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Vlad G

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Posts posted by Vlad G


  1. 5 hours ago, Scorpio64 said:

    Snap caps, practice, become awesome.

    Practice certainly helps, but it needs to be practice that matches what you are going to be doing. Pumping the gun while standing still is sufficiently different then doing it on the move, doing it while mounting or dismounting the gun, doing it while handling recoil, while your hands are sweaty, etc.

    • Like 2

  2. 32 minutes ago, 45Frank said:

    I rarely visit NJ anymore due to the NJ Gestapo.
    When you enter NJ from PA on the Turnpike it's very common to see half dozen Secret Service Police (NJ ST. Police) pulling cars over from Southern States. Especially those with NRA Stickers or Pro Gun Stickers. Then ya get your vehicle stripped for ZERO REASON!
    Has one SS Agent make my daughter who was 5 yrs old at the time sit on the ground in 25* temps so he could search my SUV!!! Never said a word after he ripped my SUV apart just got in his car and left. This is why people dislike LEO!!!!
    Ya love NJ!!! LOL!!!

     

    Err .. hold on. One, I've never seen this border police you are speaking of, but maybe it exists. Secondly, did you ask them what was the probable cause for searching your vehicle?  I'm not sure they can do that unless they have a cause or you have granted them permission, so what was the cause they told you they had?

     

    • Like 1

  3. I would say the most common one is Invictus Practical, that's what I use. You also see a lot of the Carbon Arms and more recently Safari land. Taccom's aren't bad, but I definitely prefer the Invictus myself, I can go prone in top of them and the shells will still be there when I get up.


  4. 23 minutes ago, voyager9 said:

    And SCOTUS can't address the circuit split without a case that challenges it, right?  So we're still F'd for 5-10 years

    Its always a long game, the other side always plays and we should too. It does however make it a lot more likely that SCOTUS will have to take the next case that comes to them. That doesn't guarantee a win btw.

    • Like 1

  5. It is friking genius, hey are playing a much smarter game then most people realize. They read the tea leafs,  and know that congress wants to do "something". 

    By doing what they are doing, they take the wind out of "evil NRA is pro bump-stock", they point out it was the Obama era ATF that approved them and they are urging the ATF to look at them. That means that if the ATF reclassifies them, it takes the wind out of legislative actions that could be broader and dumber and could later be undone again with just and administrative change 

    Before people are ready to burn their NRA cards like 70's bra's, consider that they have some pretty smart people working there, they are not the most powerful lobby for nothing. 

    • Like 6

  6. Most of the published manufacturers ammo velocities will based on 20" barrels, and sometimes as long as 24". Few publish velocities for shorter barrels. M193 is nominally 3,260 fps from a 20" barrel but you are using a 16" barrel you are going to see significantly lower velocities. Depending on individual barrel, powder, etc you may be as low as 3,000 fps which will make a significant difference as the range gets longer and will throw all the math into disarray, and a high sight over bore only makes those errors larger. If you really want to know your trajectory you must know how fast the bullets are leaving YOUR gun, not even one like it. 


  7. I dunno if Ballistic is available on Android, I use it on an iphone. Strelok should be available on both, and both work equally well with Strelok having more reticle information. 

    I think that getting used to these sort of apps is really important specially if you want to make calculations on the range. I often do my maths on the range with chrono out to measure the velocity and paper targets to verify the results. Once you have it figured out once, you dont have to worry about unless you change ammo. 


  8. Use a ballistic calculator on your phone. Plug in your scope line over bore height, your bullet and bullet velocity, and start playing with different zero's in the app and look at the resulting trajectories.

    Keep in mind that different bullets at different velocities will behave very differently, so pick your bullet wisely.

    There are a few apps you can choose from, Strelok and Ballistic first come to mind.

    One you find a trajectory that matches your preference, look at its zero distance and use that or look at the offset at 100 and zero at 100 so you have the same offset. Then verify at different distances that the trajectory matches what was calculated.

     


  9. On 9/10/2017 at 6:22 AM, diamondd817 said:

    I also find I am more accurate and have better control of the rifle this way. 

    I suggest a simple experiment you may want to conduct. Obtain a broom stick or something equivalent, about 4-5 long to exaggerate the physics a bit.Shoulder it, place your two hands on it in various locations, while trying to turn on and off a light switch with the far end (or a similarly small item, like a screw or something). You will quickly notice that the further forward your support hand is touching the stick the easier it is to touch the target.  The closer to the muzzle end that you can hold a rifle the better control you are going to have, assuming you are not overextending your support arm or locking your elbow.

    • Like 1

  10. On 8/26/2017 at 10:54 PM, High Exposure said:

    At 300 yards I was faster with my RDS than a lot of guys with magnification.

    How much time are these guys spending behind those scopes vs how much time have you spend behind your RDS. In my experience, all training and skill being equal there is simply no comparison beyond 100-150 yards, and closer in the difference is not huge either with a quality scope. At close range the biggest issue with magnified optics is that people over aim, gun up head up keep your eyes open red on target press it. Too many people are trying to see perfect sight pictures for no good reason


  11. 3 minutes ago, Howard said:

    Did not shoot it, but just playing around with it seemed a little crisper.  Still does not compare with some of the aftermarket triggers and no idea if the trigger itself is the same as the Gen4 or you would have to wait to get parts till someone makes them.  In no rush to go out and get one.  First I need a G17 slide to go with the Jager threaded barrel and comp I won yesterday.

    Oh the trigger is DEFINITELY different then the previous gens, just from the pictures.

    • Like 1

  12. 2 hours ago, Howard said:

    Just went and held one at RTSP and took it apart to see what makes it tick.  Since actually like the finger groves on the Gen4 and am not a south paw I don't see that it really offers anything over the Gen4.  You will still need to do something to the trigger, and like any new model it will probably have issues and parts will be hard to find for some time.

    How was the trigger vs a gen4?


  13. In the internals make it look like the trigger bars and striker plungers (and slides) are really different then previous versions. I'm curious, but not curious enough to spend money.

     

    edited to add: now that I've seen more pictures of the internals, it is a drastically new gun inside. It is more different then any of the previous 4 gens put together.  I can't decide if that is good or bad.

    • Like 1

  14. 9 hours ago, High Exposure said:

    I prefer to leave the bottom one and remove the top one:

    Hmm that is interesting, I'd have to handle one and see if I like that layout. I did recently shoot a single pin Gen 2 G19 and the trigger is was decent, better then my 34 Gen4 when it come out of the box, but about the same as my Gen3 19. 

    I too also don't get how the second pin would interfere with the trigger pull, because the location of the other pin is the same, so tge geometry of the trigger is also the same. Its not as if they changed the trigger bar and layout when they went to 2 pins, but I guess they could do that for the Gen5s. It may be a bad idea though, given the available aftermarket. 


  15. I don't get spending time and effort on going back to one pin. That means redesiging either the locking block or how it the frame holds it and it is not like there is anything wrong with the 2 pin layout, and you still need the extra strength somehow if you don't want the gen 2 .40 issues.

    I'm probably the only person on the planet who likes the finger grooves. I don't like them on other guns, but they work for me on Glocks. I recently handled a Gen 2 19 and I was like how do you hold onto this thing?

     

    everything else, have it, why not.

    • Like 1

  16. 21 hours ago, Krdshrk said:

    Unless you've got an inordinate amount of pre-travel why even bother messing with it?  With a tactile break and reset, pre-travel is pretty much moot.  

    It depends. The more I shoot the more I realize that reset feel doesn't really matter. If I'm shooting at any speed my finger comes fully off the trigger, I don't ride the reset. That means that I do a full trigger press for every pull, which means the pre-travel happens every time. Lots of people would like that full travel length to be shorter and lighter so they try to take out the pretravel which is really a terrible idea from a safety perspective. Overtravel, sure leave only what you need, over travel should be left alone.


  17. 12 hours ago, ChrisJM981 said:

    Thanks Ty. From what I'm reading the pre-travel is for disengaging the firing pin block. In the interest of safety, I'll just practice more instead of tinkering. ☺

    Thats correct, don't mess with pretravel and be weary of the triggers that claim to reduce pretravel.

    • Like 2

  18. On 8/15/2017 at 10:20 PM, Barms said:

       What is the real advantage of that flat trigger.  I'm sure it's "better" but better for what/who?   Is it shorter pull?  Is it mostly for competition? 

     

    Only you can decide if the ergonomics of a flat trigger are for you, but they are for me. When correctly build for the gun, they will tend to break when they are in the most vertical position, perpendicular to the line of sight. For a lot of shooters this helps with trigger control, as you are pulling straight back at when the gun fires so you have less likelihood to move the gun around with the trigger. I think this is happens to be part of the reason why the 1911 triggers are considered by many to be the gold standard. 

    I don't think they are a must have for everyone, but they are for me, nearly every gun I care about shooting well has a flat trigger, pistols or rifles. I'm even curious now if someone makes them for shotguns. 

    • Like 1
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