There are always exceptions to the rule. You are a fine example and that and why you are cool. Those guns in the pic are incredibly beautiful. Hats off to the smaller caliber.Ted, I think there's a lot of people that have that view of fine guns. I hunt and clay target shoot all my fine shotguns. The competition clay shotgun sports shooters fire thousands of rounds a month for many years. Those specialized guns are typically heavy over/unders from makers like Perazzi, Krieghoff and Beretta with guns starting around $15k and going up several times over that. Autos and pumps just don't have the dynamics and durability for those games. While I've dabbled in competition clays and owned a Krieghoff and some Beretta comp guns, I prefer hunting to clay games. So, many of my fine guns are designed for hunting. Some are 100 years old and shoot modern ammunition. Some are relatively new. I gravitate toward light side by side guns in small gauges. Many of my side by side guns are .410 bore, which I hunt with. Small gauge side by side fine vintage guns tend to be more rare. I don't hunt with 12 gauge much, since a friend said "once you pass the Kentucky Fried Chicken joint on the way out of town, in your expensive pickup, full of expensive guns, dogs, and equipment, hundreds or thousands of miles from home, you've tossed out all practicality." So, I hunt with guns and dogs that make me smile.
The two guns below are .410 bore. They are both Italian modern guns and have many birds and miles on them.
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while nothing fancy, it is from Remington's first run of 7mm mag verified by Remington...1962...stainless barrel that was blued....my Dad put his order in early to get a first run gun...Shoots really nice...weighs a tonI guess I'm the only one left on the planet from ancient times when beauty of a gun meant rare walnut figured wood stocks and hand engraving art.
the other end of the spectrum for .410'sTed, I think there's a lot of people that have that view of fine guns. I hunt and clay target shoot all my fine shotguns. The competition clay shotgun sports shooters fire thousands of rounds a month for many years. Those specialized guns are typically heavy over/unders from makers like Perazzi, Krieghoff and Beretta with guns starting around $15k and going up several times over that. Autos and pumps just don't have the dynamics and durability for those games. While I've dabbled in competition clays and owned a Krieghoff and some Beretta comp guns, I prefer hunting to clay games. So, many of my fine guns are designed for hunting. Some are 100 years old and shoot modern ammunition. Some are relatively new. I gravitate toward light side by side guns in small gauges. Many of my side by side guns are .410 bore, which I hunt with. Small gauge side by side fine vintage guns tend to be more rare. I don't hunt with 12 gauge much, since a friend said "once you pass the Kentucky Fried Chicken joint on the way out of town, in your expensive pickup, full of expensive guns, dogs, and equipment, hundreds or thousands of miles from home, you've tossed out all practicality." So, I hunt with guns and dogs that make me smile.
The two guns below are .410 bore. They are both Italian modern guns and have many birds and miles on them.
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Who made the knife?Here is a picture of my practice pistols and my carry knife.
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Remington went with a SS barrel on their Remington 700 7mm Rem mag because Winchester had developed a barrel errosion stigma with their 264 Win mag and the 7mm Rem mag was their marketing response to the 264 WM. In fact, the 264 and 7 Rem mag share the same case dimensions. I have made 264 cases from 7 Rem mag cases, by simply necking them. But the errosion reputation of the 264 is real. I've shot out a barrel and a friend finally shot out a barrel. Both after a lifetime of hunting. The 7mm Rem mag turned out to be easier on barrels and the use of SS barrels by Remington for their M700 7 Rem mag was short lived.while nothing fancy, it is from Remington's first run of 7mm mag verified by Remington...1962...stainless barrel that was blued....my Dad put his order in early to get a first run gun...Shoots really nice...weighs a ton
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Cool, thanks
That is a cold steel knifeWho made the knife?
I've got a few of the Ruger Mark II-III. I just love them.Nice ruger. I still have an old slabside .22
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I'm a little dissapointed it took me 14 pages to find a Super Blackhawk. Mine is remarkably accurate in the right hands, not my hands so much but the right hands, haha.just a couple...
Benelli SuperNova - 12 ga
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Dan Wesson Valor - .45 ACP
HK USP - .40
HK P2000 - .40
HK P30L - .40
HK MP5 - .22
IWI Desert Eagle - .50AE
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IWI Tavor 7 - 7.62
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Ithaca SxS (1903) (w/Damascus barrels) - 12 ga
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Jaeger Dakota (Italian Ruger Vaquero copy) - .44-40
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Marlin 336 - .30-30
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Mossberg 500 - 12 ga
Olympic Arms AR-15 - 5.56
PTR 91 (HK-G3) - 7.62
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Ruger Mark II Target stainless- .22
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Ruger SP-101 stainless - .38 sp
Ruger Super Blackhawk stainless - .44 mag
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Ruger Super Single Six stainless - .22 LR / .22 WMR
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Ruger Vaquero - .44-40
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Sig P226 - .40
Sig P239 - .40
Snider-Enfield (1866) - .57
Springfield (1863) - .58
S&W M&P Shield 40 - .40
Taurus 856 (2, one stainless, one black) - .38 sp
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Walther P22 - .22
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Walther P99 - .40
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Walther PPK S - .380 ACP
Ward's Western Field (Savage) - 12 ga
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Winchester 1873 (1883) - .44-40
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Winchester 1873 (new Miroku build) - .44-40
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more pics later.