Guns of the Cold War: SKS M59/66 Rifle
The designer of the SKS rifle, Sergei Gavrilovich Simonov, went to work on the design during WWII, but most readers […]
The designer of the SKS rifle, Sergei Gavrilovich Simonov, went to work on the design during WWII, but most readers […]
The CZ 600+ modular rifles feature an advanced Silent, Ergonomic, and Ambidextrous safety, a quick 4-position adjustable trigger, and an innovative interchangeable barrel system.
With all of the firearms in Ruger’s catalog, it might be easy to overlook the American Ranch Rifle series. While they might not be as “cool” or “sexy” as the pistols and autoloading rifles, there’s definitely a place for one of them in your gun locker.
Assuming I ran some hollowpoint defensive loads through it and confirmed it’s reliable with one or the other of the lowers and magazine combos, it could make for a very short, very handy and easy to shoot house or car gun.
Moving forward with our series of Cold War era guns, the next long gun is one that was originally listed
Two new guns from Smith & Wesson just dropped. First is the M&P FPC 22LR, a natural rimfire line extension
What the hell have I gotten myself into? I blame Mark Keefe. Yeah, that Mark Keefe, the one who’s the
All four models, chambered in 5.56, share a 7075 T6 aluminum upper and lower receiver, ambidextrous controls, a Radian Raptor charging handle, Williams folding sights, and an M&P grip that ships with four interchangeable backstraps.
While muddle-headed freedom haters want to legislatively limit our access to four- and six-position adjustable stocks on AR-15s, all they accomplish is making it harder to fit the gun to the user, decreasing accuracy.
Think about a society where there are 50x as many silencers and SBRs. That’s a different planet than what we’re used to. It’s where we’re headed. And it can create the kind of momentum that could be used to take these things out of the NFA altogether.