I cant but help think it should be painted orange or pink and be shooting foam darts with sticky suckers on the end.....
I cant but help think it should be painted orange or pink and be shooting foam darts with sticky suckers on the end.....
75/15/10 black powder matters
The concept is neat, the execution and price, not so much IMO.
agree with ya Micky Duck - compare that with the photo of a .222 Sako in Australia on here -1981 unfired in original box and no bloody competition really - the only thing that pisses me of is this nagging feeling that the .223 lever pictured here would likely be actually practical - now I will go and chew my arm of for such thoughts lol lol lol
Well I happen to love my Thompson Dimension Centre, a fine looking rifle and awesome shooter so I can't quite fathom what all y'alls problem is. I'd have one tomorrow and proud to take it anywhere (legal).
I know a lot but it seems less every day...
Due to the exorbitant cost of reloading components, warning shots will not be given.
Jhon, I know you are a fellow tragic, So I will forgive you putting up a picture of that tomato stick on a lever thread.
However, I get your point. We generally accept plastic bolt actions without all this whining. I see it's possible to replace the stock with a wooden one off a shotgun. Remove the brake and make up a more conventional forearm and I might be able to remove the paper bag..........
If they made a repro Winchester 1895 in 223 but with a detachable mag?? Or maybe a Savage 99?
Problem with all of the new production lever guns, is they are overpriced and finished like trash compared to the older models. There's no comparison in machining quality comparing an old turn of the 20th century 1895 to a new production one. Even modern BLR's look and feel like hot garbage compared to the ones made in the 70's and 80's.
Not my experience. Modern Miroku made Winchesters are expensive, but the fit and finish is as good as anything that came out of the Winchester factory, they just don't have the history or nostalgia. Having used and owned BLRs with steel actions and later alloy ones all made by Miroku I have not noticed any difference in quality except half a pound less in weight.
Cannot speak for Marlin or Henrys etc.
it beggers belief that Ruger DID NOT take the logical step of levering up the mini 14 the 44mag got done and what a wonderful rifle that is... if the mini 14 had the same treatment the resulting lever action .223----7.62x39mm would make an awesome carry rifle .
indeed the 10/22 and 10/22mag could just as easily be done,afterall 75% of the tooling is already done.
75/15/10 black powder matters
Nah I mean the 95, just tweak it so it holds more
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