Attention anybody with a 19x or Gen5 19/45!
I backordered a 19x back in December for a smoking deal, but the store decided they're not stocking any more 19xs. I bought a Tier 1 Concealed holster and an Inforce APLc in anticipation of the sweet new carry setup, but I don't feel like spending almost $100 extra on the gun anymore. My loss is your gain. Looking to sell the holster and light, and I'll even donate $15 of the sale to Patrick's 15 and the Mahomies for you. Shoot me a PM if you want details. |
Anybody here know anything about 17 HMR's? I think they would be a fun little pickup truck rifle?
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Yes. I have one. Its a Savage Arms with a target barrel.
Fast but does not buck wind well. No 17 will buck wind well. I no more got home and unboxed the 17HMR to then find out a new 17 was set to hit the market. The Winchester Super Mag. The new .17 WSM is the worlds fastest rim fire. So before you buy the HMR.. Take a good hard look at the win super mag. |
So I won a gun through a local Shrine Club gun raffle.
It's a Beretta 92F Bronze/Black Handgun 9mm. I've never shot or handled a Beretta and only fired a 9 a few times. What kind of a gun did I win myself? |
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Beretta at one time used to be known for their pistols with the 92 being the pinnacle of their success. These days their over under shotguns are all that I would consider spending money on (and those are pricey). |
I think you got a great gun. I'm a little jealous.
I've owned two Beretta 92Fs, and a 96 (.40 S&W). They are really good guns. Very reliable, good accuracy. 92s are large duty-size guns which soaks up felt recoil pretty well, making fast accurate shooting pretty easy. They also were very popular at one time, so there's plenty of spare parts, magazines, holsters, accessories, etc., available everywhere for relatively cheap. They are DA/SA triggers, which some people don't like, and generally require some practice to be fast with. This is particularly true of the 92/96 as the trigger pull in DA is quite long. However, the gun has a relatively long sight-radius and the triggers are fairly smooth despite their length. And the DA/SA system is very safe to use in a defensive situation. They also have fairly large grips, so if you have small hands they can be difficult to operate well. Or you can buy a short trigger unit, I believe. The Beretta 92F is an older design so you might have trouble installing a light (most 92s don't have an accessory rail), and the sights are usually cast on the slide, so replacing the sights will require a gunsmith that can cut your slide. Though your new 92 might have modern replaceable sights installed on it. Overall, everything about the 92F is well-engineered. The controls are where they're supposed to be, large enough to use easily, and they all function in a positive manner. Under normal use it will give you decades of flawless operation. It's size might prevent you from using it as a carry gun, unless you're a pretty big person, but as a home defense/truck gun it would be perfect. I should add that Beretta has been making the 92 for more than 40 years; all the kinks have been worked out of the gun. It's about as perfect in execution as a gun can be for its type. |
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https://www.budsgunshop.com/images/104728.jpg Definite score on your part. Nice pistol. Probably a little too big and heavy to be a good carry gun, but a great choice for a home defender. Congratulations! |
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Sweet gun , you will love it !
Shoot it often, you will like it! |
my new favorite, 3in shotgun !!https://i.imgur.com/oeRWvVX.jpg
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I checked and I was right, they make a short reach trigger aftermarket kit for that 92. My recommendation, should you desire one, is Wilson Combat. You should be able to find them on Brownell's website, possibly MidwayUSA, as well as Wilson Combat. Note: a 'short reach trigger kit' does not shorten the length of pull/draw of the trigger at all. A difference in the contour of the trigger shortens the actual distance from the backstrap to the front of the trigger face by about 2 millimeters. The trigger draw length will remain the same, you just don't need the same length of finger to get your booger hooker onto the face of the trigger. |
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The only issue I have with the Beretta as a home defender is the external safety. Unless you practice/familiarize yourself to the point where disengaging the safety becomes second nature, which most of us won't do, if a situation arises (and those situations tend to come unannounced), you may forget that it's on. And that's really bad. The less you have to think about the better.
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Or you can do what I always did and just leave the safety off. The gun is a DA/SA already, so for the first round the gun operates exactly like a typical revolver; you don't have safeties on revolvers because you don't need one. The long DA trigger pull is your safety. |
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