miracle guns

spudwrench

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I was watching some old Highway Patrol episodes with Brodrick Crawford this morning and was wondering what kind of handguns they were using. Looked like Smiths but apparently had some miracle laser or radar controlled sights because no one aimed and there were bodies everywhere. Wish I could find one of those weapons.
 
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The famous "Bowling Bullet"

There is more truth to mgjohn's posting than he may have realized. It wasn't the guns, but rather the target seeking ammo that they used. These rounds were invented in 1947 by Carl Elwood Bowling in Garden Grove, California. In 1948, having completed ballistic and target acquisition testing, Bowling opened a small factory in Culver City, California, virtually in the shadow of the now-defunct MGM Studios. As with many inventors, Bowling was under-capitalized and struggled to bring his product to market. Unfortunately he was not successful and filed for bankruptcy in November of 1948, five months after opening his Culver City factory. In February of 1949 the contents of the factory were sold at public auction and all of the prototype and first run ammunition was acquired by Martin Retting. Some of this ammo was purchased from Retting by the armorer at MGM Studios. Impressed with the results, but unaware that there would be no more of it ever produced, he arranged to demonstrate it to a select group of studio executives and members of the Directors Guild. Both groups were highly impressed, and left the demonstration convinced that Bowling's Sure Shot ammo would be used by law enforcement officers everywhere. To ensure that future films and television programs would not only be entertaining, but technically accurate, they decided to depict cops using "Bowling's Bullets" in all of their productions.

And what of Carl Elwood Bowling? Following the failure of his Culver City ammunition factory he went on to invent an automobile engine that delivered more than 100 miles-per-gallon when fitted to a 1950 Packard. The rest is history.
 
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I was watching some old Highway Patrol episodes with Brodrick Crawford this morning and was wondering what kind of handguns they were using. Looked like Smiths but apparently had some miracle laser or radar controlled sights because no one aimed and there were bodies everywhere. Wish I could find one of those weapons.

And the A Team, a crack squad of professional mercanaries, send thousands of rounds downrange & never hit a soul.

...except when one lone round would make a vehicle roll over and explode like a fireworks factory.:eek:
 
I remember Efrem Zimbalist jr., in "The FBI" series, took out a guy on a roof about 100 ft up and 200 yds away with a model 36. That's shooting Hollywood style. Joe
 
I remember Efrem Zimbalist jr., in "The FBI" series, took out a guy on a roof about 100 ft up and 200 yds away with a model 36. That's shooting Hollywood style. Joe

The forward thrust while pulling the trigger enhances accuracy...
 
As much as I like John Wayne, some of his movies, and quite a few other Westerns of the time, had some of the most incredible gun fights known to man. I remember El Dorado, where John Wayne drew, fired and hit Johnny Crawford on top of a rock outcropping that looked to be about 150-200 yards easy. Watch the movie Warlock sometime (the western not the cheesy 80's horror film) and you will see some shots of Richard Widmark and Henry Fonda making shots like you can't imagine. But the best is still Clint Eastwood on the back of a horse at several hundred yards, shooting the rope off of Eli Wallach's neck in The Good, the Bad, & The Ugly.
 
I like that scene in the Magnifient Seven when one of the magnificent, maybe Yul Brynner, drops a bandito off his galloping horse at a coupla hundred yards with one shot from his trusty six shooter. A young admirer says, "What an incredible shot!" The shooter says, "I was aimin' for the horse."
 
I like that scene in the Magnifient Seven when one of the magnificent, maybe Yul Brynner, drops a bandito off his galloping horse at a coupla hundred yards with one shot from his trusty six shooter. A young admirer says, "What an incredible shot!" The shooter says, "I was aimin' for the horse."

That was James Coburn.
 
I met broderick crawford when I was a universal studio guard and we talked a little about his program. I was surprised as he was nice and civil with me. I hadnt liked his brusque attitude on the show and guess I had prejudged him. Several years prior I had flown with his helicopter pilot that he always used on the show. Crawford told me he had dropped into a fire and got killed. He had flown me on a huge fire in sequoia national park. Roughly the era he fimed that I had a uncle by marrage who`s brother was Herbert Null a inspecter on the CHP in southern calif, he retired as 2nd in command at sacramento.
There must have be a lot of benifits on that job. About in 1955 or1956 right after disneyland opened herb gave us free tickets for disneyland!
 
I met broderick crawford when I was a universal studio guard and we talked a little about his program. I was surprised as he was nice and civil with me. I hadnt liked his brusque attitude on the show and guess I had prejudged him. Several years prior I had flown with his helicopter pilot that he always used on the show. Crawford told me he had dropped into a fire and got killed. He had flown me on a huge fire in sequoia national park. Roughly the era he fimed that I had a uncle by marrage who`s brother was Herbert Null a inspecter on the CHP in southern calif, he retired as 2nd in command at sacramento.
There must have be a lot of benifits on that job. About in 1955 or1956 right after disneyland opened herb gave us free tickets for disneyland!

I wonder if guys like Mr. Crawford, Jack Webb, Martin Milner, etc.etc.etc. ever truly realize that the characters they portray actually influence people in real life to go into certain fields....
I knew a lot of paramedics in the day that did because of Kevin Tighe and Randy Mantooth on Saturday nights.
 
I would love to know where you got the old Highway Patrol movies. I loved that show.

Here in the Knoxville area there's a station called RTV for retro tv. I think it's actually produced by one of the larger churches here , not sure though. It also has Dragnet, the Adam 12 series , the Emergency series and the Alfred Hitchcock series. A real trip back through my childhood.
 
Never saw Colt's in uniformed hands on Highway Patrol

Matthews had a Model 10 2" and his troopers had Model 10 6". Most bad guys seemed to carry the 4" Model 10. All the episodes I've seen that was it. Only Colt I remember seeing was in the hands of a bad guy and it was a 1911. In one episode, Matthews and his partner are pinned down behind a boulder by a guy with a rifle and way out of range. Matthews borrowed his guys six inch Model 10 and "tried" to make like a rifle with it...with no success.
 
There was one that was so far-fetched that I still remember it. It was the 70's TV series "Cannon" where the hero was a private detective who weighed on the high side of 300 lbs. In one episode the bad guy was some kind of gun enthusiast who had won competitions as evidence by his numerous trophies. As I remember it in the climatic shoot-out Cannon, one cheeseburger away from a massive coronary, was chasing bad guy around some sand dunes and the bad guy was armed and shooting at Cannon with an AR-15. How he could miss a target the size of a trophy black bear was unbelievable enough but the best part was when Cannon, who in real life would have been huffing like the little engine that could and sweating like a mason doing a math problem, dropped him with a single shot from his .38 snubbie.
I was just a kid with no experience with handguns at the time but even I called BS on that one.
 
One better on the same show!

Cannon ran after a guy driving away on a stolen school bus...he managed to catch up to the speeding bus and enter through the rear emergency exit door whereupon he and the bad guy engaged in a shootout.

Gave new meaning to the term "jumped the shark"
 
1950 Highway Patrol

Matthews had a Model 10 2" and his troopers had Model 10 6". Most bad guys seemed to carry the 4" Model 10. All the episodes I've seen that was it. Only Colt I remember seeing was in the hands of a bad guy and it was a 1911. In one episode, Matthews and his partner are pinned down behind a boulder by a guy with a rifle and way out of range. Matthews borrowed his guys six inch Model 10 and "tried" to make like a rifle with it...with no success.

I just viewed a episode on "YouTube"and "The last Standing Knight" is correct.
Broderick Crawford did use a S&W Model 10 2" carried strong side and the uniform officers used S&W Model 10 6".
I have no idea how I thought that Brodrick Crawford used a Colt Cobra carried "Cross Draw" and the uniform officers used Colt Official Police with "Clam Shell" holsters.
My Bad,
Jimmy
 
Watching some of the old Highway Patrol episodes recently made me start thinking VERY seriously about getting a 4 or 6 inch tapered barrel Model 10...starting to lean toward 4 inch for CCW:)!
 
I watched a film while I was at the Treasury Academy of a NOPD Officer drop to his knee, place his off arm across his chest, draw his S&W Model 15 with his other hand and take aim at the top of the Holiday Inn, approximated 250 yards away and fire six round (down range). I was impressed.
This was in 1973 and I was easily impressed in those days.
Folks back in the old days were a lot better shots then than now. I know this to be true cause I watch Gene Autry on the Cowboy Channel.

Rule 303
 
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