Latest Media Releases

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Untitled Wednesday, 24 Nov 2010 04:04pm

A man will re-appear in court next year after police unearthed a number of firearms buried in the Goonoo State Forest at Mogriguy. On Monday 22 November Dubbo Police attended an area of the state forest on Mogriguy Road, approximately 25kms north-west of Dubbo, after receiving information from a member of the public. While in the dense bushland police located six firearms which were buried in the forest inside PVC pipes. The firearms consisted of two .22 rifles, one 12 gauge shotgun, a semi-automatic .223 Ruger rifle, a .303 Lithgow rifle and a 3030 Winchester lever action rifle. about 5:30pm the same day police attended a house in Jubilee Street, Dubbo where they conducted a search warrant allegedly seizing an amount of piping. a 29-year-old man was arrested at the premises and taken to Dubbo Police Station and charged with eight offences including: · three counts of possess shortened firearm without authority · Two counts of possess unregistered firearm · One count of possess unauthorised prohibited firearm · One count of possess more than 3 unregistered firearms · One count of goods in custody he appeared in Dubbo Local Court and was remanded in custody to re-appear on Monday 17 January 2011.

<a href="http://www.police.nsw.gov.au/news/latest_releases?sq_content_src=%2BdXJsPWh0dHBzJTNBJTJGJTJGd3d3LmViaXoucG9saWNlLm5zdy5nb3YuYXUlMkZtZWRpYSUyRjE0MTQxLmh0bWwmYWxsPTE%3Dtag:news.google.com,2005:cluster=http://www.police.nsw.gov.au/news/latest_releases?sq_content_src=+dXJsPWh0dHBzJTNBJTJGJTJGd3d3LmViaXoucG9saWNlLm5zdy5nb3YuYXUlMkZtZWRpYSUyRjE0MTQxLmh0bWwmYWxsPTE=Wed, 24 Nov 2010 05:21:05 GMT 00:00″>Latest Media Releases

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“Naming a state gun is problematic because a gun is, after all, a killing tool”

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An editorial in sltrib.com gets all wimpy about the proposal to name the 1911 as Utah’s state gun, despite being the birthplace of one of the world’s greatest—if not THE greatest—firearms designer. “Naming a state gun is problematic because a gun is, after all, a killing tool. It’s not like honoring the state flower, state bird, or even the state dinosaur, which happens to be a rather nasty carnivore. a gun necessarily carries the connotation of violent death, not the sort of thing Utah would want to appear to celebrate.” You see what happened there? The editorial writer knew the state’s dinosaur, the Utahraptor, eviscerated his argument. And yet he plowed on in that don’t confuse-me-with-logic way that anti-gunners do. After a little John Moses Browning supporters ass-kissing, he concludes . . .

But instead of naming a state gun, why not honor Browning with a statue at the State Capitol?

Utah already has an outstanding, though modest, state museum devoted to Browning and his firearms at Union Station in Ogden. If you’re interested in firearms and haven’t seen it, you should check it out. It’s wonderful.

Still, naming a state gun would be a public relations misfire.

A PR misfire to whom? Man up dude. Go fire a few rounds from a .45 or something. Jeez.

“Naming a state gun is problematic because a gun is, after all, a killing tool”

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Is Obama the greatest thing to happen to the gun industry since Oliver Winchester?

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I am a gun dealer, and one thing Obama’s administration has done for me is make me busy! :) The rush to buy guns and ammo has created a tremendous demand (and a slowly lightening shortage) in any firearm and all ammunition, but especially pistols and “gut guns.”One particular area of “boom” for my shop has been the sales to young people. We used to see 18 and 19 year olds as hunting season rolled around, but now it isn’t unusual at all for us to do 2-3 transactions each day to 18 year olds (you have to be 18 to buy a long rifle, 21 to buy a pistol).Do you think Obama’s administration has created a seller’s market in firearms and ammunition, and have you seen the effects of increased demand and decreased supply?Avail….We do see that, but this one is VERY different. Around October of last year, the rush was on. By December, all assault rifles, and particular 380 models (a small pistol, easily concealed in a pocket) were almost impossible to find. The assault rifles are letting up…a LITTLE….but the 380s, and ammunition are being hoarded and are still VERY hard to find. I have a standing order for 500 380s, 500 AR-15s, and 500 AK-47s….I’m lucky to get 5 of the ARs and AKs each month, and maybe 50 380s about once every 3 months.This run is different than the usual “they’re coming for our guns” run. My sales over the last 6 months are almost twice what I used to do in a year.One more thing….those standing orders I have….they’re all sold the minute they arrice. I have a waiting list on the 380s of over 240 names now, so if I get 250 in, I’ll only have 10 available to sell. The rest are already sold.Same with the AKs and ARs.Matty,Ammo is letting up, a little. I expect to see supply in ammo “back to normal” after hunting season this year (so January of 2010). I still expect 380, 45, 223, and 7.62 to be tough for a while, so I would buy all of that you see, and save enough for protection if you’re practicing with it.1000 round bulk .223 is starting to show up again, but it is still somewhat infrequent, and the price has jumped a little. Most of the increased prices right now is gouging though. Wholesale prices haven’t risen much at all.

Is Obama the greatest thing to happen to the gun industry since Oliver Winchester?

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Why is a Pre 1964 Winchester Model 70 on the C&R list?

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What makes 1964 the magic year for Winchester Model 70 rifles to make them C&R eligible? “To be recognized by ATF as a C&R firearm, a firearm must fall into at least one of the following three categories:1-Firearms which were manufactured at least 50 years prior to the current date, but not including replicas thereof; 2-Firearms which are certified by the curator of a municipal, State, or Federal museum which exhibits firearms to be curios or relics of museum interest; and 3-Any other firearms which derive a substantial part of their monetary value from the fact that they are novel, rare, bizarre, or because of their association with some historical figure, period, or event.”Obviously, it’s not #1, but is there anything of significance that happened in 1964 to these rifles?Thanks.

Why is a Pre 1964 Winchester Model 70 on the C&R list?

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Why is a Pre 1964 Winchester Model 70 on the C&R list?

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What makes 1964 the magic year for Winchester Model 70 rifles to make them C&R eligible? “To be recognized by ATF as a C&R firearm, a firearm must fall into at least one of the following three categories:1-Firearms which were manufactured at least 50 years prior to the current date, but not including replicas thereof; 2-Firearms which are certified by the curator of a municipal, State, or Federal museum which exhibits firearms to be curios or relics of museum interest; and 3-Any other firearms which derive a substantial part of their monetary value from the fact that they are novel, rare, bizarre, or because of their association with some historical figure, period, or event.”Obviously, it’s not #1, but is there anything of significance that happened in 1964 to these rifles?Thanks.

Why is a Pre 1964 Winchester Model 70 on the C&R list?

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Auto-Ordnance M1 Carbine « Vuurwapen Blog

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Some of you may notice that this post is not filed under “firearms” or “reviews” or even “tests”. It’s filed under “Lies, Errors, and Omissions.”

Why is that, you ask? Well, this firearm is an error. The company that made it is an error. I might even go so far as to say that the ancestors of the people who founded the company were also errors.

But first, the firearm. It looks just like this. Yes, I stole Auto-Ordnance’s photo.

I had a pretty hard time finding .30 carbine ammo locally – I was very lucky that two boxes of S&B .30 Carbine had fallen behind some Winchester 5.56 at my local Sportsman’s Warehouse. I paid 50 cents a round for 100 rounds. Expensive, but not really all that horrible compared to brass cased 5.56mm ammunition.

So, with my new carbine and ammunition in hand, I headed for the range. I have to say, it was nice to be taking something other than an AR to the range for once. Don’t get me wrong, I love ARs, but variety is the spice of life, as they say.

I encountered problems before I even chambered a round. Seating a magazine was very difficult and required a firm smack on the baseplate of a loaded 15 round magazine to accomplish. With that task complete, though, I figured it was smooth sailing from there on out.

I was wrong. The next problem I encountered, after pulling the operating rod handle to the rear and releasing it, was that the bolt didn’t fully lock into battery. It went all the way forward, but it didn’t rotate into place. It could be forced into battery, but I was not comfortable with shooting the weapon in that condition – especially with thoughts of a kB encountered by a friend with his own AO M1 Carbine floating around in my head.

So I went to remove the round, but that’s when I found that the operating handle wouldn’t budge to the rear without a fight. I “mortared” the weapon and the handle came back nicely. The spent round flew out onto the shooting bench. I set it aside for later inspection and attempted to chamber another round. Miraculously, this time, the bolt rotated into position. I fired at a 3″ Shoot-N-C target placed at 25 yards and hit right at 9 o’clock. Unfortunately, the weapon had stopped working again. This time, it seemed to be magazine related – the round hadn’t fed straight towards the feed ramp, rather, it had veered off to the left side. I cleared this malfunction and attempted to fire again. This time I managed to shoot twice before encountering another round that wouldn’t go into battery.

At this point, I sat back and tried to think about what was going wrong. It was then that I realized the condition of the weapon – it was essentially dry. Cursing myself for making such a basic mistake, I found some oil and generously lubricated the appropriate areas. After a few more magazine malfunctions, I was able to shoot 3 or 4 times before the weapon wouldn’t go into battery again. I tried a different magazine – I had 3 – and encountered no more magazine related malfunctions. I did, however, continue to regularly encounter the aforementioned failure to go into battery.

Hoping that it was some sort of break in issue, I fired a total of 45 rounds – yes, a smaller amount than one would expect to call a “break-in period” – but this had no effect.

Several days later, after what California would call a “mandatory cooling-off period”, I grabbed the carbine out of its case and inspected it thoroughly. I noticed that there were several minor cosmetic issues, as well as issues that affected function. I categorized the functional issues as follows:

1. Loose upper handguard was rotating to the left and having a minor binding effect on the operating slide handle.

2. One of the magazines, the magazine original to the weapon, had feed lips that were approximately 1/10″ longer than the other two magazines’ feed lips, and very rough to boot. Incidentally, this was the magazine that did not work.

3. The action itself was simply a collection of rough surfaces that were already showing very rapid finish wear considering the low round count.

I could also not rule out the possibility that ammunition was to blame – that certain rounds were loaded long or that the cases themselves were too long. However, all cases were consistently 1.285″, within the maximum OAL for .30 Carbine cases.

The first item was easily corrected by tightening the screw that holds tension on the barrel band. I didn’t do this too much – just enough that the upper handguard couldn’t rotate too far to the right and rub the operating slide.

The second item was also easily corrected by discarding the junk magazine into my junk magazine bucket.

The third item would prove to be the most difficult to correct.

Initially, I figured that simply working the action would help “break in” the weapon – just like at the CZ factory, where a machine racks the slides of CZ pistols hundreds of times before the weapon leaves the factory. So I sat down in front of the TV and watched Fox News’ Red Eye while quickly working the action of the weapon. I did this hundreds of times before I attempted to chamber a live round (while the muzzle was pointed at my sand bucket). No change, the bolt wouldn’t go into battery. I also found that the weapon would regularly not go into battery even when a round was not present, which led me to believe that ammunition might not be a factor.

So my next step was to field strip the weapon, a task which is accomplished quickly and easily – especially if you get to do it a few times, as I did over the course of that day.

I started with lubrication again, thinking that I’d missed a critical area. No, that didn’t work. After a few more failed ideas, I simply took a very close look at the action under magnification as I slowly let the operating handle forward. I noticed several areas where the head of the bolt was binding against the slide as it rotated into place.

Thinking “This is the last chance you have to contact Kahr customer service about this rifle”, I took one of my polishing stones and carefully smoothed out the area on the inside of the op-rod where the finish had been worn away the most. I figured that if I messed anything up, it would make a nice wall hanging.

As it turns out, though, I don’t think I messed anything up. After reassembly, I noticed that the action was much smoother and never failed to go into battery, even if allowed to go forward slowly. I was also able to hand-cycle dozens of rounds without any problems.

At the range, I was also able to make it through a significant amount of ammunition (having ordered more via the internet since my first outing) without any failures of any kind.

At this point, I was able to appreciate the concept of the M1 carbine. It is light, handy, simple to operate, quite accurate, and has little more recoil than a 5.56mm AR-15. I have about $375 invested in it, not counting ammunition, and I’d say it’s a decent weapon for that price. I see this model on the wall in local gun stores, though, for $700. I wouldn’t pay $700 for one of these. If I wanted to pay $700 for an M1 Carbine, I’d get a USGI version from the CMP (Civilian Marksmanship Program) and have some money left over for ammo.

I have to wonder, though – did they actually test fire the weapon before allowing it to leave the factory? How could so many problems with the weapon have slipped by even the most inexperienced of QC inspectors? Does this company even employ QC inspectors? I could understand if one issue went by unnoticed, but a loose handguard that rubbed against the op-rod (AO’s manual calls it the “operating slide”, and I’m not educated on M1 carbines enough to call it ei
ther way), a faulty magazine, and an action so full of rough surfaces and sharp edges that it would hardly go into battery without a round being in the rifle?

That’s why this is in the “errors” section of the blog.

Auto-Ordnance M1 Carbine « Vuurwapen Blog

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A Modern Libertarian: A new Aim for our Coalition- Repeal the hand …

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As civilian ownership of firearms has been curtailed
by Parliament the Police use and variety of weaponry has
increased exponentially (I support the cops but our government
should not have all this power)

This I accept to many (usually the ill-informed) is a strange subject to blog on. Namely the very important need as I see it to liberalise Britain’s gun laws. Why you may think as well as shudder and regard the issue as well as the author as crazy. In fact in British culture in general people who like guns or want to keep them are often regarded as being a bit loopy. But for me the issue is simple. A law abiding citizen should be allowed to own firearms, further more they should be allowed to use them in self defence of their property until the police eventually arrive.

Also did you know that gun crime has increased fourfold since the 1998 ban on handguns was introduced? Did you also know that countries with more liberal gun laws such as Switzerland and Israel have a fraction of our crime? Finally when someone attacks your property, what is your sole choice in the UK? You guessed it to be a victim of crime? That is all. I am calling for as a minimum, the hand guns ban of 1997 to be repealed. The law that exists in Northern Ireland and the Channel Islands should be the norm. Finally I will show below the article from BBC online in which the American academic Joyce Malcolm provides her view. My view is that HMG should be willing to trust its citizens to be armed, otherwise why should we trust HMG? Please debate this issue in the comments I warmly welcome contributions from the US and those opposed to my view below. Onto Joyce Malcolm:

Yet what we need is more guns, not fewer, says a US academic.
“If guns are outlawed,” an American bumper sticker warns, “only outlaws will have guns.” With gun crime in Britain soaring in the face of the strictest gun control laws of any democracy, the UK seems about to prove that warning prophetic.

For 80 years the safety of the British people has been staked on the premise that fewer private guns means less crime, indeed that any weapons in the hands of men and women, however law-abiding, pose a danger.
JOYCE L MALCOLM
Professor of history, Bentley College, US
Author of Guns & Violence: the English Experience
Senior Advisor, MIT Security Studies Program
Click here to have you say on this story
Government assured Britons they needed no weapons, society would protect them. If that were so in 1920 when the first firearms restrictions were passed, or in 1953 when Britons were forbidden to carry any article for their protection, it no longer is.
The failure of this general disarmament to stem, or even slow, armed and violent crime could not be more blatant. According to a recent UN study, England and Wales have the highest crime rate and worst record for “very serious” offences of the 18 industrial countries surveyed.
But would allowing law-abiding people to “have arms for their defence”, as the 1689 English Bill of Rights promised, increase violence? Would Britain be following America’s bad example?

Old stereotypes die hard and the vision of Britain as a peaceable kingdom, America as “the wild west culture on the other side of the Atlantic” is out of date. It is true that in contrast to Britain’s tight gun restrictions, half of American households have firearms, and 33 states now permit law-abiding citizens to carry concealed weapons.
But despite, or because, of this, violent crime in America has been plummeting for 10 consecutive years, even as British violence has been rising. By 1995 English rates of violent crime were already far higher than America’s for every major violent crime except murder and rape.
You are now six times more likely to be mugged in London than New York. Why? Because as common law appreciated, not only does an armed individual have the ability to protect himself or herself but criminals are less likely to attack them. They help keep the peace. A study found American burglars fear armed home-owners more than the police. As a result burglaries are much rarer and only 13% occur when people are at home, in contrast to 53% in England.

Much is made of the higher American rate for murder. That is true and has been for some time. But as the Office of Health Economics in London found, not weapons availability, but “particular cultural factors” are to blame.

A study comparing New York and London over 200 years found the New York homicide rate consistently five times the London rate, although for most of that period residents of both cities had unrestricted access to firearms.

When guns were available in England they were seldom used in crime. A government study for 1890-1892 found an average of one handgun homicide a year in a population of 30 million. But murder rates for both countries are now changing. In 1981 the American rate was 8.7 times the English rate, in 1995 it was 5.7 times the English rate, and by last year it was 3.5 times. With American rates described as “in startling free-fall” and British rates as of October 2002 the highest for 100 years the two are on a path to converge.

The price of British government insistence upon a monopoly of force comes at a high social cost.
First, it is unrealistic. No police force, however large, can protect everyone. Further, hundreds of thousands of police hours are spent monitoring firearms restrictions, rather than patrolling the streets. And changes in the law of self-defence have left ordinary people at the mercy of thugs.
According to Glanville Williams in his Textbook of Criminal Law, self-defence is “now stated in such mitigated terms as to cast doubt on whether it still forms part of the law”.
Nearly a century before that American bumper sticker was slapped on the first bumper, the great English jurist, AV Dicey cautioned: “Discourage self-help, and loyal subjects become the slaves of ruffians.” He knew public safety is not enhanced by depriving people of their right to personal safety.

Joyce Lee Malcolm, professor of history, is author of Guns and Violence: The English Experience, published in June 2002.

A Modern Libertarian: A new Aim for our Coalition- Repeal the hand …

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Why is a Pre 1964 Winchester Model 70 on the C&R list?

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What makes 1964 the magic year for Winchester Model 70 rifles to make them C&R eligible? “To be recognized by ATF as a C&R firearm, a firearm must fall into at least one of the following three categories:1-Firearms which were manufactured at least 50 years prior to the current date, but not including replicas thereof; 2-Firearms which are certified by the curator of a municipal, State, or Federal museum which exhibits firearms to be curios or relics of museum interest; and 3-Any other firearms which derive a substantial part of their monetary value from the fact that they are novel, rare, bizarre, or because of their association with some historical figure, period, or event.”Obviously, it’s not #1, but is there anything of significance that happened in 1964 to these rifles?Thanks.

Why is a Pre 1964 Winchester Model 70 on the C&R list?

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State College Gun Range?

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Really the only gun range in the State College area that is close is the PA Game Commission range at Scotia. Many PaFOA members from this area go there to shoot.

How soon is she leaving? I am sure we can set up a group shoot at the range where there would be plently of guns to shoot and a lot of people to help give instruction (I’ll detail this a bit later)

The safety regulations for the PGC range can be found on the PGC web site and if we get a shoot together they will be explained. Mostly it is common sense. There is NEVER a guarantee that you will not meet a wacko at a range, it happens but very, very, very, VERY, rarely. Again you will be surrounded by very friendly, very safety concerned, mentally stable people. There are no real requirements to shoot at the range, you don’t need a license and if we get a shoot together, you don’t even need to have a gun, again, there will be plenty to shoot.

Prior to any shooting I will have a safety and range etiquette session so that everyone understands what is going to happen. This will give you a chance to ask any questions you may have. REMEMBER, when it comes to firearms and shooting THERE ARE NO STUPID QUESTIONS, DO NOT BE AFRAID TO ASK, that’s how you learn.

See above, and no one will charge you to shoot their guns. We love to get people started in the shooting sports.Don’t worry, everything will be explained, in full detail, about what will happen. You can ask as many questions as you want. If you go to some of the other threads here at PaFOA the “stickys” will give you a lot of information. If you still have questions, just post them here since this thread is started and someone willl answer them.

I will be starting a new thread to see what the response willl be to a Saturday or Sunday shoot at Scotia. I think you may be amazed at how many people will say “I’ll be there and am bringing my x, y, z, guns.

The only thing that you will need to bring to the range is eye protection and ear protection. You can get shooting glasses very cheaply at Wal-Mart, the same with ear protection (or let me know and I’ll pass the word, most shooters have multiples of everything and again they are willing to share).

Again, we need to know when you’ll be leaving town so we can get this set up. It usually takes a couple weeks to get everything ironed out because of peoples plans in the summer time.

If you want to discuss it more, just post here or give me a call at 814-867-0867 and leave a message if I don’t pick up.

State College Gun Range?

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Can anyone recommend a good website with info about Old West firearms?

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Can anyone recommend a good website with information about firearms of the old west? I’m working on a short story now that has a western theme to it. The problem is,I don’t want to pigeonhole my characters by making them all carry Peacemakers and Winchesters and such. Even though they were quite popular,I know not everyone carried Peacemakers back then.

Can anyone recommend a good website with info about Old West firearms?

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