Archive for Shotgun

Gun Storage Tips

I recommend that you have a gun safe to place your guns in. I do know people who have guns stashed all over the house in desk drawers, closets, under the bed, between the mattress and boxspring, in the garage, up in the attic, down in the basement, in the medicine cabinet, etc. Although this provides you with easy access to a gun anywhere in the house, THIS IS CRAZY.
Gun Reports – Special Reports

US Army Reserve Shooting Team: Serving The Force

You’d be surprised how many people view the shooting teams as a good old boys club. They have no idea of the benefit and skill these Soldier-shooters are bringing to the Army Reserve. It’s like accusing an NFL team of being nothing more than a group of drinking buddies that play catch on Sunday afternoon. Outsiders to US Army Reserve Shooting Team fail to understand why such a team exists. Unless one has been involved in small arms training or higher level shooting activity, marksmanship experience is typically limited to basic qualification. Just as retaking the same elementary arithmetic test will never teach Calculus, marksmen need to evolve to gain proficiency. Shooting teams were established in enact this and provide other benefits as well.
Gun Reports – Special Reports

The ‘No-Machining’ 1911 Project

Recently, I was approached by a young soldier who wished to upgrade his 1911 pistol. The pistol in question is a Springfield Stainless 1911A1. The pistol was in good shape and had proven reliable and accurate in thousands of rounds of ammunition, but the owner felt limited by the small sights—and he’s among the few shooters genuinely good enough to feel limited by a pistol. I checked the pistol and found it to be a good solid piece well worth an upgrade. Trigger compression was a crisp and clean 4 pounds, overall an above average factory trigger. The pistol fed hollowpoints and exhibited no glaring faults, despite the embryonic sights of the 1911 GI pistol. These sights simply don’t make the grade in a modern-combat/general-purpose pistol.
Gun Reports – Special Reports

Servicing Out-of-Production Firearms

If you decide to work with a gun you’ve never seen before, here are some places you can turn to for help.
Gun Reports – Special Reports

Servicing The Ruger Mini-14

GunReports.com asks, Ever been asked why the Mini-14 isn’t called the Mini-.223 or Mini-anything else? Take a look at one next to an M14. In general appearance, the Mini is a smaller, lighter ringer for the rifle the U.S. Military rediscovered during Desert Storm. It even functions much the same. Due to the factory’s penchant for in-house repairs, there are limits to what you can do with the Mini-14.
Gun Reports – Special Reports

Disassembly/Reassembly of the Remington Model 5 Rimfire Rifle

The first Remington Number 5 bears no resemblance to the new Remington Model 5. The two rifles differ as much as cats and dogs do. The old Number 5 was a rolling-block sporting and target rifle adapted to use smokeless powder ammunition. It was introduced in 1898, initially chambered for .30-30 Winchester, 7mm Mauser, .30-40 Krag, with .303 British added a few years later. The rifle flopped. Only 198 were sold before it went out of production in 1903. That was too bad for Remington but a good deal for anyone who owns a Number 5, as it would be a mighty nice collector’s piece today. I don’t think the new Remington Model 5 will suffer the same fate as the old Number 5. Right now, it’s a clip-fed bolt-action available in .22 LR and .22 WMR. I have few doubts that in the future it will be able to handle one or more of the .17-caliber rounds gaining popularity. While it wears “Remington” on its box and at the rear of the receiver, you’ll find “Zastava-Serbia” above and forward of the magazine housing. Zastava is the town; Serbia a former kingdom of the Balkans and presently part of Yugoslavia.
Gun Reports – Special Reports

Tightening The Armalite AR-24′s Slide

Opinions differ on the importance of slide-to-frame-rail fit, but it can improve accuracy without compromising reliability.
Gun Reports – Special Reports

Repairing Winchester’s Model 12 Shotguns

After making 2 million Model 12s from 1912 to 1980, Winchester brought this famous shotgun back. Here’s what to look for in the newer one.
Gun Reports – Special Reports

Adjusting Fixed Chokes In Single-Barrel Guns

The fixed, or “built-in,” choke is found in many of today’s shotgun barrels, and it is found in almost all shotgun barrels over ten years of age. It generally consists of a tapered entry (choke forcing cone) followed by a parallel section. Without a doubt, the most frequent alteration that the shotgun bore mechanic is asked to do is to make an adjustment in a choke exit diameter.
Gun Reports – Special Reports

Coatings: Cure-Alls or Just Options?

GunReports.com discusses the American Gunsmith magazine article, ‘Coatings that once were only associated with frying pans are successfully finding their way into the gun world—in a variety of colors.’
Gun Reports – Special Reports