Guns & Ammo - November 2015 PDF
Guns & Ammo - November 2015 PDF
Guns & Ammo - November 2015 PDF
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CONTENTS
BY TOM BECKSTRAND
HANDLE ON
features a new
XD, this one a
4-inch full-size
9mm with Spring-
field Armory’s
THINGS
multi-level grip
texturing. p. 50
COVER PHOTOS: STEVE WOODS AND MARK FINGAR, ABOVE: MARK FINGAR
62 STILL HAPPY,
HAPPY,
HAPPY
An exclusive interview
76 PRACTICE
LIKE YOU
HUNT
Are rifle hunters
82 SPEED
KING
The .22-250 Story. America’s
92 THE NORTH’S
FORGOTTEN
REVOLVER
Though overshadowed by Colt and Remington
with Duck Commander’s doing it wrong? favorite fast .22 turns 50. products, the Whitney Navy stands out as one
Willie and Jase Robertson. by richard mann by craig boddington of the best revolvers of the Civil War era.
by eric r. poole by garry james
GUNS & AMMO Magazine, Copyright 2015 by Outdoor Sportsman Group. All rights reserved.
CAUTION: Some advertisements may concern products that are not legally for sale to California residents or residents in other jurisdictions.
Guns & Ammo (ISSN# 0017-5684) November 2015, Volume 59, Number 11� Copyright 2015� Published monthly by OUTDOOR SPORTSMAN GROUP, 1040 6th Ave�, 12th Floor, New York, NY 10018-3703� Periodical postage paid at New York,
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gunsandammo.com
An Outdoor Sportsman Group publication
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8 G&A november 2015
READER WRITE US! “Letters,” Guns & Ammo, 2 News Plaza, 3rd Floor, Peoria, IL 61614, or email us at gaeditor@imoutdoors.com.
BLOWBACK Please include your city and state of residence. Letters may be edited for brevity and clarity.
FALL ’58
The second issue of Guns &
Ammo featured a Browning
Grade 5 Superposed shotgun
on its cover. “Make mine a
double,” author Homer Mc-
Coy concluded in his shot-
Daniel Defense MK18 Pistol gun trend feature, “Return of
fitted with the new SBX the Double.” In spite of their
Pistol Stabilizing Brace from prices, McCoy examined the
SIG Sauer. popularity of double-
MK18: $1,700 barrel smoothbores over
Brace: $150 autoloaders and pumps. In
1958, the field-grade Brown-
ing Superposed outsold all
NO MORE AR “PISTOLS” other shotguns at $260. In
contrast that year, a field-
Six- to 7-pound pistols that you “conceal” in a backpack? Four articles (three on the guns grade Winchester Model
and one on the backpack) in the October issue of G&A? Your summation on the [new CZ] 21 cost $425. Gun stores
Bren pistol about says it all: “For me, the highly anticipated 805 Bren PS1 has nothing surveyed indicated that the
prestige of owning a dou-
to do with need and everything to do with want.” Okay, I want to shoot the PS1 (or the ble-barrel triumphed among
Roscoes or the OA-93/98), and .223 plinking ammo is available at a relatively reasonable gentlemen shotgunners.
price, at least when compared to large-caliber handgun rounds. But would I want to own
an AR-15 pistol? I can’t see any scenario where one would serve me better than a conven-
tional pistol or a real AR-15 carbine. And since I’m not 25-years-old (except in my imagi-
nation), anything having more than a 6-pound curb weight would literally drag me down
fairly quickly. Which brings me to the real deal breaker: Since these AR-15 pistols are built,
sold and licensed as handguns under BATFE regulations, it would be illegal to add a butt-
stock and use the gun(s) as AR-style carbines after the pistol fun factor wears thin.
Steve Slater
Waterford, Michigan
heard people say a 10mm quality of ammo, and legal knowledge of such cases, TROPHY HUNTING
will penetrate too much for hassles. Unless you are an I have not heard such an I’ve been an avid reader of
self defense use. Also, I like experienced, and careful, approach having been used “Guns & Ammo” for many
how my handloads perform. reloader, factory ammo will in court. Generally, if your years and have been a
I carry ones I have loaded in be more accurate, reli- shooting is justified, the hunter for over 60 years. It
new cases and weigh every able and be a consistent ammunition choice doesn’t is ill-timed irony that Craig
charge and measure every performer. The big strike enter into things, and if Boddington’s article about
COAL for my carry rounds. against handloads legally is it isn’t, ammunition is the his polar bear hunt arrived
Should I use factory ammo the option of the prosecu- least of your worries. in my mailbox about the
instead? tor to hammer you over it. I use factory ammo same time as the news
Joe “Mr. Joe, regular ammuni- for one simple reason; if broke about Dr. Walter
bethlehem, Georgia tion wasn’t lethal enough anyone asks, I can truthfully Palmer killing that lion
for you? You had to create say “It is widely used by named Cecil in Zimbabwe
Joe, nothing wrong with your own, more vicious law enforcement across the after his guide lured it out
a 10mm as a house gun ammunition to use on my country.” This would end of a park by dragging bait
choice, just make sure you client?” That said, and I such inquiries about bullet behind a motor vehicle
match your ammo choice do not have encyclopedic design. –P. Sweeney where the lion died a horri-
for the situation. A few
bullet designs aside, every FACEBOOK: 789,000+ likes
handgun cartridge will exit Kahr Arms settles in Pennsylvania
a frame house, period. Use
On August 11, 2015, Kahr Arms officially became a Pennsylva-
what will work on perps. nia company when it moved in to its new 40,000 square-foot
As for handloads, the home. It’s operated in New York state since 1995, but made
plans to leave after the passage of the NY SAFE Act in 2013.
two reasons most people
like us at GunsAndAmmoMag to join trending discussions and weigh in on current debates.
go with factory instead are;
ble death forty hours after Hunting should be about rising. There are limited op- the law in any jurisdiction
being illegally shot. becoming integrated with portunities to recruit young- and that Boddington gives
I saw nothing in Bod- nature and becoming a bet- er hunters and actions like some more thought to what
dington’s article that the ter outdoor participant and Palmer’s and Boddington’s he hunts.
polar bear was illegally nothing else. I will shoot a make it more difficult w. birdwell
shot or baited. There is one trophy whitetail or turkey as and almost impossible to laguna Vista, Texas
glaring similarity between fast as anybody, but I take explain to non-hunters.
the two hunts, however. the concept of woodsman The best I can do is show Dear Mr. Birdwell,
Boddington and Palmer and sportsman seriously people who do not hunt I cannot address any
both killed animals that and will never shoot an that I’m not like Palmer or circumstances surrounding
should not have been har- endangered species or Boddington. the unfortunate death of
vested for no reason other one threatened by loss of I enjoy “Guns & Ammo” the collared lion in Zim-
than a “bucket list” wish or habitat. I will hunt as long very much, and plan to babwe, as that remains
to puff their ego. as I can walk. keep reading it for years. for their legal system to
Both lions and polar Our world is becoming That does not stop me from decide. As for lion hunt-
bears are struggling to more urbanized and the hoping that Palmer is pros- ing in general, it is true
survive in shrinking habitats. average age of hunters is ecuted to the full extent of populations are declining
due to habitat loss. It is not
TWITTER: @GunsAndAmmoMag 90K followers necessarily true that sport
ROAD TRIP hunting should be stopped.
G&A toured Jonathan Browning’s shop in Nauvoo, This is because carefully
Illinois. John Moses Browning’s father was an inventor
of several repeaters including the “Harmonica” gun, a regulated sport hunting
breech-loaded, slide-action firearm that used interchang- places value on what local
able magazines with capacities ranging five to 25 shots.
African farmers, farmers,
Each month, we’ll spotlight your most interesting tweets here as well as the most Favorited tweets. ranchers, and villagers
12 G&A november 2015 | reAder blowbAck
might otherwise consider a population ... but not all. Nunavut, where I hunted, and where polar bear hunting is
dangerous nuisance. Some Canadian biologists go to legal subject to seasons, quotas, licensing, and conditions,
areas can support such a the same schools as our has an estimated 16,000 polar bears. The annual harvest
harvest; others cannot. I biologists, but on the polar is about 500. This is less than 3 percent, very sustainable,
have long since taken my bear have not reached the and a smaller percentage than we harvest in key Alaskan
last lion, but I support legal same conclusions. After de- brown bear areas. The population continues to grow, and
and regulated hunting as a cades of intensive study the the international body, CITES, supports Canada’s hunting
management tool. Canadians know there are program. U.S. Fish and Wildlife does not (polar bear tro-
Some of the same is true more polar bears now than phies, though legally taken, are not importable to the U.S.).
about Canada’s polar bear any time in the last 40 years. Most bears are taken by Inuit hunters for meat, but Arctic
communities are allowed to pass part
of their quota to visiting hunters. This
places value on the bears, but there
is another factor: visiting hunters
specifically target older boars. Male
bears often practice infanticide, so
INTRODUCING THE WORLD’S FINEST by removing older boars more cud
AUTO-ADJUSTING FLASHLIGHT survive. Most Canadian biologists thus
believe sport hunting is a factor in
P2X Fury® with IntelliBeam™ Technology their increased polar bear population.
There are some hunts in this world
I would still like to do, and others I
have no interest in. However, as a
hunter I support legal and ethical
sport hunting, and trust that local
game managers and the international
body know more about their wildlife
than we in our distant ivory towers.
You do state that you are a hunter, so
I urge you to consider this position.
— C. Boddington
APARTMENT GUNS
Hello. I read an article in the Sep-
INTELLIGENT SENSOR tember 2015 issue of Guns & Ammo
continuously evaluates environment
where the author talks about how he
and works with microprocessor to
automatically adjust light output. believes the AR-15 is the best gun
for home defense. I have kept a .357
Magnum as my primary home de-
fense gun for about 3 years now, but
I also own an AK47. I would be more
comfortable with a rifle if the unthink-
able ever happens, but I have been
hesitant to ever consider promoting
the AK as a home defense firearm
due to all the comments on how the
Finally there’s an intuitive way to harness the variable-output capability of one of our
7.62 bullet overpenetrates and will
brightest, most popular fashlights—the P2X Fury—via our auto-adjusting IntelliBeam™
surely kill someone in the next room
Technology. A frst press or click activates its intelligent sensor and microprocessor-
if ever fired. I live in an apartment so
based system to continuously evaluate and seamlessly adjust light output based on
overpenetration is a big concern of
your surroundings, so you always have the light output you need. This cutting-edge
mine. But the author states that a .223
technology also preserves dark-adapted vision by never activating on high in close
will go through less Sheetrock than a
quarters. If you need tactical light output, just press or click twice to lock in all 600 lumens.
9mm. Is the same true for 7.62x39, or
will I be killing my neighbor if I ever
have to use it? If the AK is indeed a
surefire.com/P2XIB
reader blowback | november 2015 G&a 13
terrible choice for home defense, what rifle (or shotgun) do an excellent issue. I literally penetration, state-by-state
you recommend for an apartment? have not been able to put rights, home concealment
Thank you, and I hope to hear back from you soon. it down. It has been great and hardening tips were
a. Harrell cover to cover. I am not sure also excellent. I have found
Houston, Texas I can pick a favorite article everything from Kyle Lamb’s
but if I must it might be the wealth of experience enrich-
In your case, the .357 is the better of the two firearms for Model 1895 by Garry James. ing. All that and a cover rifle
home defense. The 7.62x39mm is a poor choice for home After all, I am a history MSRP under 600 bucks!
defense because the bullets are heavy, slow-moving, and nut. However, the articles d. Starr
most of the ammo has “bi-metal” jackets containing steel. about house guns, wall email
mail
When these heavy, slow-moving (and
often steel-clad) bullets hit sheetrock,
they don’t fragment quickly and they
keep penetrating. This is what you are
trying to avoid.
By contrast, the .223 bullet is moving
much faster and likely has a thin jacket, S P O R T
which is why it fragments the second it
hits anything hard. My preferred home
defense combination is an AR-15 load-
ed with Hornady TAP ammunition. The
bullet has a polymer tip, so it begins P R OT E C T I O N
expanding the moment it hits flesh and
it will be less of an over penetration MEETS
liability should we miss.
Try to avoid using a shotgun for
PRECISION
home defense unless it is a semiauto
that likes the ammo you’re feeding it.
Shotguns are unwieldy, have lots of
recoil, and the patterns don’t open as
fast as many believe. In your apartment
the pattern will likely never be more
than 2 to 3 inches in diameter, at best.
When things get exciting, it is too easy
to short-stroke a pump shotgun and
reloading any shotgun is so slow that
we can time it with a sun dial. I hope
this helps and wish you the best.
—Tom Beckstrand
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EDITORIAL november 2015 G&A 15
ERIC R. POOLE
NEXT MONTH: 2015 @GUNSANDAMMOMAG
on. No ad sales reps are ever invited. SHOTGUN OF THE YEAR ����������������������������������������������
Let’s move on to the discussion of products. We cre-
AMMO OF THE YEAR��������������������������������������������������
ated this award to limit categories. I’ve noticed that as
time goes on, other magazines end up using their awards OPTIC OF THE YEAR ��������������������������������������������������
to pay homage to valued advertisers or the executives
SUPPRESSOR OF THE YEAR ��������������������������������������������
leading important brands. Therefore, the new categories
they’ve created dilute the value of those awards. We will INNOVATION OF THE YEAR ��������������������������������������������
10mm
IDENTIF
IDENTIFICATION G A R RY J A M E S
& VALUES G A R RY. J A M E S @
OUTDOORSG.COM
AJAX 16-GA. proper assembly process. the only shotgun name back, especially on crisp
DOUBLE GUN I have shot the gun, and it used by Davis/Davis-Warner. fall days, of my father (who
Q: I have recently received works flawlessly. I believe it Generally speaking, they is no longer with us) and
an n.r. Davis & Sons “Ajax” was manufactured between don’t sell for a lot of money. me hunting on a friend’s
16-gauge side-by-side shot- 1917 and 1926. The serial A 16 gauge in very good farmland. Can you give me
gun. It is manufactured by number is E7XXX, marked shape would bring about more information on this
“Davis Warner Arms Corp. on the receiver, barrel and $250 to $375. As usual, 12 marlin Arms Co. glenfield
norwich Conn uSA.” It forearm. Can you give me gauges are more sought model 10 rifle, serial num-
has a 28-inch barrel. I have an idea of the value? after and bring a slightly ber 69370XXX, .22 Long
attached a vintage adver- B.P. higher tariff. rifle?
tisement as well as pictures. NY and FL D.K.
This had been wrapped in GLENFIELD MODEL 10 email
newspaper in 1960. Inside A: The Davis/Davis-Warner Q: I have a glenfield model
the newspaper was an oil- Company had a somewhat 10, which was purchased A: Isn’t it wonderful how
cloth gun case. The gun was convoluted history stretch- by my father and given to guns and shooting can
broken down in the case ing back into the 19th me after I passed my hunt- evoke such fond memories
and in near-mint condition, century. After a series of er’s safety class in the early and provide solid family tra-
with all bluing intact. The mergers and takeovers, it fi- 1970s. Years later, I trained ditions? The arms used don’t
barrels are like mirrors. Due nally ceased to exist around my then-girlfriend, who have to be high-end models
to some bad research (and 1930 when it was absorbed became my wife. Later, we either; oftentimes the
poor judgment on my part), by the prolific Crescent Fire- trained our daughter. now, humblest of guns provide
I thought I had to remove a arms Company of Norwich, as a family we have grown the strongest feeling. My old
pin to re- Connecticut. Your Ajax 16 to love shooting sports and Remington Sportmaster is
assemble the gun (hence gauge probably dates from become good shooters a good example. Like your
the marks around the pin). some time in the 1910s, — many good times with Glenfield, it was the first rifle
I subsequently found the though it was by no means my family. memories flood I ever fired, and I, too, was
Load a dozen 12-gauge rounds in its dual-tube magazines and you know the Kel-Tec™ KSG is one
bad tactical shotgun. But chamber another, fire and in a fraction of a second, everything else is old
school. Innovation. Performance. Kel-Tec®. See more at YouTube.com/KelTecWeapons
20 G&A november 2015 | Gun room
instructed by my dad. I’d ceiver and another on the a decision you will have to the rear aperture or peep
never part with it. Anyway, steel buttplate, so I think make yourself. sight. I would rate the stock
to your question. The Marlin $500 to $600 might be at 65 to 70 percent and
Model 10 was designed to fair. I would like to install EARLY WINCHESTER the barrel and bolt at 90
be sold by general retail- a peep sight on either the MODEL 68? percent. What do you think
ers and was thus called tang or receiver but am Q: I collect older single- the current value is, and
Glenfield (as were several afraid of impacting the val- shot .22 rifles. I recently does the lack of marks add
other models) to provide ue of the gun. I still shoot bought what appears to be or detract from the price?
an alternate brand name. the rifle and would not sell an early model 68 Win- If I refinish the stock, will it
While they were usually not it until I no longer could. chester. As you know, these kill the value?
as fancy as guns marked T.W. were produced without L.L.C.
“Marlin,” quality-wise they email serial numbers. I believe it Kingsport, Tennessee
were every bit as good. The is an early model because
Model 10 single-shot rimfire A: While the Winchester of the narrow finger-groove A: Yes, you do have an
was manufactured from 1966 Model 63 is not the hottest stock. It has no markings early Model 68, as the
to 1978 and was the same collector piece on the mar- on the barrel except what finger grooves in the forend
basic gun as others titled ket, it still has value, which I I think is a proofmark near were discontinued in 1935.
100G and 101. am sure will increase as the the breech and on the bolt. Production on Model 68
years roll by. Being some- The barrel shows no sign of single-shots began in 1934.
WINCHESTER M63 thing of a purist, I would not the Winchester and model From your photos, your rifle
ALTERATION alter the piece. It certainly markings being removed; appears to be in excellent
Q: I have a Winchester 63 will affect the current and they are just not there. shape. I can’t imagine why
.22 rifle in good shape. on future worth. Now, if you It does have the correct you would want to refinish
the Internet, prices vary don’t care about selling it buttplate and hooded the stock, but if you do,
from $400 to $1,000. There and just want a shooter, front sight. It also has the it will certainly adversely
is one blemish on the re- that’s another matter and correct patent number on affect the gun’s desirability
usH w it H
Fl
pact
Field Com om
ErguNS.c
winchest winchester is aorreporte
re
ation
of olin c
tra
gun room | november 2015 g&A 21
RECOMMENDED READS
“Treasures of the NRA National Firearms Museum,” by Jim Supica, Doug Wickland
and Philip Schreier. Chartwell Books Inc., 2013, 304 pages, $29.95
As its title indicates, this gorgeously mounted, large-format, full-color tome, declares
some of the finest arms on exhibit at the National Firearms Museum in Fairfax, Virginia.
Authored by the museum staff, it depicts a wide range of spectacular arms including
everything from Gatling guns to the finest pieces from the Robert E. Petersen collection.
Though primarily a picture book, with excellent photography by Michael Ives and Terry
Popkin, each illustration is accompanied by a detailed caption. Thus, it is both beautiful
and informative and a true delight for any gun lover. It may be ordered from the National
Rifle Association bookstore, nrastore.com, 888-607-6007. $30
PRESCOTT REVOLVER
Q: I have had this revolver for many
years. Serial number is 8XX. It is locat-
ed on the cylinder pin, cylinder and
stocks. The back side of the cylinder
also has the number “115.” Someone
has scratched “oHIo” on the bottom
of one stock, and the stocks show
many dimples, as it appears to have
been used as a hammer. About 74
years ago, I took it outside to play
cowboys and Indians and dropped it
on the sidewalk, breaking the ham-
mer spur off. my dad took it to a gun-
smith to have it silver-soldered back
on. I am wondering what its value is
in this condition. Thank you for your
time, and keep up the good work.
R.O.
email
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THINGS
INGS THAT MAKE PAT R I C K S W E E N E Y
YOU GO “OUCH.”
OK, I’VE BE BEEN TO O ALASKA, but as a tourist, not a hunter. fight back. To increase power in a handgun, you need a
And when it i comes
es to bears, I have more than just a bigger bore. Yes, you can increase velocity, but there is a
healthy rrespect. My idea of a “suitable” bear caliber starts sharp limit to increased velocity due to pressure limits and
at the .375 H&H&H and goes up from there. However, no barrel lengths. Unless you’ve discovered a safe way to load
matter how good your riflesmith may be, he can’t make cases with C4, you aren’t going to get heavy bullets in a
you a .375 H&H that fits in a .44 Magnum much past 1,300
holster. And no holster maker feet-per-second. You need to
will accommodate you either. go bigger and heavier, not
So, we’re left with handguns. faster. We can take an interme-
My contribution on this is diate stop at the .454 or the
not the hunting handgun but .475/.480 caliber, but why? If
the “always on your person” you want more horsepower, go
defensive handgun, the one for it. If you can’t take the recoil
you wear while walking around or don’t want the handgun
camp, getting firewood, recy- weight, go back to the .44
cling dinner … the gun that is or 10mm. Enter the various
always on your belt. .50-caliber handgun rounds.
Sometimes my big mouth First up is my favorite for
gets me into trouble. While looks, a Hamilton Bowen Red-
talking to our esteemed editor, .460 S&W .500 S&W .454 CASULL .480 RUGER hawk recylindered in .500 Line-
200-GR. FTX 350-GR. XTR/MAG. 240-GR. XTP MAG. 400-GR. XTP
I mentioned that I’d had a baugh with a 5-inch barrel. The
chance at trying a .50-caliber Redhawk is a bruiser of a gun in
handgun. “Good,” he said. “See if you can find some .44 Magnum. In .500 Linebaugh, it is like an atomic-pow-
others, and let the readers know what fun they can have.” ered semi-snubbie. Of the three hand-hammers I tested,
What? More than one? Did he know the recoil I’d take? it was the lightest, most compact and easiest to wear on a
Judging from the smile in his voice, yes. belt, and it is the one that can be both a hunting gun and
First, though, let’s discuss the more reasonable handgun a backup gun. The .500 Linebaugh delivers sledgeham-
cartridges. At the bottom end is the 10mm, in which Fed- mer-like performance, rocketing some 500-grain bullets to
eral has come out with its new 180-grain Trophy Bonded just shy of 1,000 fps. When the mass gets to be this great,
load that shows promise. If you want hardcast and pene- you don’t need more speed for penetration. Velocity of
trating, Buffalo Bore is your source. The only other pistol 900 fps plus change is plenty; trust me.
cartridge I’d consider is the .460 Rowland, which delivers Second is the Freedom Arms Model 83. When the sport
honest .44 Magnum performance, again available from of metallic silhouette was all the rage, organizers wanted
Buffalo Bore. to have a production category. Alas, Silhouette instituted
For some hunters, the .44 Magnum, even in its mod- a price ceiling for Production class, a cap that magically
ern, pumped-up-on-steroids avatar, isn’t enough, nor is always existed just under the MSRP of the Freedom Arms
the heavy-loaded .45 Colt guns. So, Freedom side-
in a revolver of suitable stepped and went right
size. When you’re using
COOPER ON HANDGUNS to the hunters. Soon after
PHOTOS: MICHAEL ANSCHUETZ
10/22
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R u g e r C o l l e c t or ’ s S e r i e s 10 / 2 2
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al
Off-ff-f-Kfffffffff®fCffffffff’ff
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Lfmffff-Effffffffffffffffff
The last shots of the entire testing session I fired weren’t 990 fps — this load is simply numbing to shoot. If, howev-
really a five-shot group. They were five individual shots, er, you had a light practice load of, say, 400-grain bullets
which I paced back and forth on the range, applying an at 800 fps, you could get used to the recoil and work your
icepack on my hand and wondering just how I was going way up.
to get back at our editor, Mr. Poole. I’m not particularly Then again, there is another option. You are not going
pain-sensitive, and I’m not a wimp, but .50s hurt to shoot, to hammer a big bruin into submission with a handgun,
especially if you’re doing it from the bench and focused on unless you can find and handle Hellboy’s “Samaritan.” A
the absolute best sight picture to ensure each shot is the lesser handgun, used to make noise and create commo-
best of your ability. tion, has worked. I’m not sure I’d do things that way, but
How bad was the recoil? I split the PAST recoil glove I others have and lived to tell the tale.
had been wearing in the course of this testing. I’d like to talk Hamilton Bowen into sending me that
My recommendation for those of you looking to get a Redhawk in .500. I figure if the point of the exercise is to
pistol this big is to do two things: First, take up reloading. keep a bear from gnawing on me, I won’t notice the recoil
This is not just so you can afford to shoot but so you can until much later. Call me a hopeless optimist, but I’d have a
reload practice ammo with some of the steam taken out of reload with me. I don’t go anywhere with a gun that I don’t
it. For instance, the .500 Linebaugh load of 500 grains at have a reload for. To do otherwise feels naked.
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Drop-In Enhanced Finger Roller Cam Pin Upgrade This Enhanced Universal Bolt Catch Tomahawk Charging Handle
Placement 2 With many options kit includes POF-USA’s roller This lever adds a serrated pad Blending style and functionality,
to replace a standard unit, this cam pin. The replacement gas and surface area at the bottom of this winged handle is ambidex-
one has a shoe that ensures con- key (shown) allows clearance for the catch so that it functions as trous and extended for a more
sistent finger placement. $230 the radius of the roller head. $45 the part’s name describes. $20 positive charge with scopes. $75
M&P® 15 SPORT . AN EXPERIENCE YOU HAVE TO FEEL TO BELIEVE.
TM
NIGHTHAWK
N IGHTHAWK
HTHAWK 1911
COMPACT HOLSTER
CARRYING A GUN ON YOUR BODY should be more of adequate size for fast and controllable shooting while
than a casual endeavor. I mean, it’s a loaded gun, and it’ll being small and thin enough to carry IWB. I spoke with the
be there ffor hours at a time. Making sure it’s secure and people at Nighthawk Custom, and for a reasonable up-
that we’re comfortable
mfortable are both positive attributes. Look- charge, they included one of their belts and holsters (built
ing good while doing it is always a plus. in-house) when they shipped my pistol.
I had the opportunity to spend some quality time with The custom-made brown Nighthawk holster I selected
a Commander-size Nighthawk Heinie 1911 and wanted features a Level 1 retention system that uses the leather’s
to carry it concealed inside the waistband (IWB). It is an form-fit friction to keep the pistol secure. Though thecom-
investment-quality pistol that is just the right combination pany crafts virtually all styles of holster, this one was de-
32 G&A n o v e m b e r 2 0 1 5 | t h e c A r ry r i G
Materials Leather
Carry Type Inside the Waistband (IWB)
Retention Type Level 1
Adjustability Belt tension
MSRP $200 (as tested)
Handgun Fit Nighthawk Heinie Lady Hawk (tested)
Accessory Rail Accommodations None
Positions to Carry 4 o’clock (recommended)
Average Time to Attach 12 seconds
Comfort Rating 4.5/5
6.5 in.
Concealment Clothing Untucked, loose-fitting T-shirt (minimum)
Average Draw-to-Fire Time 1.8 seconds
Manufacturer Nighthawk Custom, 870-423-4867, nighthawkcustom.com
Draw-to-fire time is the average of five clean draws from under a concealed garment, striking the A-zone of a stationary target at 21 feet.
wrap slightly around my sides, so I worried that I’d have to holsters have the loops stick-
take the pistol off on long drives because the gun would ing out so far they’re almost
be pushed into my side. This was not the case. impossible to hide well. This
The seat did squish the gun and holster into my body, holster was comfortable to
but the leather had enough rigidity to maintain its shape wear right from the begin-
while eliminating any hard edges that could have become ning, shows almost no signs
uncomfortable. of wear beyond this 30-day carry and still holds the gun just
At night and in the morning, Nighthawk’s rig was easy to as tightly now as the day I received it. I highly recommend
put on and take off, thanks to the two snap loops that are these holsters as a complement to any Nighthawk.
low profile enough that they don’t print. Many snap-loop —Tom Beckstrand
BEST FIREARM
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RIFLES & GLASS november 2015 G&A 35
Ruger SR-556 T
Takedown
dow &
ica P
Practical all
Parallax
TOM BECKSTRAND
THE
E TAKEDOWN AR
GUNSNS THAT W WE CAN TAKE APART and store in a bag receiver. There is a small spring-loaded tab at the tip of the
are always
ys a fu
fun topic. Ruger’s latest foray into these forend, found at the 6 o’clock position. We move the tab
highly
h g y portable rifles, coming on the heels of the success- toward the receiver, compressing the spring while simul-
Takedown rimfire repeater, is the new SR-556
ful 10/22 Taked taneously twisting the barrel counterclockwise (as viewed
Takedown A AR-type rifle. For those who thought every AR with the rifle shouldered). The barrel rotates about 1/8 of
shared the same capacity for quick a turn, and then we can pull it out the
disassembly, the Ruger model breaks Ruger SR-556 Takedown front of the handguard.
down into a much smaller package Type: Gas-piston operated, Separating the barrel from the upper
semiautomatic
than your typical AR separated into Caliber: 5.56 NATO, .300 BLK receiver shaves an additional 6 inches
upper and lower assemblies, Plus, Capacity: 20, 30 rds. off the overall length of the assembly.
Ruger now offers a .300 AAC Black- Barrel: 16.1 in.; 1:9-in. twist (5.56), While 6 inches might not sound like a
1:7-in. twist (.300 BLK)
out barrel-change accessory kit that Overall Length: 32.75 in. (collapsed),
lot to some, it can mean the difference
includes two .300 BLK-optimized 36 in. (extended) between fitting the rifle into a regular
30-round magazines for an additional Weight: 7 lbs., 10 oz. backpack or being forced to use some-
Stock: Magpul SL
$450. More on that later. thing more obtrusive.
Grip: Magpul MOE
The disassembly process is simple Length of Pull: 11.1 in. (collapsed), What I like most about the quick-
enough that I didn’t even crack the 14.5 in. (extended) detach barrel on the SR-556 is how
manual the first time I pulled the rifle Finish: Type III, hardcoat anodized easy cleaning an AR becomes. By far
Sights: Ruger flip-up sights
from the box. The upper and lower (included) the hardest component of an AR to
receiver assemblies are held in place Safety: Two-position selector keep clean is the barrel extension. It has
by two familiar captive pins. Once we MSRP: $2,049 teeth where the bolt enters and exits
Manufacturer: Sturm, Ruger & Co.
have the upper separated from the 603-865-2442, ruger.com and then a large channel where the
lower, we pull the bolt-carrier group bolt lugs rotate and lock in place. I like
out the back of the upper receiver to keep this area clean because of the
and remove the charging handle. critical moving parts operating there.
The additional takedown capability comes when It can also be a nightmare to
we separate the barrel from the rest of the upper maintain
maintain. The only way to get
a cleaning rag in there is to reach in through the bottom of marked “.300 BLK” in big letters on both sides of the gas
the upper receiver or through the ejection port. Once we do block to discourage shooters from mistakenly putting the
get our rag-wrapped finger in there, we then get to drag it wrong ammunition in the wrong barrel. Putting .300 BLK
over the cheese-grater-like teeth, trying to wipe out all the ammo in a 5.56x45mm barrel can cause the rifle to have a
fouling. catastrophic failure and lead to serious injuries.
The SR-556 barrel pulls out of the upper and gives us I spent some time on the range with both barrels and
unrestricted access to the barrel extension. Using a rag had zero malfunctions. I even made it a point to leave the
and Q-tips, we can have it clean in a minute or two. The same-weight buffer in the buffer tube and still didn’t have
chamber and barrel are also much easier to clean when a problem when switching between 5.56 and .300 BLK.
separated from the upper receiver. The rifle is on the heavy side for an AR, but it runs like a
Ruger’s new Takedown model has a .300 Blackout barrel sewing machine. Also, the new Ruger trigger is a huge im-
assembly available from the factory. The barrel is clearly provement over most AR triggers, and the ability to quickly
The SR-556 Takedown rifle breaks down into a package Ruger includes a nylon bag with each Takedown model, which can be used to
approximately 6 inches shorter than an AR with the carry the complete, unassembled rifle along with several magazines. It also pro-
same barrel length. vides an unobtrusive and discreet way to tote a rifle.
PRACTICAL
RAC ICAL PARALLAX
PARAL AX IS ON
PARALLAX ONE OF THO THOSE TERMS we hear thrown journey through the scope when the image gets projected
around a lot,
t, but it of
often ge
gets blamed for crimes it didn’t onto the lens containing our reticle. If the focused image is
commit. If you’re
commit ’re into long
long-range shooting or like to shoot just a fraction of a millimeter in front of or behind the lens
tiny
ny groups, pparallax
llax is one of tho
those things that require our that contains our reticle, we’ll have some parallax.
attention.
tion Howeve
However, hunters
unters wh
who keep their shots inside The tried-and-true method of detecting parallax includes
300 yards have nothing to worry about with parallax, so stabilizing the rifle and then moving our head up and
they shouldn’t feel compelled to pay for the feature, re- down or side to side without disturbing the rifle. If our ret-
gardless of what the scope salesman says. icle moves around on the target while we move our head,
As an image enters our scope, each lens focuses it onto we have parallax.
the face of the lens behind it. The image gets squished, The thing to remember about parallax is that it won’t
flipped upside down a couple times and then spit out shift our point of impact on most hunting scopes more
the back end for us to admire. Parallax occurs during the than a couple inches at 300 yards, a distance beyond what
THIS KIND OF SAFETY
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38 G&A november 2015 | rifles & GlAss
Les Baer 1911 Les Baer 1911 Les Baer 1911 New! Les Baer
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ME
MEDICINE FOR S G M K Y L E L A M B [ R E T. ]
WYOMING’S MULIES
WY V I K I N G TA C T I C S . C O M
IF YOU’VE
YO EVER HUNTED mule deer I mounted a Leupold VX-6 2-12X
on public
pub lands, you’re well aware of variable-power scope to this light-
trials and tribulations of getting far
the tria weight blaster. After burning a few
from tthe trail head, way off the beaten rounds of the 150-grain Power Points, I
path, all
a alone in the mountains in decided to try the Power Max Bonded
search of that large mulie. bullets. I definitely prefer a tough bul-
I had struck out in 2012, passing on let for most game animals, and having
several bucks that to most would be had success in the past with bonded
shooters. Not that I am a mulie snob, bullets, I wanted the downrange ef-
but I was hunting with a renowned fects that I had become accustomed to
guide, Robb Wiley, from Non-Typical using this type of ammunition.
Outfitters. He is a menace when it
comes to stalking and harvesting dis- Bonded Bullets If you are not familiar
proportionately large deer. He starts with the bonded-bullet phenomenon,
his season in the summer, spending you may have been hanging out in
many days and nights in the moun- a cave with bin Laden. The last few
tains in search of “deer of a lifetime” years have resulted in much better
for his clients. Once he has them performance from many of these
pinpointed, he continues to make re- bonded lead-core bullets. To get the
turn visits hoping to pattern the bucks idea, Winchester takes a rather tough
before his hunters arrive in the fall. jacket and slides a special lead inside
Robb and I are good friends, so my along with using a bonding process to
summers are filled with text messages make the jacket and core of the bullet
and pictures of incredible deer, doc- act as one. The front of the bullet
umenting their growth each month. usually has a hollow point, or a hollow
Eventually Robb gives each deer a point with a polycarbonate tip, to
“call sign.” He keeps tabs on a lot of deer, so giving them provide a more controlled expansion as well as protect the
names is just an easier way of keeping things straight. It tip of the bullet from damage.
drives the rest of us crazy, though. As I started to shoot groups, I was happy but not overly
I would be heading to Robb’s southern camp straight impressed with the outcome. Both loadings from Win-
from the Salt Lake City airport. I had prepared by spending chester shot under 1½ inches at 100 yards, but for this
three weeks in Alaska float hunting for moose and caribou. type of hunting rifle I was hoping for better results.
My gear sorted out, at least I hoped to be successful.
Back to the Gun Shop I stopped by the ammunition racks
Preparation Months prior, I had found what I thought to at the local Bass Pro. It never hurts to check if there are a
be the right rifle for this particular outing, a Proof Research few boxes of lonely .22 Long Rifle ammunition that have
7mm WSM. Now I had to find the right ammo. After been overlooked. Unfortuately, I once again came up short
talking with Winchester, I felt there were several loads on .22LR. I did happen across a couple boxes of Win-
that would fit the bill. I went with its recommendation of chester 7mm WSM AccuBond. They happened to be in the
PHOTO: MICHAEL ANSCHUETZ
Winchester 150-grain Power Max Bonded ammunition 140-grain weight class, so I figured, Why not?
and picked up a of couple boxes of Winchester 150-grain Arriving back at the range, I immediately jumped in the
Power Point to see how it shot as well. My local shop only Polaris and headed out to the 200-yard range to see how
had two dust-covered boxes of 150-grainers, so this would this ammo would group. My normal procedure is to get
have to do. There’s not much call for 7mm WSM in the a solid zero on my hunting rifle, then make random stops
heavily wooded area where I reside. by the range when I have time to shoot a group or two.
44 G&A november 2015 | lock, stock & bArrel
Non-Typical
Outfitters hunts
everything from elk
to bear to mountain
lion in the high
country of beautiful
western Wyoming.
A 5-day, 2-on-1
mule deer hunt
with Robb Wiley
starts at $4,995.
Since I change gear a lot, this helps to instill confidence right for 10 minutes sometime during the day.
and test the rifle further to see how it performs on a day- Robb and I hunted for a few days without seeing the
to-day basis. right deer, so on the third day we decided to get way
After arriving at the range, I stapled up a fresh bull and up high. We climbed aboard our trusty steeds, Robb on
tooled back to 200 yards. After stoking the Proof with the Angus, I was on Jackpot, and we even brought along a
140-grain AccuBonds, I slid into a prone position and sent packhorse in training named Tacoma. For several hours we
three rounds downrange. I shot a half-inch group from 200 climbed and were right where we wanted to be when the
yards. Now I was cooking with bacon grease. sun started to peak over the Wyoming Range and warm
our bones. Some folks don’t care for riding, but for me, it
Accubond There are a few differences between the Power is the only way to hunt in Wyoming. You can make great
Max and the AccuBond bullets. The AccuBond is a much time and still be able to shoot when you get there. After
sexier bullet. These bullets sport black Lubalox coating (a patiently glassing from three different spots, we finally
trade name for black oxide) and red polycarbonate tip. The found what we were after. Well, Robb found what we were
Lubalox is intended to reduce engraving force, a fancy way after. With eyes like a hawk, he can quickly access what the
of saying the bullets have less resistance. The Lubalox is next step will be to get us into a position to shoot.
also intended to reduce barrel fouling, which is an issue with The mule deer we were looking at was a long way out.
some of these high-speed short magnums. The polycarbon- The only way to get there was to follow the ridge we were
ate tip is intended to help initiate expansion when the bullet on until it dropped down into the valley, then get to the
strikes flesh. Overall, it is an extremely good-looking bullet, lowest point and climb back up onto the same ridge that
a compliment I don’t often hand out. In fact, I think the last this deer was feeding across. It seemed simple, but the gut
time I passed out this accolade was for the discontinued check was just beginning. Robb isn’t only gifted with hawk-
and also Lubaloxed Winchester Black Talon. like eyesight; he has the legs of a mountain goat. Normal-
ly I can hold my own, but this mountain man put me to
the Hunt I only had a few days to trollop around the moun- shame. After 30 minutes of dismounting for the down hills
tains of Wyoming. While I am blessed with a great shooting and remounting where we could ride, we were finally at a
and hunting schedule, I wanted more time to hunt, but position to tie up and make our stalk.
my shooting instruction schedule only allows for so much In less than 20 minutes, we stood in the general vicinity
adventure time. I was on horseback early in the morning of the deer we had seen from afar. We knew we were close
enjoying the Wyoming weather, which always seems about but still had to scour the area with our binos to find the
We’re
primed to
deliver...
46 G&A november 2015 | lock, stock & bArrel
The AccuBond CT
from Winchester is a
controlled-expansion
bullet. Loaded in
a nickel case, this
140-grain premium
bullet leaves the muz-
zle at 3,200 fps. It fea-
tures a red polymer tip
and a bonded lead-al-
loy core finished with
Lubalox on the jacket.
The result is high
retained weight and
penetration through a
mulie’s tough skin and
muscle.
SERIOUS
DEPENDABILITY
Each Only
y
$19.99
Item 078-000-200
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THE ADVENTURE
THE POSSIBILITY
THE CHALLENGE
THE JOURNEY
STARTS HERE
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50 G&A november 2015
HANDLE
THINGS
ON
WORDS BY TOM BECKSTRAND
PHOTOS BY MARK FINGAR
november 2015 G&A 51
the grip safety is one of a distinguishing the grip flats are smooth and won’t the rear-most frame rails are integral to
feature about the Xd, one that makes it damage your clothing or irritate your skin the polymer frame and made of the same
arguably better than a striker gun without. while carrying concealed on your body. molded material.
WITH THE GLUT of polymer-frame striker-fried pistols on the The Backstrap Evolves Perhaps the feature that separates the XD
market, sometimes it’s hard to clearly differentiate one model line of pistols from the pack of striker-fired guns the most is its
from the next. Springfield Armory was one of the early adopters grip safety. Striker-fired pistols live in a state of perpetually cocked
of polymer frames, introducing its XD line of pistols to the Amer- firing pins where the trigger serves to move a firing-pin block
ican market in the early 2000s. out of the way before releasing the firing pin. These guns are eco-
The XD pistol quickly became a standout known for its nomical to make (when compared with more traditional designs)
economical price and good ergonomics. Each pistol ships with and require very little trigger movement to fire. A handful have
a holster, magazine carrier and magazine loader, offering the external safeties that are usually small and hard to manipulate.
consumer everything needed to go shooting (except the ammo) Short trigger pull, an always-cocked firing pin and frequent
at the point of sale. lack of an external safety are the three reasons I prefer not to car-
While the XD has been going strong for more than 10 years, ry most striker-fired guns concealed in my waistband. I am aware
the time came to freshen up the design, and that’s exactly what that many do carry striker-fired guns in the waistband without
Springfield has done with its Mod. 2 variant. Until now, it was any issue, and I’m happy for them, but I still strongly recommend
only available in a subcompact model, but it’s now offered in a using a rigid holster that covers the trigger and stays open when
full-size pistol intended for duty use and home defense. the pistol is removed. I also recommend that women find other
options if they carry a pistol in their purse.
BRUCE PETTET (center)
Leupold President and CEO
with 6 of Leupold’s
650 American craftsmen
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Shot after shot, year after year, generation after generation. They’re backed by Full Lifetime Guarantee, if your
Leupold product doesn’t perform
over a century of craftsmanship, the hard work of 650 American employees, and
as promised, we will repair or
a lifetime performance guarantee. Doesn’t that sound better than an imported
replace it for free, whether you are
scope with a warranty you know you will have to use?
the original owner or not—forever
© 2015 Leupold & Stevens, Inc. MEET THE TEAM AT LEUPOLD.COM/GUARANTEE (excludes electronic components).
54 G&A november 2015 | A Good hAndle on thinGs
7.125 in.
2.56 in.
An important Mod. 2 improvement is the addition of a red fiber the textured zones and contoured frontstrap give the Mod. 2
optic front sight. it stands visible in any lighting condition. excellent handling qualities and supports a high grip.
The only exception to my striker-fired concealed carry prefer- away from the backstrap enough to disengage the grip safety and
ence is the Springfield XD because it has a grip safety. The grip provide some extra protection against an accidental discharge.
safety functions like an ergonomic and intuitive external safety, one Springfield invested considerable time designing improve-
we don’t have to think about disengaging when we’re in a hurry. ments to the area surrounding the backstrap and grip safety, and
It also provides an additional safety measure where we’re stuffing I love everything it has done. It has altered the geometry at the
a loaded pistol with a short trigger pull into our waistband. If we top of the backstrap and beavertail, allowing the shooter to grab
move our thumb to cover the back of the slide (like we’re con- higher on the pistol. This allows more of the hand to contact the
trolling the hammer on a hammer-fired pistol), it pulls our hand grip safety to ensure positive disengagement, and it also affords
WATCH SEASON 3 OF THE OUTFITTERS, BUILT BY FORD F-SERIES.
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all-expenses-paid trip to Las Vegas to attend the 2015 Sportsman Choice Awards and meet the outdoor
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tol, two areas of the grip frame contact our hand and keep it from Fieldstripping any
advancing any farther: the top of the backstrap and the bottom Xd is a familiar af-
fair. simply remove
of the triggerguard. As we’ve covered the improvements to the the magazine, lock
backstrap geometry, we now turn our attention to the area just the slide to the
under the triggerguard. rear, rotate the
takedown lever
The area where the frontstrap meets the bottom of the trigger- skyward within
guard has a surprisingly profound impact on our comfort level the arched slot
while shooting the pistol. A very high backstrap with a poorly cutout in the slide,
and depress the
contoured triggerguard places a lot of pressure on the middle slide-lock lever.
knuckle of our firing hand. We instinctively grab high up on the then ease the
backstrap and drag the rest of our hand along for the ride, leav- slide forward, and
pull the trigger to
ing our middle finger to get crushed against the triggerguard. remove the slide
Springfield is obviously familiar with the problem because it assembly from the
has incorporated an undercut triggerguard with the simultaneous polymer frame. the
major subassem-
addition of the high beavertail on the Mod. 2’s backstrap. This blies can easily
allows our hand to stay in a comfortable position when we move be maintained,
it high up on the grip. including the barrel
and recoil guide
A frequent mistake that manufacturers make when putting rod/spring (once
a high beavertail and an undercut triggerguard on a pistol is removed from the
leaving a steeply angled undercut. This places the knuckle of our slide) as well as the
frame and maga-
middle finger against a flat surface, perpendicular to our finger. zine assemblies.
Should we shoot several hundred rounds through our pistol in
one outing, this flat surface will peel the skin off our knuckle.
Springfield did a good job of contouring the area where the
triggerguard meets the frontstrap, leaving no flat surfaces pushing
against our middle finger. With surfaces kept gently angled and
as rounded as possible, we have a frontstrap/triggerguard inter-
section that won’t remove skin.
Springfield carried its attention down the frontstrap, doing
november 2015 G&A 59
Starting at
thorough than ever before. $
And for a limited time we 1 299
, 99
top left: the rear top right: the red Above: the mass
white dot sight is a fiber optic front at the bottom of
serrated blade that sight is one of the the slide is new to
cuts down on glare best fiber optic the Xd. it gives this
from direct light. set-ups G&A has model a little more
When it’s combined tested. even when tactile surface area
with the bright shooting high and depth to the
fiber optic sight, round counts, the slide serrations.
the shooter’s focus sight still effective- the Mod. 2’s ledge
remains up front. ly gathers light. is easy to grab.
PERFORMANCE
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INTERVIEW EXCLUSIVE
Most of us know the Robertson family from their popular TV Show, “Duck Dynasty” on A&E, but many gun-loving hunt-
ers have asked if they are the same people off camera? Are they really the tight-knit family that gathers around a supper
table? The short answer is “yes.” They are true to their beliefs and the camo they wear. G&A tracked down Willie and
Jase Robertson and found them making duck calls in West Monroe, Louisiana. (Sorry folks, Phil and Si were out fishing.)
When did each of you grow your own beards and how long did it take for each of you to
grow them to its current length?
Willie: (Joking) I was 11!
Jase: (Laughing) I was 9!
Willie: no, seriously. We had to attract the right wife, so we were clean-shav-
en when we were dating and then, once we were married, it only took a few
months.
Jase: I told my wife that I’d shave once a year. now that I think about it, it’s been
six to eight years since I last shaved.
Willie: When we got with [“Duck Dynasty”], we started filming year round and
just let it grow.
Jase: We used to think we needed to wear suits and be clean-shaven for things
like trade shows.
Willie: (Interrupts) That was dumb. Real dumb.
Jase: Turned out that everybody wanted to see us like the way we always look at
home.
Willie: Jase’s wife really liked the beard. (Laughs)
Jase: my wife doesn’t like the beard at all. If I shaved it off, I’d look 20 pounds
lighter and 10 years younger. The first time I went to the grocery store after shav-
ing a long time ago, I noticed that everybody smiles and greets you. When we
shaved, everybody was nice. nowadays, people recognize us by our beards or
from “Duck Dynasty,” but if they haven’t seen the show there is no eye contact
or smiles.
BRIGHT is there a story behind the old Browning A5 we’ve seen him use on tV?
Utilizes the world’s best Swiss Willie: That’s what Dad started out on. That’s the first gun I ever shot.
tritium for maximum brightness. He loaded that thing with magnums back then and would say, “You’ve
DAY/NIGHT gotta lean into it.” I pulled the trigger and the next thing I saw was
the sky.
Unmatched visibility in all
shooting conditions 24/7; Jase: The magnum 12 shotgun was the reason I changed from shoot-
visible in daylight, low-light ing right to left hand. I’m right handed but I later found out that my
or no light. left-eye is dominant. So I used to arc my head over the A5’s stock to
see the sight with my left eye, and then I would bust my nose wide
VIRTUALLY INDESTRUCTIBLE open on that shotgun’s hump.
Hermetically sealed. Impervious
to oils, chemicals, solvents and Where do you hunt? is it primarily private land, or do you go any place else?
ultra-sonic cleaners. Willie: I hunt mostly private land.
Jase: I do hunt public land, but I go where nobody wants to go.
When I take my family, we’ll walk in sometimes two miles before set-
COMPATIBLE WITH tling on a good honey hole.
GLOCK 43 hunting with suppressors is growing throughout the U.s. with nearly 40
states allowing it. What are your thoughts on this movement? have you tried
silencerCo’s new salvo 12-gauge shotgun suppressor?
Jase: I think [the Salvo] is one of the greatest things invented! When
you discharge your typical firearm, all the ducks get up and leave!
There are so many reasons to love suppressors. It’s easier on animals,
SCAN FOR VIDEO makes teaching new shooters more productive, and helps to protect
your hearing as well as those hunting or shooting around you. Duck
hunters have chronic concussion syndrome from the noise created
by several guys sharing the same blind. With a suppressor, shooting
doesn’t disturb other people. It’s way more friendly than shooting
without. And if you think about it, people in their homes who get up-
set with hunters are mad because they get woken up. Cans on guns
just make sense!
For all of Guns & Ammo’s duck-hunting readers, what is your philosophy on
calling ducks in different situations?
Jase: That’s what we argue about every day. every duck hunter thinks
he’s got it figure out.
Willie: but we don’t. The challenge is that each day is different.
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A dual-vent Jase: Ducks are different. What I like is that I’m in charge of how it’s set up in the
gas operating morning. Some days, calling a lot is great. I’ve learned over the years that a quiet duck
system makes
the Mossberg is a scared duck, which is why using a duck call is so valuable. If you sound like a duck, I
930 Duck don’t think that hurts your chances.
Commander
a comfortable
shooter. And there’s a light-gun revolution happening in the shotgun sports these days with some folks
it looks good taking 20 and 28 gauges to the field. have you guys picked up on any of that?
wearing Real- Jase: You know who has is Si. Si is all about shooting a small gun right now.
tree’s Max-5
camo. $890 Willie: Si was also the first person to bring a 28 gauge to our blind, but how much is
that Si wanting to use something that no one else has. It’s like when he pieces different
parts from different calls together in search of that magic duck call. He just has to be
different.
Jase: He’s doing it because he’s blind and decrepit. We know that Si is in the middle
of the duck blind and he’s going to shoot three times, whether ducks come in to him
or not. He’s thinking, I’m not hitting anything anyways, so a smaller gun puts less strain
on my body and I can still claim that I shot the same amount of ducks. And if you think
about it, shooting through a box of [12-gauge] shells … that’s a pretty good strain on
an old body like his. We all still shoot 12-gauge [mossberg] DCPro shotguns except Si.
He shoots a 20-gauge SA-20, but still claims all the ducks we kill!
Willie: [Looks at Jase] I like shooting a 20 gauge.
Jase: I’ve been shooting a 20 gauge a little, too, mainly in teal season. It’s all about speed
in our blind. The guys I hunt with are good. When you get into mallards or geese, you need
a 12 because those birds are tough. A 20 has less recoil and I can get back on teals faster
than if I were shooting a 12 gauge.
hunters used to think that you needed 31/2–inch shells, but most of us know that you can kill
a lot of birds with a 23/4–inch #5s just as many people used to. Do you feel the trend towards
standard 23/4- and 3-inch shells and lighter shot is a good one?
Jase: I like the middle of the road. I prefer 3-inch shells personally. It takes me a second
to recover with the jolt of the 3½. In my opinion, what you get from a 3½ is not worth
that jolt. I don’t like to cripple birds, so I use a tighter choke with 3-inch shells. I either
want to kill or completely miss. now, we are shooting a Hevi-metal 3-inch #3 blended
load. It really seemed to do well last season in the duck blind.
november 2015 G&A 69
Remember those old Duck Commander videos when you cleared the sky? the coolest
parts of those videos were when multiple birds were brought down out of a flock and
at real long ranges. For duck hunters, there’s nothing better. Do you have plans about
going back to making that type of video and bringing it to the next generation?
Willie: I think we’re still doing it! our philosophy is that you don’t disturb a
bunch of ducks if you’re efficient with one bunch. Wipe them out clean and get
Each Robertson fam-
ily member seems to to your limit. Then, get on to the house. our goal is to be efficient as possible.
have a book out, but Jase: There’s more planning to it than you think. We position the blind on the
G&A likes this one ends with tight chokes depending on the wind and guys in the middle should
in particular after
tasting Miss Kay’s have wider-pattern chokes. When ducks come in from one side to the other, the
lunch. Don’t like the further you go down the line, the tighter the chokes are. There’s a little more
gamey flavor of wild planning like that than you’d think. especially when it comes to teal. They’re
meat? We recom-
mend that you pick flying so fast you have to get them broken down and then take the rest of the
up one of her recipe bunch. That’s how you get very few cripples.
books and give it
another chance. $23
We hear that the men of the family do most of the cooking. What is each of your favor-
ite way to cook and serve duck?
Willie: Yep, that comes from miss Kay and Phil. I like wrapping duck [in bacon].
And I like mom’s duck and dressing.
Jase: my favorite way is to soak it in salt water for a few hours, put a rub on it,
butterfly the meat, insert a jalapeno pepper with cream cheese, wrap it all in
bacon and glaze it in honey. Then you inhale. Just watch out for the pellets.
All pricing is subject to change without notice. Please see our website for current pricing.
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and not just teal. blue wing teal is at the bottom of the list.
These two cousins couldn’t be further in table fare. It shows
us that God has a sense of humor.
how do you tell phil’s early duck calls apart, say the first
500.
Willie: There are some distinct markings on the original
calls. There is a different sticker with an old address, and
inside there is a wooden cork wedge. That’s the biggest
difference. It didn’t hold up well in hunting conditions,
and most of them were replaced over time with a plastic
wedge. Phil switched to plastic wedges shortly after fig-
uring that out. We have many fans that think they have an
original call from the first 10 years, but it’s usually not.
Jase: We recently had one sent in for repair. The biggest problem we have is
that it seems we can’t take one of those early [calls] apart without busting it. It’s
kind of sad. It’s almost impossible to fix those old ones if they’ve never been
disassembled for cleaning.
Jase, you have a new signature pro series duck call with a double reed that’s hand tuned
and assembled by your duck call builder Jay stone. tell us a little about it.
Jase: I’m really proud of this. It’s taken us a long time to reach this point in duck
calling. As I put together duck calls, I’ve been on a quest to make a great call
that doesn’t take a lot of air to harmonize sounds that a duck makes. With this
one, it takes very minimal air to produce a great quack or hail call
Fred Eichler
host of Predator Nation
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Do you have any advice for novices you’ve attracted to hunting through your shows? MORE AT GUNSANDAMMO.COM
This exclusive interview continues on
Jase: Yeah, I do. Shoot with your eyes open. I find that people get everything our website. There you’ll find the Rob-
right, but then when the ducks come in most new hunters I’m out with shoot ertson’s take on golf versus shooting
and some of the stranger contents
with their eyes closed. It goes back to what we were talking about with suppres- inside
s de Willie’s
e s gu
gun sa
safe.
e. Go “Cut
Cut ‘em.”
e .
sors. Firing your first shot, with the noise and recoil, can be a very scary thing.
Willie: I think it starts with being in the woods and enjoying nature. even
ven on days
when you don’t bring any-
thing home, it can still be a
great hunting experience.
the new
herd bull
Nosler.com ■ 800.285.3701
80 G&A november 2015 | prActice like you hunt
A Gunsite student learns where to shoot a big-game animal. your ultimate goal as a hunter is a one-shot, quick kill. this is
We’ve found that many rifle hunters aim at the wrong spot. accomplished by putting a good bullet in the correct spot.
a big-game animal. You might like the high-shoulder or behind- the target with the reticle like they would when shooting at a
the-shoulder shot. (An online poll I conducted on my blog bullseye target. When you quarter a big-game animal with the
showed that 21 out of 100 hunters preferred a “too far back” reticle, you’re aiming at the guts, and that’s where the bullet ends
shot.) Your preference is of no consequence, and as they say, up. Because you’ve been practicing at shooting equilateral shapes
ignorance of the law is no excuse. The hold described by Aagaard — circles and squares — when your eye sees that uniform, quar-
undeniably offers the best opportunity for a quick, humane kill. tering of the target, it tells your finger to pull the trigger.
It’s my opinion that when shooting at big-game animals, hunt- So, what is the solution? After you sight your rifle in and, like
ers frequently shoot too fast and very often with the same center- Col. Townsend Whelen said, “learn its trigger,” step away from
mass hold applied when shooting at circular or square targets. the shooting bench. Next, follow the lead of all other shooters
They feel the rush of the situation, the stress of the shot, and who engage living creatures with gunfire — practice shooting
with the absence of a defined aiming point they simply quarter at targets that mimic the creature you want to shoot. Cops and
practice like you hunt | november 2015 G&a 81
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AMERICA’S
FAVORITE
FAST .22
words by craig boddington | photos by sean utley TURNS 50.
HANDLOADING is not a uniquely American pas- Ackley, introduced by Nosler) and the .35 Whelen
time. Though not legal in all countries, handloading (influenced, though perhaps not designed, by Col.
is also a popular pastime in Australia, South Africa Townsend Whelen, introduced by Remington).
and several European countries. Wildcatting, how- The .22-250 Remington was introduced as a factory
ever, is primarily an American tradition. This is not cartridge by Remington in 1965; 50 years is an awe-
because we are more innovative or industrious and some milestone for any cartridge. Although it bears
certainly not because we really need new cartridges Remington’s name, in 1965 the cartridge had been a
more than anyone else. It’s more a matter that we popular wildcat for at least 30 years. This does not
have the easiest access to loading tools, like custom imply that Remington stole the design or chose not
dies, and data. Wildcatting, or the creation of to give credit. The actual origin of the .22-250 as we
nonstandard cartridges, is an offshoot know it today is a bit more confusing than that.
of handloading pursued by
relatively few, but it Parallel developments? The .250 Savage cartridge was
goes back a long way. designed by Charles Newton and introduced by Arthur
Some wildcats Savage in 1915. We also know it as the .250-3000 be-
are whimsical; some cause it was the first commercial cartridge to cross the
actually fill a need not 3,000-feet-per-second threshold. Wildcatting was even
filled by standard cartridges. Or, even if they don’t, older than that. It actually began back in the black-
the public perceives that they do, and despite being powder cartridge era, so while exactly who first necked
nonstandard, they achieve a level of popularity, recog- the .250 Savage case down to .22 is not known, it had
nizable even though not manufactured by anyone. The probably already happened by the 1920s.
ultimate level of achievement for a wildcat cartridge It is known that Harvey Donaldson, J.E. Gebby,
is for it to be recognized and adopted by a major John Sweany, J.B. Smith and Grosvenor Wotkins all
manufacturer. This is also an ultimate achievement for worked on versions of the .22-250 starting in about
the cartridge’s designer, especially if identified as its 1934. Chances are there were others. In those days, of
namesake. This is the situation with the .257 Roberts course, there was no Internet, and a lot of Americans
(wildcatted by Ned Roberts, introduced by Reming- didn’t yet have telephones, so parallel and discreet
ton), the .280 Ackley Improved (wildcatted by P.O. development was more plausible than it is today.
84 G&A n o v e m b e r 2 0 1 5 | S p e e d K i n G : T h e . 2 2 - 2 5 0 S T o ry
I hate to date myself like this, but back practices, “varmints” were in great shape
in the 1960s, before Remington legitimized and “varminting” was popular and wide-
the .22-250, I acquired my first centerfire spread. In 1930, the .22 Hornet became
rifle, a 1903 Springfield. It had a wartime the first .22 centerfire “varmint cartridge,”
(World War II, that is) two-groove barrel, but woodchuck and prairie dog shooters
so we took it to veteran Kansas City gun- already thirsted for a cartridge offering
smith Howard Baucher for rebarreling. I higher velocity and greater range. The
wound up sitting in Baucher’s vintage shop .22-250 seemed a natural, and in fact it is
for hours asking interminable questions believed that Grosvenor Wotkins’ version
and listening to his answers and story- of the .22-250 served as the model, if not
telling. Gun-silly kid that I was, I knew prototype, for Winchester’s .220 Swift,
about the .22 Varminter (aka .22-50), so I introduced in 1935.
was fascinated by Baucher’s stories about The .22-250 and .220 Swift were paral- The .220 Swift was a ground-breaking
lel developments in the 1930s. oddly,
wildcatting it 30 years earlier and all the Winchester’s .220 Swift was based on the cartridge, not only the first commercial
trouble he had with bullets at its unprec- near-obsolete semi-rimmed 6mm Lee navy cartridge to break the 4,000-feet-per-
edented velocity. Whether he was a leader case, while the .22-250, popular as a wildcat second barrier but still one of the fastest,
for 30 years, was based on the rimless .250
or an early follower I will never know, but Savage. Left to right: 6mm Lee navy, .220 able to cross that elusive line with standard
there was a lot of experimentation in a fast Swift, .250 Savage, .22-250 remington. 50-grain bullets. The .22-250 was already
.22 on the .250 Savage case. out there. Using the tapered .250 Savage
Wildcatting cartridges from existing cases offers innumerable case with 1930s propellants, it cannot quite reach 4,000 fps with
options in shoulder angle, neck length and body taper, so there 50-grain bullets, although it certainly can with lighter bullets or in
were numerous versions. According to Frank Barnes’ “Cartridges an improved version with body taper removed and powder capac-
of the World,” “J.E. Gebby and J.B. Smith are usually credited ity increased, such as the .22-250 Ackley Improved. On the other
with having developed the present configuration in 1937.” Gebby hand, the .250 Savage was still very popular in 1935, so cases
actually copyrighted his version as the “.22 Varminter,” but with were readily available, and the rimless case had the most common
multiple versions out there and only its own submitted as a .473-inch rim diameter, same as the .30-’06.
factory cartridge, Remington had little choice but to use its own It seems almost inexplicable, then, that the Winchester engineers
distinct name, calling the cartridge “.22-250 Remington.” abandoned the .250 Savage case, using instead the old 6mm Lee
Navy semi-rimmed case. Exactly why Winchester chose this already
Almost a Swift In the 1930s, North American big game was still obscure case seems to have been lost in the sands of time, but in
in trouble, but hunters will hunt, and they will hunt the game those days the Savage 99 was a fierce competitor to Winchester’s
most available close to home. Before pesticides and clean farming aging lever actions, so the answer might be as simple as that.
86 G&A n o v e m b e r 2 0 1 5 | S p e e d K i n G : T h e . 2 2 - 2 5 0 S T o ry
In any case, the .220 Swift quickly became both famous and
infamous, The former for its incredible velocity and flat-shooting
capability, the latter for its quickly earned reputation as a barrel
burner. Undoubtedly, the latter was true, and with a difference of
just a couple hundred fps (max), the .22-250 wasn’t much better.
After World War II, better barrel steel provided a partial solution. In
reality, whether or not the specific number of 4,000 is passed, with
barrels and propellants as we know them any cartridge approaching
that magic number is going to be hard on barrels.
So, the .220 Swift, though legendary, never achieved extreme
popularity. The .22-250 continued to roll along as a well-known
but nonstandard cartridge, and it’s a bit surprising that this con-
tinued for three decades before somebody legitimized it. Rem-
ington was a natural. It did very well with its .222 Remington,
introduced in 1950. Designed by Remington’s accuracy guru and
legendary benchrest champion Mike Walker, the .222 Remington
was a fairly mild cartridge but awesome for accuracy and a whole
lot more potent than the .22 Hornet. Remington didn’t do quite as
well with the slightly longer .222 Remington Magnum (a tenth of
an inch longer case and 20 percent greater powder capacity than
the .222), introduced in 1958. But it was about to hit paydirt. Our
5.56mm round actually goes back to an experimental military
cartridge designed for the Armalite AR-15 in 1957. It was officially
88 G&A n o v e m b e r 2 0 1 5 | S p e e d K i n G : T h e . 2 2 - 2 5 0 S T o ry
RL
O C K PA
E
necking down of the .250 Savage case. It retains the same case
length of 1.912 inches, easily fitting into a short bolt action, and
the same base-to-shoulder dimension of 1.51 inches. Diameter at
the shoulder is also the same, at .413 inch. Both cartridges have
RG a fairly generous neck length, well exceeding one caliber (.275
for the .250, .252 for the .22-250). The relatively shorter neck on
the .22-250 means that it has a slightly sharper shoulder angle:
28 degrees versus 26½ degrees for the .250 Savage. However you
RG slice it, the .22-250 is based on a very simple necking down of
the .250 Savage case.
A bit of redesign could have made it faster, but despite its 30-
year history, the .220 Swift had never become popular. Perhaps
Remington wanted to forego the advertising splash of a 4,000-fps
S p e e d K i n g : T h e . 2 2 - 2 5 0 S T o ry | n o v e m b e r 2 0 1 5 g&A 89
USA
Celebrating the Milestone The .22-250 was recently introduced in do well with Remington ammo.” Well, I’d never thought about
Remington’s flagship Model 700 bolt action. It is therefore most ap- it, but based on my experience there’s some validity. But, no
propriate that a 50-year commemorative be issued in that long-run- dice. What I could find was American Eagle (made by Federal), a
ning (and long-popular) model, but the Model 700 Limited .22-250 vanilla ice-cream load with 50-grain jacketed hollow point (un-
commemorative is a whole lot different from any 1965 Model 700. stated brand) and Hornady Superformance with 50-grain V-MAX,
The action, barrel and triggerguard/floorplate assembly are a fast, state-of-the-art load.
stainless. The stock is the American Classic style with straight No disrespect to Federal intended, but it’s kind of a no-brainer
comb, decent wood with cut checkering, ebony pistol-grip cap that I expected the more expensive Hornady load to group the
and matching forend tip. The wood is finished fairly dark as a best, but in this respect I was dead wrong. There is simply no
nice accent to the stainless metal. The 24-inch barrel is what I telling what load a given rifle will shoot well and what it won’t.
would call medium contour and fluted. The rifle is thus not a This rifle didn’t like Superformance, a line I’ve had great results
heavy varminter, but more of what I would call a “walkaround with. I have little experience with American Eagle rifle ammo,
varminter” or predator-calling rig, but with the fluted barrel it but it’s intended as an economical line. Even so, with that load
would not be out of place in a prairie dog town. Weight is about the rifle shot like a Remington 700 in .22-250 should shoot.
8 pounds without scope, a good heft. Mounted with a Nikon At this stage, the barrel isn’t properly broken in, and I’d like to
4-16X in Leupold mounts, total weight came up to 9.2 pounds see what it will do with a genuine variety of loads, but the Amer-
for me. It’s hardly a lightweight, but just fine for pretty much ican Eagle was consistently under an inch, with the best group
anything one might wish to do with a .22-250. measured .46 inch. I can live with that just fine, and although the
A good .22-250 brings back memories. Dad and I used to trigger is adjustable, it was set from the factory at a clean, crisp
spend a lot of time shooting prairie dogs when I was a kid. In 2¾ pounds. I can live with that, too. The one thing I can’t live
those days we never owned a .22-250, but friends did and I came with: The darned thing is right-hand. It’s a good ’un, just like the
to revere the cartridge. Later, of course, I always had a .22-250. I tens of thousands of .22-250s Remington has made since 1965.
haven’t shot prairie dogs in several years, so I was sort of between It will remain a mystery why this cartridge didn’t make it into
rifles in that chambering when this opportunity came along. This factory form much earlier, but it’s going to be around for a long
meant I didn’t have any ammo on hand, and these days that can time to come.
be quite a problem. It would have been most appropriate to use
Remington ammo, not only for political correctness but because,
as an editor commented not long ago, “Remington rifles seem to
Special Forces SR
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92 G&A november 2015
THE NORTH’S
FORGOTTEN REVOLVER
Though overshadowed by Colt and Remington products, the Whitney
Navy stands out as one of the best revolvers of the Civil War era.
words by garry james | photos by jill marlow
november 2015 G&A 93
94 G&A n o v e m b e r 2 0 1 5 | T H E N O RT H ’ S F O R G O T T E N R E V O LV E R
TO THE CAUSAL STUDENT OF CIVIL WAR ARMS, it appears there were only two
makers of percussion revolvers used during the conflict, Colt and Remington. Nothing
could be further from the truth, as a large variety of percussion and cartridge arms, both
foreign and domestic, found their way into Yank and Reb holsters. Some were privately
purchased, many were manufactured to fulfill official contracts, and others were a com-
bination of both procurement methods.
While Colt and Remington did get the lion’s share of govern- interest in firearms manufacture and his early attempts at mass
ment largess, they were certainly not the only ones. Starr, Savage, production and the implementation of interchangeable parts.
Massachusetts Arms and Pettengill, to name just a few, were all While his early dreams of streamlined arms production fell
recipients of War Department favors. Probably the best of the somewhat short of the ideal, undaunted, Whitney did establish
batch, however — and one that has received something of a his own private manufactory in New Haven, Connecticut, called
short shrift among collectors and historians — is the .36-caliber Whitneyville Armory. In the early years, he was successful in
Whitney Navy. building a good selection of contract muskets for both federal
Whitney is one of the great names in American technology, and state authorities.
though most individuals only associate it with Eli Whitney‘s Whitney Sr. died in 1825, and for a period of time the firm was
famed cotton gin, one of the most important and influential managed by two of Whitney’s nephews as caretakers. In 1842, Eli
inventions in U.S. history. Fewer people are aware of Whitney’s Whitney Jr. having come of age, was given the company.
T H E N O RT H ’ S F O R G O T T E N R E V O LV E R | n o v e m b e r 2 0 1 5 G&A 95
THEFORDOUTFITTERS.COM
Try to avoid water higher than the bottom of the hubs
and proceed slowly. Refer to your Owner’s Manual for
detailed information regarding driving through water.
96 G&A n o v e m b e r 2 0 1 5 | T H E N O RT H ’ S F O R G O T T E N R E V O LV E R
is understandable, for like the Remington, the frame was also over through several incarnations. A roll-engraved cylinder scene
designed by Fordyce Beals. Over the several years (approximately featuring an eagle, shield and lion became standard.
a half-dozen) the gun would be made, numerous variants ap- Two more First Model types appeared, each made in greater
peared, which were also subsequently broken down into models numbers than its predecessor. Some differences were cosmetic,
and subtypes for convenience of identification. such as the substitution of a rounded instead of a square shoulder
The first model, 1st Type, looked like it was a semi-prototype. on the revolver’s two-piece walnut grips and, with the 4th and final
Lacking a loading lever and possessing a rather primitive appear- Type, the incorporation of a single safety notch on the rear of the
ance that would evolve into the more sophisticated one seen on cylinder. The guns were marked on their barrels “E WHITNEY/
the Second Model, only about 100 were made before the 2nd N.HAVEN,” though some were also sold stamped “EAGLE CO.”
Type appeared. The second model was enhanced with a loading The Second Model marked the adulthood of the Whitney; six
lever with a spring-loaded ball-style catch that would be held types were eventually produced. The frame was heavier, a brass
T H E N O RT H ’ S F O R G O T T E N R E V O LV E R | n o v e m b e r 2 0 1 5 G&A 97
Dual Bore
Purpose Brush
for for
rods cables
wipes
brushes
BURN SAFELY
with the
Stainless Steel
BurnCage™
PERFECT FOR:
• Sensitive financial documents
• All burnable household waste*
• Old leaves and branches A superb-condition
Second Model
STAINLESS STEEL CONSTRUCTION is 3rd Type Whitney
lightweight, durable, and portable (it folds Navy. It basical-
for easy storage). ly looks like its
PERFORATED LID and sidewalls maximize predecessors, but
airflow and trap embers. there are differenc-
1600° 2 SIZES! es. Photo courtesy
TEMPERATURES College Hill Arsenal
mean more
89107X © 2015
Whitney also
produced a Pocket
version of the
Navy. This cased, Imitation being the sincerest form of flattery, Whitney received
engraved speci- The UMAREX FUEL iis a .22 22 caliber
men, presented a rather back-handed tribute from Georgia maker Spillers & Burr, powerhouse fueled by the ReAxis nitrogen
to Czar Alexander which produced 1,450 brass-framed copies of the Whitney Navy gas piston. It slings readily available
II of Russia by pellets down range at a blazing 1000 fps.
in 1864 and 1865. With production starting so late in the war, it’s
Philo Blake, Eli Its muzzle noise is reduced by the Umarex
Whitney’s nephew, no wonder the quantity manufactured fell far short of the 15,000 SilencAir noise dampening system.
shows the quality contracted for, but the handgun was at least a reasonably well- Equipped with a built-in bipod, Lockdown
of manufacture made imitation of the original. Today, it remains a fascinating, Mount, and 3-9x32 scope, the FUEL is
the company was ready for steady target acquisition.
capable of. Photo highly sought-after relic of the era.
See it in action here:
courtesy James D. Though production numbers nowhere near those of Colt and www.UmarexUSA.com/GUNSAMMO
Julia Inc. Remington Armys and Navys, the Whitney Navy was regarded as ©2015 Umarex USA
SEPTEMBER 22ND
↓
102 G & A n o v e m b e r 2 0 1 5
10/22 HANDFUN
THE FIRST QUESTION that came to mind when Guns & detached from the receiver by rotating counterclockwise.
Ammo laid eyes on the new Ruger 22 Charger Takedown This takedown feature made an already compact rifle even
model was, Why? About three years ago, Ruger took a handier, as it can be broken down with the flip of a switch,
different spin on its classic .22LR, the 10/22, by introduc- cutting its length in half for easier transport and storage.
ing the Takedown model. The 10/22 Takedown allowed But a takedown pistol?
the user to separate the rifle into two pieces: the stock, Introduced in 2007, the 22 Charger was simply a 10/22
inclusive of the receiver, and the barrel/forend. Unlocking action given a 10-inch barrel and set in a laminate pistol-
the barrel simply requires pushing forward on the locking type wood stock in place of a rifle’s traditional shoulder-fire
lever, located forward of the magazine well, and then stock. The blowback action is the same as found on the
the barrel and forend assembly can be easily twisted and 10/22 rifle, which remains virtually unchanged since its
november 2015 G&A 103
The 22 Charger can be easily fired offhand, or from a bag or rest The Ruger BX-15 magazine is standard, but the 22 Charger Take-
without the need to attach the Ruger-supplied bipod. It’s an excellent down readily accepts all other Ruger 10/22 rotary magazines in other
piece of kit, providing stable and adjustable support. capacities.
introduction by Ruger in 1964. pattern compatible with today’s .22LR and .223 sound sup-
In late 2014, Ruger introduced a Takedown model of the pressors and popular muzzle devices already available for
22 Charger, which shares the same assembly/disassembly AR-style rifles in the same calibers. From the factory, each
as its big brother but in an even more compact package. 22 Charger is provided with a thread protector that easily
The 22 Charger features a 1:16-inch RH twist, 10-inch, screws on and off. G&A staff has had several examples of
cold-hammer-forged barrel with a ½-inch-28 thread this semiauto pistol on hand for the last year, and each is
with a little time behind the AR-15 platform. Aftermarket If you have a supply of rotary 10-round 10/22 magazines
grips can be sought to replace it. on hand, prepare to rejoice. Those, too, will fit the 22 Char-
A Picatinny rail atop the 10/22 action comes factory ger. So will Ruger’s BX series of 15- and 25-rounders. The
installed and allows for the addition of any compatible red Charger ships with one BX-15 15-round magazine, which is
dot optics or telescopic scopes to increase the platform’s the perfect height when using the supplied bipod from the
shootability. After accuracy testing, we mounted Burris’ bench or while shooting from the prone position.
new FastFire III red dot, which makes the 22 Charger quick As part of the kit that comes the 22 Charger’s carrying
and intuitive to plink with at the range. When shooting, case, the bipod is constructed of aluminum alloy and
having the ability to quickly configure the Charger with a features independently adjustable legs that fold out of
wide range of optics expands its utility. the way for ease of stowage. The bipod itself attaches
to a sling swivel stud located on the
stock’s forend. It is easily removable.
The 22 Charger was quite the
shooter with the three loads we had
on hand. G&A’s standard for testing
rimfire rifle accuracy is 50 yards, and
while the Charger isn’t a rifle, it per-
formed admirably at that distance and
proved capable of placing five shots
in 11/2-inch groups. (This is impressive
considering a custom pistol often
comes with a 2-inch guarantee at 50
yards with match ammunition.)
With the 22 Charger’s 10-inch
barrel and marketing as a pistol, we
officially applied G&A’s handgun
testing protocol at 25 yards. Our
best five-shot group came from
Winchester 40-grain lead roundnose
(LRN) Standard Velocity ammunition,
resulting in a .76-inch cluster. The
Federal 40-grain solid Auto Match
and Remington 36-grain LRN hollow-
point (HP) raced neck-and-neck in
numbers, resulting in best five-shot
r u g e r 2 2 c h a r g e r ta k e d o w n | n o v e m b e r 2 0 1 5 g&a 107
PERFORMANCE
VELOCITY BEST AVERAGEexcitement of hitting their intended
LOAD (FPS) ES SD GROUP (IN.) GROUP (IN.)
target without frustration. In the pro-
Federal Auto Match 40 gr. Solid 1,165 35 14 0.87 1.53 cess, they are familiarizing where their
Remington Golden Bullet 36 gr. LRNHP 1,163 82 34 0.85 1.19 head should be positioned behind the
Winchester Standard Velocity 40 gr. LRN 1,193 55 22 0.76 1.1 optic, leading to an easier transition
*Capable of 1.62 in. at 50 yards. to a rifle. The Takedown model also
adds a level of interest, as they can
groups of .85 inch and .87 inch, respectively. Reming- help assemble and disassemble it at the range. For us
ton’s and Winchester’s average of five five-shot groups adults, the 22 Charger is a great way to pass an afternoon
were within 1/100 of an inch of one another, averaging plinking or varmint hunting.
just over an inch. Federal’s load,
which was specifically optimized for
semiautomatic .22 firearms, aver-
aged 1.53 inches.
Spending time with the 22 Charger
Takedown proved to be a lot of fun
and practical for new shooters at a
bench. For a child’s first exposure to
the world of firearms, we’d be hard
pressed to find a better option, and
here’s why. The 22 Charger is light in
weight, easy to maneuver on a bench
or field position, and offers hours of
inexpensive practice if you’re willing
to part with a box or two from your
stash of rimfire ammo. We have found
that when teaching young children
the art of marksmanship, head place-
ment behind the stock is the most
challenging part for them, often due
to length of pull (LOP). With a red dot
sight mounted on the Charger’s rail,
children can get close to the optic,
Photo submitted by
practice trigger control, obtain a
Steve M., Fort Myers FL
good sight picture and experience the
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SPENT CASES
WHITE FEATHER
ONE YEAR BEFORE ORE his first deployment to Vietnam and es by the Marine Corps Marksmanship Unit under the
prior to his 93 confirmed
nfirmed kills as a Marine sniper, then- direction of Colonel Walter Walsh. Under Walsh’s direction,
Corporal Carlos N. Hathcock won the 1965 1,000-yard Hart target barrels with 12-inch twists were attached to
Wimbledon Cup with an amazing score of 100, with 17 Winchester 70 actions and high-combed laminated beech-
of the 20 shots landing in the 20-inch V-ring. It was a feat wood stocks by Roy Dunlap, the Tucson riflemaker whose
widely reported throughout American headlines as “the stocks and ammunition had been among the winners at
finest long-range rifle marksmanship on record.” Camp Perry for more than 20 years. Preliminary tests made
In our February 1966 issue, G&A Technical Editor under Col. Walsh’s direction were with 168,- 180- 190- and
Robert Hutton wrote, “Until now, it seems to have been 200-grain bullets, but they finally settled on the 180-grain
a secret that in the 1965 national rifle matches at Camp Sierra MatchKing in front of 71 grains of IMR 4350 powder.
Perry, Ohio, there were great victories for Winchester, Roy Hathcock hunted at an early age with a .22-caliber J.C.
Dunlap, Hart barrels, Sierra Bullets and the United States Higgins single-shot rifle and dreamed of being a Marine.
Marines. In the three 1,000-yard matches they were the His missions were legendary, so much so that he was
winners, and they did the job with civilian rifles and ammo recognized by the nickname “White Feather” among the
of their own making. And it was all the same.” Viet Cong and NVA. In 1967, he set a new record for the
The Wimbledon Cup, 20 shots at 1,000 yards, any rifle, longest sniper kill of 2,460 yards using an M2 .50-caliber
prone position, any sights (meaning scope) was won by Browning machine gun mounted with a scope. The record
Cpl. Hathcock with a Winchester Model 70 chambered stood until 2002. Hathcock rose to the rank of gunnery
for the .300 Winchester Magnum, a new cartridge at that sergeant and remained close to the Marine Corps scout/
time. The winning rifle was strictly made up for the match- sniper community until his death at age 56 in 1999.
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