Good to hear! I am enjoying retirement but still keeping busy and active. I still do quite a lot of shooting (pistol, rifle, and shotgun) and just agreed to do a bit of part-time shooting for one of the local cherry orchards. Shooting doubles on starlings with a pump action is good practice!
Some photos from 1988 and 89. First two are the 1,000 SLR's and 1900 Bren gun magazines the day they arrived from Trentham 1988.
This one is the custom L1A1 we built to donate as the prize for the winner of the 1989 Practical Rifle champs. Myself and Jon Jones with the rifle. It was won by the late Paul Mander of the Christchurch Pistol Club.
These are 5 sporting model SLR's we built in .243. They have 10 shot mags and are fitted with 4x Nikko Stirling Gold Crown 'scopes. There are also 3 .45 Marlin fully suppressed Camp Carbines, 1 completed and 2 yet to be anodized.
Wow gundoc and thanks for those photo's. It could very well be that one of those SLR's was issued to a young fresh faced Private Rushy back in 1971. I loved the aperture sight on the SLR and could knock the nuts off a gnat at a hundred with it. Mind you I would have to admit that my eyesight was a bunch better back then.
It takes 43 muscle's to frown and 17 to smile, but only 3 for proper trigger pull.
What more do we need? If we are above ground and breathing the rest is up to us!
Rule 1: Treat every firearm as loaded
Rule 2: Always point firearms in a safe direction
Rule 3: Load a firearm only when ready to fire
Rule 4: Identify your target beyond all doubt
Rule 5: Check your firing zone
Rule 6: Store firearms and ammunition safely
Rule 7: Avoid alcohol and drugs when handling firearms
And as a paraphrase of the old monty python sketch "if you told the americans we did that to slr's they'd never believe you.."
@gundoc a workmate of mine 20+ years ago who from memory had some sort of family connection through marriage to you, had I believe a fat (maybe target?) barrel version of an slr you did.
Hi Rushy. A bit of a long shot but quite possible! My 1,000 was from the sale batch of 2,500, from a total of just over 15,000 SLR's in NZ service. We were issued No4's when I went through Burnham in the early 1960's but we trained with SLR's. Only the Regular Force were issued with them at that stage. As for eyesight, we won't go there!
Yes, I did a small number of heavy barrel rifles which shot very well. One of the important things was to make the lower receiver a very tight fit and have minimum headspace. On some of them I had to make oversize hinge pins to remove the wear. Our family has been in NZ for 6 or 7 generations so there is the odd relly out there!
Yes, I was in my early 40's when that (not very photogenic) picture was taken.
Fantastic photos, hopefully they make their way onto nzhistory.govt.nz one day.
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