircraft, seen here at 3 Wing Bagotville on March 30th, 2015, commemorates the 75th anniversary of the Battle of Britain. Image: LS Alex Roy, Atelier d’imagerie Bagotville. BN01-2015-0189-002 CLICK TO BIG UP

This year's CF-18 Hornet Demonstration Aircraft gets towed out to the flight line after it's unveiling at CFB Bagotville in Saguenay, Qué. on March 27th, 2015.

This year’s CF-18 Hornet Demonstration Aircraft gets towed out to the flight line after it’s unveiling at CFB Bagotville in Saguenay, Qué. on March 27th, 2015. Click to big up

The 2015 CF-18 Hornet Demonstration Aircraft is unveiled at a ceremony held at 3 Wing Bagotville in Saguenay, Québec on 27 March 2015. Image: LS Alex Roy, Atelier d'imagerie Bagotville.a BN01-2015-0186-005

The 2015 CF-18 Hornet Demonstration Aircraft is unveiled at a ceremony held at 3 Wing Bagotville in Saguenay, Québec on 27 March 2015. Image: LS Alex Roy, Atelier d’imagerie Bagotville.a BN01-2015-0186-005 CLICK TO BIG UP

The CF-18 is from 425 Tactical Fighter Squadron “Skylarks” (425e Escadron d’appui tactique, “Alouette”) who flew Wellingtons during WWII

The 2015 CF-18 Demonstration Hornet 2b

Back from NRA

Sorry was falling down on the number of posts since last week. Just got back in from covering the 144th Annual NRA Meeting and Exhibits in Nashville with Guns.com. Nine acres of guns, 70,000 attendees, 11-ish GOP Presidential candidates, one protest. Two personal highlights:

Got to jam out on the new Glock 43. No malfunctions, seems to work well.

Got to jam out on the new Glock 43. No malfunctions, seems to work well.

And picked up the J. Guthrie Award from the American Suppressor Association for my pieces on NFA items. it weighs like 12-pounds...

And picked up the J. Guthrie Award from the American Suppressor Association for my pieces on NFA items. it weighs like 12-pounds…

A look at the Ruger LC9: Tomorrow’s slimline 9 of four years ago

Introduced in 2011 on the heels of the outrageously successful .380ACP caliber Ruger LCP (Lightweight Compact Pistol), the LC9 gave the masses of concealed carry devotees who loved the size of that pocket gun but not the caliber something more substantial to wrap their hands around.

Colt Model 1908 .25ACP pocket pistol engraved by William H. Gough, circa 1917.

Colt Model 1908 .25ACP pocket pistol engraved by William H. Gough, circa 1917.

Going back to the 1900s, the small Colt vest (hey guys wore them back then) and pocket sized semi-auto handguns were all snappy little blowback actions chambered in .25, .32, or .380 (all of which John Browning invented). These designs continued through the Walther, Beretta, and Bersa eras, remaining largely unchanged from a mechanical sense. Then in 2008 Sturm, Ruger came out with the locked breech LCP hammerless, which sent the recoil down into the grip and the palm rather than back through the slide in the form of muzzle flip. This made the little (9.4 ounces unloaded, 5.16-inches long overall) .380 a hit. However, many still preferred a larger caliber. That’s where the LC9 came in…

Ruger LC9 9mm in FDE
(And its still smaller and has a bigger standard capacity than the new Glock 43!)

Read the rest in my column at Ruger Talk

Parlez-vous Sten?

Beginning as early as May 11, 1940, resistance groups of Frenchmen and women trapped behind German lines took it upon themselves to continue the fight to throw the “Boche” out.

Terming themselves the “Maquisards” (People that live in the “maquis” in the woods and mountains) these guerrillas fought with whatever they had at hand and went underground whenever things got too hot, often abandoning their weapons if they could not cache them for future use. This meant that very soon, the small supply of French military and sporting weapons that had been in the hands of the resistance were running short. This left them either having to capture guns from the occupiers (which happened), or get them from outside friends.

That’s where airdrops of STEN guns and other arms from the Allies came in handy. Taking only about a half dozen man-hours to build, the STEN cost about $10 to make (about $130 a pop in today’s money– cheaper than a Hi Point pistol!), it was cheap enough to literally give away.

Most wartime STEN guns were built by female British factory workers

Most wartime STEN guns were built by female British factory workers

sten-disassemble1

This meant they could be made in great volume and some 5 million Stens were cranked out officially during World War Two (as well as an estimated million more in underground shops).

British Special Operations Executive (SOE) units and Jedburgh teams with the U.S. OSS Special Operations (SO) branch fanned out across Europe, making contact with those who could use a delivery or ten of high explosives and STEN guns with the idea of setting Hitler’s Europe on fire.

The French received more deliveries than any other group, making the cheap submachine gun an iconic weapon of the beret-clad insurgent.

Resistance Learning about the Sten

Resistance Learning about the Sten

Resistant of the Finistère region armed with a British Sten, 1944

Resistant of the Finistère region armed with a British Sten, 1944 Click to big up

Parisian partisan with his STEN helping liberate the City of Light in 1944

Parisian partisan with his STEN helping liberate the City of Light in 1944.

homemade stenguns

homemade stenguns

A French resistance maquis armed with a STEN gun shelters behind a truck while taking on German snipers in the town of Dreux

A French resistance maquis armed with a STEN gun shelters behind a truck while taking on German snipers in the town of Dreux

It wasnt just the French resistance that was armed with the STEN. Here, Dule Bey Allemani, an Albanian resistance chief, poses with his STEN gun provided by Allied SOE agents in July 1944

It wasn’t just the French resistance that was armed with the STEN. Here, Dule Bey Allemani, an Albanian resistance chief, poses with his STEN gun provided by Allied SOE agents in July 1944

Danish resistance fighters note the mix of arms to include a BREN, a number of  Danish Army Nagant revolvers, and a couple of very Darth Vaderish  Royal Danish army helmets

Danish resistance fighters in 1945 –Note the mix of arms to include a BREN, a STEN, a number of Danish Army M1880/85 revolvers, and a couple of very Darth Vaderish Royal Danish army helmets

Termed the FFI (Forces Françaises de l’Intérieur) later in the war, by 1944 they counted some 400,000 under arms, with nearly a quarter of the members of some units equipped solely with ‘the plumber’s nightmare.’

This of course, helped them acquire some much larger and better made gear as well.

French fighter of the resistance holding his STG 44. I wouldn't trade a STEN for anything but...

French resistance fighter holding his captured German STG 44. I wouldn’t trade a STEN for anything but…

 

The fuzzy salty sea dogs of the California

Pretty groovy disco-era (post-Vietnam) doc on the (then) brand-new USS California (CGN-36) and her CPOs. The Big Cali was a huge 11,000-ton nuke cruiser from the golden age of the atomic surface Navy

Oh yeah, and back then beards were not only allowed under regs, but apparently encouraged.

Excuse me, is that a Colt SP-1 on your shoulder?

Click to big up

Click to big up

HST on his Woody Creek ranch in California with a 1976 Penton GS6 125 motocross bike and an old school Colt SP-1 (AR-15) from the same era.

All three are classic, if somewhat renowned for being cranky, and I don’t believe any of the three are California legal at this time.

The SBX Sucks

ABM_SBX_Moving_lg

The LA Times took a really hard and in-depth look into the super expensive, super innovative Sea-Based X-Band Radar and what they found was not good:

If North Korea launched a sneak attack, the Sea-Based X-Band Radar — SBX for short — would spot the incoming missiles, track them through space and guide U.S. rocket-interceptors to destroy them.

Crucially, the system would be able to distinguish between actual missiles and decoys.

SBX “represents a capability that is unmatched,” the director of the Missile Defense Agency told a Senate subcommittee in 2007.

In reality, the giant floating radar has been a $2.2-billion flop,

The rest here

How the Kel Tec PLR-16 stacks up to the competition

In the past few years, .223 (5.56mm) pistols have really taken off in popularity, largely due to BATFE rules on the use of stabilizing braces and the like. These interesting little range toys, to include KT’s own PLR pistol, are now seen coast to coast. With that in mind, let us see how the Cocoa offering compares to the rest of the field.

5.56 pistols 101

Back in the 1990s about the only offering in this then-unique category was the Olympic Arms OA-93. The 4.46-pound 17-inch long overall AR-platform used a 6.5-inch barrel and took standard NATO mags (not to mention many regular AR internals).

Olympic Arms OA-93
Following the end of the Federal Assault Weapons Ban in 2004 and the days of legal 30-round mags came back (except for states like California and Connecticut), the growth of these pistols began to increase. These included a number of both AR (made by LWRC, SIG, Rock River, POF, Daniel Defense and PWS) as well as AK variants (PAP imports as well as guns from Century and Arsenal).

Today, there are literally hundreds of offerings out there from these and other makers large and small. They make great hunting pistols (especially in the dense woods for feral pigs), compact “trunk guns,” home defense pieces (keep in mind your penetration issues with 5.56mm rounds), and awesome range toys.

Then there is…

The PLR-16, a piston powered AR pistol that weighs just 3.2 pounds and has a street price of about $550.

Keltec PLR 16 w threaded barrel

Read the rest in my column at the KTOG

 

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