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owidruldu

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About owidruldu

  • Rank
    Forum Dabbler
  • Birthday 07/06/1970

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  • Gender
    Male
  • Location:
    Des Moines
  • Interests
    Hunting,Hiking,Fishing
  • Home Range
    Range 14

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  1. I have a Vline gun safe like this https://secretstorages.com/best-under-bed-gun-safes/ mounted in my bedroom. Keeps the kids out of it, but the combo is quick and easy to enter and access. A little bit pricey, but keeps the gun well away from yunguns and lets me keep the guns loaded and ready to go. I personally don't believe in leaving the chamber empty on a home defense gun. Had an instructor once say "the only thing more scary than the sound of a shotgun being racked in the bedroom, is the sound of safeties being taken off in the living room after the rack" The first thing I want a home invader to hear is either my command for them to freeze while they are covered, or the sound of my firearm discharging (depending on situation).
  2. The Tavor is fully capable of shoot 400-600 yards... I'd scope it. There are several good all-around scopes with 2.5-10 or 3-12 magnification that would work well at any range from point blank to 600 yards. Save your money for the Aimpoint, it will pay for itself before you know it. The cheap sights will just suck money out of your wallet and drive you crazy, and you'll just end up paying for the better sight down the road. If I had what I wasted on cheap red dots when I first started looking at them, I have a couple more Aimpoints now. I've been running M2's/ML2's on both my AR's and Tavor (and a couple of others) since they were the "new" model, and they are still going strong now for around 12 years of pretty steady use and abuse. They are like the Energizer Bunny, they just keep on going and going...... The Aimpoints also won't break the bank feeding their battery habit. Mine is pretty much "old school" now, and I leave them on 24/7/365 and change the batteries once a year. The new ones I believe, are up to about 9 years on a battery. Also, don't get caught up on one or the other. Get both. With lever mounts, you can have either at a flip of a lever or two and swap them at will, with no loss of zero. I have one AR that usually wears a Leupold 1.5x5 https://thetacticalscopes.com/best-optic-for-tavor/ on an old ARMS lever mount, and a backup, pre zeroed Aimpoint on an ARMS M68 mount. Best of both worlds.There are a lot of useful videos on this topic on Youtube, I will leave here one of them, I hope someone will come in handy. Good luck. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IiM5uLQUOwk
  3. ell...I strung one with 220 yards of 6 lb spiderwire. The reel held the line well. I have caught numerous perch and trout to 10 lbs on it. The drag feels smooth. The retrieve is steady and the materials seem to be holding together. The only plastic part I can readily see is the screw cap to hold the reel arm on. The reel and cheap ultralight rod fought the larger trout very well. Just like with any reel however if you have the full amount of line on you need to check for tangles quickly prior to starting the retrieve. I get wickedly long casts at the moment with very light lures. Hope this helps.
  4. owidruldu

    Hello`

    Hello and Welcome! All the best: https://diceus.com/a-relationship-between-erp-and-crm/
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