Sailor29
Member
The dinosaur at the range is usually me.
Bunch of us dinosaurs agree with your post.
The dinosaur at the range is usually me.
Later, I got out an FN-49 and the bafflement reached epic proportions. A semi-auto with wood furniture? Yes, one of them did ask if it was a Garand.![]()
Not really-it was a pretty big gong-maybe 2 feet acrossCaj; that's really good shooting with a kit gun. I remember when I was about 25, shooting on the US Army Air Defense Pistol Team, I shot my S&W 41 at 100 yds; lying sort of supine with my hand on my knee. It was very steady but I only shot about a 12 inch group.
While I guess I qualify as a little dinoI have had one or two puzzled looks at ranges with my wheel guns, lever action and all metal pistols.
The most recent was at a indoor range and the loud boom of the warmer .45 Colt rounds I was shooting got the attention of ua 20 something two bays down. He came over when I was getting some ammo out of my range bag and asked what I was shooting, showed him the Blackhawk and thought it was neat as "You don't see many cowboy guns." and asked what it was chambered in. He never had heard of the .45 Colt!!!Think I might have won him over after letting him shoot it.
How can I not chime in? 70+ bad dominant eye, shooting right handed with my left eye only; Ruger old model Blackhawk .45Colt. Standing next to the guys and gals banging hundreds of rounds at the 7 yd target and waiting for them to switch clips. Then I shoot and hit the fifty yard gong (so they hear it) in between each of their reloads. The concept of fun does change when you become the 'old guy'. J
Even the gun rags are starting to do handgun "testing" at 7 yds. I suppose that if one never intends to put meat on the table or make a longer shot for defense, then it doesn't matter. Me?, I like the challenge. I do shoot my defensive guns at closer ranges too, but I have to shoot those longer ranges once in a while. How in the world can someone expect to develop good trigger control unless he shoots at 25 yds. or greater, once in a while? The tactical group seldom do any live training from the holster or magazine changes. Since I brought up the magazine change topic, if most shootouts occur at 7 yds or less and consist of only 2-3 shots, I'd have to ask the tactical crowd, why practice magazine changes?I have noticed as well that hardly anyone shoots a handgun at 25 yards or more. I have been on the range at 25 and had others move in on me and shoot at 3-7 yards which ended my shooting. One "gentleman" garbed in all the latest "tactical" c--- uh stuff could not understand why anyone shot a revolver at 25 yds. I informed him that if I wanted to poke holes in paper at 3 yards I would use a long sharp stick as it is cheaper and quieter. I don't think I made a convert. Yes, I am a dinosaur!
I never anticipated the curiosity and befuddlement I experienced at the range today.
The other shooters present had apparently never seen or even HEARD OF the guns I was shooting!
I mean, who doesn't know what an M2 Springfield .22 is?
Or a Winchester 52C?
Even the pretty mundane Winchester 61 pump gun drew confused glances!
And the handguns!
"Well, son, this is a Colt Officer's Model Target, a .22 revolver, and yes, it will hit the bull at 50 yards if I can see that far!"
"That? Just a garden variety Walther Olympia, made in 1936. Shoots pretty well, too!"
"Oh, that's my favorite! It's a Smith & Wesson Combat Masterpiece--one of the first .22s, made in 1950. The grips? Um, they're Ropers, like the ones on the Officer's Model Target I showed you. Yes, they are quite nice. Thanks!"
"This big one here? It's a .44. No, not a Magnum. It's a .44 Special, made back in the fifties. The nineteen fifties! You, know, when Truman was President? Truman! Harry S!
"So, tell me, son--do your guns come in any colors besides black? No? Pity."
Do replica oldies count? My favorite shooter is my 1892 lever action .357 with a 24 inch octagon barrel. Its new, but its special to me.
I forgot to mention that I have gotten a few looks with this 1909 vintage Single Shot Second Model. What amazes people is that this was at 25 yards and of course, it is a single shot, which means it has to be loaded and re-aim each time before it is fired. One guy at the range shook his head in disbelief that a single shot can shoot this well, and when I told him it was over 100 years old, he was even more shocked!
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I don't think I've ever let anyone fire an M1 carbine that didn't ask where they could find one.A while back I took my Inland M1 Carbine to the range and a man and his 10 year old son approached me while I was reloading my magazines. Apparently, the son plays a video game that features the M1 Carbine and it was his favorite weapon in the game, so he wanted to see a real one. I did him one better and let him fire a few rounds, after instructing him on how to operate the gun, and made his day. Maybe he's a dinosaur in the makingAt any rate, it's always nice to talk and shoot with people who appreciate the old dinosaur guns.