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Tavor musings

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Originally published at VolkStudio Blog. You can comment here or there.

I have a left-hand bolt for my Tavor but had no idea how to install it. At this weekend’s Bullpup Convention at Rockcastle Shooting Center, Casey Flack from IWI had an armorer’s class on doing the conversion. It takes basic tools, mostly correctly sized punches, and the ability to follow instructions closely for about twenty minutes. Not the kind of changeover that can be done between shooters at a range, but not rocket surgery, either.

Since Tavor is “unrestricted” in Canada, it’s quite popular there. SInce they have no restrictions on short barrels, I suspect the X95 (13″ barrel) will eventually show up there as well. I saw a sample at the convention, it’s a nice, trim design with magazine release accessible to the strong hand without moving from the pistol grip.

I also discovered that the tritium front sight works well with both eyes open. In low light, that’s a huge advantage — the sight picture is nice and bright even with the relatively small rear aperture.

Geissele trigger got installed — that took all of a minute. The trigger pull got improved greatly but, strangely, racking the bolt got harder. There’s now a slight snag in the middle of the stroke. I will post comparative photos later.

Quite a few Tavors were in use at the event, and I was favorably impressed with reliability. So far, I’ve not actually witnessed a malfunction with any rifle of that model.


My P1914 is back from restoration

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Originally published at VolkStudio Blog. You can comment here or there.

P1914_MVC00049

I got this rifle back around 2000 for $60. It has very little wood left and kicked most viciously on firing. It was, however, quite accurate. I had a “speedlock” kits installed in it, which made it cock on opening and also shortened the lock time.

_MG_6387

Later, I picked up an original stock and front sight protector at a gun show, only to find out that the barrel was shorter than spec.

_MG_6389

The rifle didn’t look right, but at least it didn’t hurt to shoot anymore. Unlike SMLE, this one fed round nose soft point ammunition very well.

The wood and the metal remained ugly, and I wasn’t a fan of the unprotected front sight blade. In the end, the gun went to Spectrum Coating in Cocoa, FL and then, as a great surprise to me, to Keltec.

It returned with all metal Cerakoted clearcoat black, tan and OD green. The wood of the stock, too ugly to refinish, was hydro-printed with wood grain pattern.  And a .308 flashhider was installed to make up for the missing barrel and also to tame muzzle flash in low light. Keltec did the machining and Steve from Spectrum did the rest of the restoration. I have nice friends. Even the nice hunting ammo was a present from Lucky Gunner.

I can’t wait to try it out at the range! Many years ago, I promised myself to take a deer with this rifle…looks like that plan is closer to reality now than it has ever been.

 

Bullpup SKS

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Originally published at VolkStudio Blog. You can comment here or there.

A very clever and ergonomic adaptation seen at the Bullpup Conference. The stock was made by Shernic Gun Works, and the resulting contraption worked reliably with 20-round Tapco AK magazines. With the 2x pistol scope, it was quite accurate out to 200 yards. The owner plans on putting a 4x scope with a larger objective on next to improve the ability to see distant targets.

The bullpup is much shorter than the original rifle, a good deal lighter and better balanced. In my opinion, it lacks only a flash hider to be a viable fighting tool. I would have also preferred a red dot to the scope. Unlike the original, this one allows inserting magazine with the bolt closed.

 

 

Halloween comes early.

Report on PPU 270Win 130gr load

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Originally published at VolkStudio Blog. You can comment here or there.

PPU_270Win_130gr_0525_edited

My deerslaying friend Don wrote: Finally, got around to trying the .270W PPU cartridges you gave me awhile back. They shot as good as my custom loads. I was able to group an inch @ 100 yds. I can recommend them. The brass looks like it has been annealed,

Slow-motion video in HD?

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Originally published at VolkStudio Blog. You can comment here or there.

Now that even some cell phones offer decent quality 240fps slow motion, I’d like to see if slow-mo is available in HD resolution…for my purposes, even 720×1280 (Youtube HD) might work, though full 1920×1080 would be preferable. I tried little Sony camcorders, but the footage quality was terrible. Any recommendations?

Update: turns out that my Sony A7R works well in 60P–>24P. If I mix it with 5D2 footage, then it’s 60P–>30P, also usable.

Rapid fire with ARAK21 SBR

Making the decision to defend yourself.

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Originally published at VolkStudio Blog. You can comment here or there.

Imagine a mosquito landed on your arm. Would you swat it? Simple socialist logic suggests that you should let it be. After all, all biting mosquitoes are single mothers who need your blood to complete their reproductive cycle. Moreover, the sting isn’t fatal or even disabling to you, merely slightly itchy. Transmission of malaria and West Nile disease is only a factor in some areas, so there’s no long-term threat to your life and health. Let the mosquito be!

Somehow, I get an impression that you would kill that poor, benighted insect that was only following its instincts. So you have no trouble using deadly force to stop a small imposition on you by a being with no moral sense. Fine! Let’s talk about cute, cuddly puppies instead.

Imagine going on a hike and getting surrounded by a pack of canines, wolves or feral dogs. They are obviously hungry and intend to kill and eat you, not necessarily in that order. Like the mosquito, they are driven by necessity. They have no concept of your rights and act quite naturally. Should you give yourself to them generously and nourishingly?

What, you are not keen on being eaten? You really are no friend of nature! And what’s that about a stout stick I am seeing in your hand? Don’t you know that an animal with a broken leg has no chance of survival in the wild!

From the two examples, it follows that you — and most other people — have no trouble using deadly force to rebuff impositions by animals who are only doing what comes naturally to them. A wild animal has no moral sense that it has to ignore in order to prey on you, and so it is as innocent in thought as it is determined to get your flesh and blood.

Now consider an attack by a person. Preying on a member of its own species for food is not natural for humans or apes, as we are not typically cannibals. Attacking to gain material or reproductive advantage is rather more common, but usually not necessary for survival. So a person who attacks you for gain or spite is doing so by choice and not by compulsion. Your life and health are of less concern to him than the expected gain, however minimal. And that disregard comes from a person who should have had at least some exposure to the ethical concept of nonaggression.

Should a person whose immediate survival does not hinge on attacking you and who should know better be given more consideration than the ethically ignorant mosquito and wolf? If so, why? While you are thinking about that, consider also that a person who preys on you won’t change his ways after one attack.

Animals who develop a taste for blood, keep it for a lifetime. Your pain are as much a positive reinforcement for them as the proceeds of brigandage. And worse, the screams of your kids or parents are are turn-on as well. It’s conceivable that the spirit of self-sacrifice would lead a person to be a passive victim, though being victimized by a nominal human is no less painful or more romantic than being chewed by by a hyena or a crocodile. Even if you don’t mind death or a lifetime disability from injuries, what of the safety of family and friends? An attacker who kills or maims you will be encourage to do the same to them, while an attacker who gets scared off but not neutralized will just pick easier victims the next time. If a healthy adult proves too dangerous, a human predator will go for a child or an elderly invalid, just as their counterparts in the wild do.

Technical details of self-defense are easy to figure out. The first-world problem we face is making the decision that Human Life is Worth Defending in general, and yours in particular.  Other people can’t make that decision for you. You can.


Roll call: Boise, Idaho

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Originally published at VolkStudio Blog. You can comment here or there.

I will be there next week for a photo shoot with Gemtech, PWS, Lucid, Keltec and other companies. A couple of my models are coming in from California and Minnesota. I’d like to know who is in the area — perhaps we would be able to connect.

Making the decision to defend yourself.

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Originally published at VolkStudio Blog. You can comment here or there.

Imagine a mosquito landed on your arm. Would you swat it? Simple socialist logic suggests that you should let it be. After all, all biting mosquitoes are single mothers who need your blood to complete their reproductive cycle. Moreover, the sting isn’t fatal or even disabling to you, merely slightly itchy. Transmission of malaria and West Nile disease is only a factor in some areas, so there’s no long-term threat to your life and health. Let the mosquito be!

Somehow, I get an impression that you would kill that poor, benighted insect that was only following its instincts. So you have no trouble using deadly force to stop a small imposition on you by a being with no moral sense. Fine! Let’s talk about cute, cuddly puppies instead.

Imagine going on a hike and getting surrounded by a pack of canines, wolves or feral dogs. They are obviously hungry and intend to kill and eat you, not necessarily in that order. Like the mosquito, they are driven by necessity. They have no concept of your rights and act quite naturally. Should you give yourself to them generously and nourishingly?

What, you are not keen on being eaten? You really are no friend of nature! And what’s that about a stout stick I am seeing in your hand? Don’t you know that an animal with a broken leg has no chance of survival in the wild!

From the two examples, it follows that you — and most other people — have no trouble using deadly force to rebuff impositions by animals who are only doing what comes naturally to them. A wild animal has no moral sense that it has to ignore in order to prey on you, and so it is as innocent in thought as it is determined to get your flesh and blood.

Now consider an attack by a person. Preying on a member of its own species for food is not natural for humans or apes, as we are not typically cannibals. Attacking to gain material or reproductive advantage is rather more common, but usually not necessary for survival. So a person who attacks you for gain or spite is doing so by choice and not by compulsion. Your life and health are of less concern to him than the expected gain, however minimal. And that disregard comes from a person who should have had at least some exposure to the ethical concept of nonaggression.

Should a person whose immediate survival does not hinge on attacking you and who should know better be given more consideration than the ethically ignorant mosquito and wolf? If so, why? While you are thinking about that, consider also that a person who preys on you won’t change his ways after one attack.

Animals who develop a taste for blood, keep it for a lifetime. Your pain are as much a positive reinforcement for them as the proceeds of brigandage. And worse, the screams of your kids or parents are turn-on as well. It’s conceivable that the spirit of self-sacrifice would lead a person to be a passive victim, though being victimized by a nominal human is no less painful or more romantic than being chewed by by a hyena or a crocodile. Even if you don’t mind death or a lifetime disability from injuries, what of the safety of family and friends? An attacker who kills or maims you will be encourage to do the same to them, while an attacker who gets scared off but not neutralized will just pick easier victims the next time. If a healthy adult proves too dangerous, a human predator will go for a child or an elderly invalid, just as their counterparts in the wild do.

Technical details of self-defense are easy to figure out. The first-world problem we face is making the decision that Human Life is Worth Defending in general, and yours in particular.  Other people can’t make that decision for you. You can.

Need help with coordinating a project in Boise, ID

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Originally published at VolkStudio Blog. You can comment here or there.

The location at which I was set to do photos, video and some live fire just became unavailable. Neither of my two local coordinators have been reachable in several days, so I need to come up with plan B by Tuesday or next week. Anyone able to assist?

Need help with coordinating a project in Boise, ID

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Originally published at VolkStudio Blog. You can comment here or there.

The location at which I was set to do photos, video and some live fire just became unavailable. Neither of my two local coordinators have been reachable in several days, so I need to come up with plan B by Tuesday October 6. Anyone able to assist?

Crosman MAR177 upper for AR-15: new on AllOutdoor

Boise get-together, Saturday 11th

Where to get a power adapter from Swedish to American outlet?

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Originally published at VolkStudio Blog. You can comment here or there.

I have a Swedish visitor here and she needs to plug in her laptop. All my web searches turn out the reverse (US–>Sweden) of what I need. Suggestions, please?


Paging Wilhelm Tell!

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Originally published at VolkStudio Blog. You can comment here or there.

I had a great time at the range today with several friends. More photos after I get my new computer installed on Saturday.

Rapid fire

I really like vz58 in .223

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Originally published at VolkStudio Blog. You can comment here or there.

While 7.62×39 version is cute, tiny and pretty punchy, the .223 is more of an all-around fighting rifle. Using the same barrel blank as the 7.62, the 5.56mm version is more accurate, heats up slower and has less recoil. In fact, with the loud but effective muzzle brake, recoil is closer to a semi-auto 22wmr than to other centerfire rifles. I haven’t scopes this one yet (that would require a stock with a riser), but even irons provide less than 3MOA vs. 5MOA of the 7.62 variant (again, with iron sights). In the near future, I will have to compare the efficiency of the AR15 magazines vs. using the original rock and lock mags without the adapter.

Unwinding between bouts of work

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Originally published at VolkStudio Blog. You can comment here or there.

My tech support is in town.

Ingram 45ACp submachine gun with a home-made (properly tax stamped) Scionics-type silencer. No usable sights (needs a red dot) but can be point shot fairly well out to 35-40 yards.

Inland M1 carbines back in production.

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Originally published at VolkStudio Blog. You can comment here or there.

Inland Manufacturing is once again making M1 carbines done right: ladder sights with proper detents, round bolts, good reliability and accuracy. Had a fun shoot with them. They even fed Hornady red tip defense ammo which my own carbine won’t feed. Inland is also making M1911A1 pistols. I got to plink with one at a 1/2 size steel silhouette and 100% hits at 35 yards were pretty easy.

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