Tag Archives: hurricane gun

Looter Repellent

The recent hurricanes of this year, Isaac and Sandy, have brought to light that worse trait of post-storm recovery: looting.

Looting is the act of taking goods (stealing) during unusual circumstances such as the recent hurricanes, or other natural or manufactured disasters when police are unavailable or otherwise occupied. It’s simple: when the lights go out alarms don’t work. Damage to storefronts and homes left vacant by evacuating families often create access points through knocked-out windows, doors, and walls, that further invite people with sticky fingers. After Hurricane Sandy one eyewitness said, “”I saw this guy stealing televisions from a nursing home right on the boardwalk on Tuesday, and the workers were chasing him up the street….Every time I saw him he had a different TV.”

Simple, affordable, and effective is the key to a good anti-looter arsenal. Any firearm is preferable to nothing at all. In (legal) firearm-scare Queens, residents had to use “baseball bats, booby traps – even a bow and arrow – to defend themselves” from looters.
Read the rest in my article on Firearms Talk

Updating the Old Smith

What happens when a wonderful revolver falls into your life but it has a few issues? You rehab it, love it, and let it evolve into a better version of itself.

A few months ago, I came across an old Smith and Wesson Combat Masterpiece K38 revolver. This model 15-3 Smith was born a little over thirty years ago in Massachusetts but spent its life in the heavy saltwater air of the Gulf Coast. Those of you dedicated readers out there may remember this crusty old sea dog from a past article. For those who don’t, to make a long story short, this long serving veteran found itself at the bottom of Davy Jones locker in Hurricane Katrina. After a lot of tender loving care, disassembly, cleaning, a liberal amount of Ballistol, and the odd replacement spring or two, it came back to life and shot fine, but looked oh so bad.

While well suited for a ‘Jeep gun’ or a tag along on the trail during deer season loaded with rat shot, it still presented the ever-present crisis of surface rust control every week. Therefore, even though I am a sucker for leaving a gun au natural, I had to break down and do something, for the gun’s sake.

Read the rest in my column at Firearms Talk

Tale of a Salty Old Smith

In my lifetime of a firearms owner and collector, many different guns have passed through my hands. Ever since I was a teenager, I’ve bought, sold, and traded these tools of wood, steel, and (occasionally) polymer. Over the years, I’ve had the good, the bad, and the ugly. Some of them have stories behind them. This is one of them.

It Started in a talk with Dan

Dan, my coatings guy at Custom Coatings, was doing a Duracoat (link) job on my LCP and when I dropped by to see him, had an old Smith wheel gun he was working on. Always a sucker for old K-frames, I asked to look at it. It was a beat-up Model 15 .38-Special. Its previous owner had been a Hurricane Katrina victim and the revolver had sat submerged in salt-water from the epic storm’s surge for days before being rescued……and that was seven years ago.

Read the rest in my column at Firearms Talk.com