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How important is rifle's balance?

I would like to go beyond discussion on muzzle deflection and weight/length ratio.
Well respected gunsmiths (like A.Wheeler) as well as top f-class shooters say that balance is crucial for the rifle to properly slide in the rest and rear bag.

I find it difficul to balance a competition rifle with 24-28" 1.250" diameter barrel. If we want to have rifle balanced like Larry Potterfield suggest (i.e. 4"-5" in front of the trigger) we would have to skip the barrel's length and weight typical for competition rifles.
All my rifles are nose heavy. In order to improve the balance I would have to add 1-2kg in the buttstock. By doing that I would probably break weight limit for my class. How do you approach the rifle balance issue?

Firearms Sold

Curtis axiom 223 26 inch brux barrel 1in7 twist with tuner ,apa chode brake and triggertech diamond trigger. Gun was chambered by elemental industries out of Tennessee. Shoots 75 80 and 88 Eld bullets very well. Will give load info to buyer the group below is with 88 eld 2825 at 200 yards. Approximately 475 rounds down the barrel.
1650.00 shipped.

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A win for the good guys and gals...

The Supreme Court followed up its June 23 landmark ruling that for the first time recognized a constitutional right to carry firearms in public for self-defense, by issuing a series of rulings June 30 reversing federal appeals court decisions that upheld gun restrictions in California, New Jersey, Maryland, and Hawaii.

Courts will find it difficult to uphold the firearms laws in question after the high court’s June 30 and June 23 rulings.

In unsigned orders, all four cases were remanded June 30 to lower courts “for further consideration in light of” the Supreme Court’s June 23 decision in New York State Rifle and Pistol Association v. Bruen. In that 6–3 ruling, the high court invalidated New York state’s tough concealed-carry gun permitting system.

Epoch Times Photo
Lisa Caso sells guns at Caso’s Gun-A-Rama store in Jersey City, N.J., on March 25, 2021. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)
The Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution states: “A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.”


The Supreme Court has been strengthening Second Amendment protections in recent years. In District of Columbia v. Heller (2008), the Supreme Court held the amendment protects “the individual right to possess and carry weapons in case of confrontation,” and in McDonald v. City of Chicago (2010), that this right “is fully applicable to the States.”

It makes no sense to recognize Americans’ right to defend themselves in their homes while denying them the ability to defend themselves outside their homes, Justice Clarence Thomas wrote June 23 in the court’s majority opinion.

“After all, the Second Amendment guarantees an ‘individual right to possess and carry weapons in case of confrontation,’ and confrontation can surely take place outside the home. … Many Americans hazard greater danger outside the home than in it,” Thomas wrote.

In the new orders, the Supreme Court summarily disposed of the four pending cases, simultaneously granting appellants’ petitions seeking review while skipping over the oral argument phase. Some lawyers call this process GVR, standing for grant, vacate, and remand.

In the Maryland case, Bianchi v. Frosh, court file 21-902, a coalition of 25 states led by Arizona challenged Maryland’s Firearms Safety Act of 2013. The statute, which was upheld by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit in September 2021, required pistol purchasers to seek a license, complete safety training, and be fingerprinted. Maryland bans popular weapons such as the AR-15 and similar rifles and limits magazine capacity to 10 rounds.

Rifles
Rifles are offered for sale at Freddie Bear Sports on April 8, 2021 in Tinley Park, Illinois.(Scott Olson/Getty Images)
Maryland Attorney General Brian Frosh, a Democrat, was defiant after the remand order. Military-style firearms “pose grave risks to public safety, as recent mass shootings in other states have made clear,” Frosh stated. Despite the Bruen ruling, the state’s law remains in effect, he said. “Marylanders have a right to be protected from these dangerous weapons.”’


The California case, Duncan v. Bonta, court file 21-1194, challenged the state’s ban on magazines containing more than 10 rounds. The ban went further, requiring the confiscation of such magazines, which had previously been lawful to own. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit upheld the ban in November 2021.

California Attorney General Rob Bonta, a Democrat, is currently scrambling to deal with the fallout after his office leaked sensitive personal information, including the names and addresses of every concealed-carry permit holder in the state. Some holders say they now fear for their lives.

The New Jersey case, Association of New Jersey Rifle and Pistol Clubs Inc. v. Bruck, court file 20-1507, is similar to the California case. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit affirmed the New Jersey law in December 2021.

Petitioners challenged the state law that bans 10-round magazines and requires that owners surrender such magazines to law enforcement. The law also forbids the transfer or sale of these magazines but allows owners to keep them if they modify them to reduce how many rounds may be held. Failing to comply with the law is a crime that can be punished with a sentence of up to 10 years of imprisonment and $150,000 in fines.

In Young v. Hawaii, court file 20-1639, a petitioner challenged Hawaii’s gun licensing system that allows the transportation of an unloaded firearm only in an enclosed container and only to and from a gun repair shop, target range, licensed gun dealer, hunting ground, or police station. Licensed firearms may only be used for hunting or target shooting. Licenses are issued by the chief of police of the county in which the gun owner lives.

Hawaii law requires gun owners to keep their weapons at their “place of business, residence, or sojourn.” Concealed-carry permit applicants must show they have “reason to fear injury to the applicant’s person or property” in order to obtain a permit. Permits allowing open carry are granted only “where the urgency or the need has been sufficiently indicated” and the applicant “is engaged in the protection of life and property.”

“Records show the state granted only 4 permits from 2000 to 2020,” KITV reports.

The Hawaii law was affirmed in March 2021 by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit.
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Suppressors with muzzlebrakes.

Im curious.
Suppressors with a muzzlebrake on the end, like the SiCo Omega. Is it working or is it just a gimmick?

Some write that if the suppressor works efficietly enough there wont be enough pressure for the muzzlebrake to do its job, thus making it pointless. And I think that seems to make a lot of sense. But thats just me.
Still these suppressors are out there, not from a lot of makers but more than one. So there might be something to it?

What does the Hide say?

2 observations this week.

First, Season 6 of Peaky Blinders (after waiting like what, 2 years for it?) is absolutely fucking abysmal. I'm literally fighting myself to watch it and I'm only on episode 5. it's so awful I want to punch whoever wrote this' child in the face.

Also, Bushmills is vastly superior to Jameson's in every way possible. I don't even know how these are compared to each other. I think Jameson's exists just to see who has absolutely no fucking idea about anything and can be talked into drinking literal garbage.

Carry on.

Troubleshooting Help for Finicky Barrel and Unexplained Flier

Gents, I am at a loss here. My final answer to this problem is that I just ordered a Brux barrel, and will get it chambered in 6.5x47 and spun on by Matt Stewart of Stewart Rifles.

However, that doesn't guarantee that my problem will go away, so I'm reaching out to see if anyone else (I'm sure) has encountered this problem, and what it eventually turned out to be.

Background: I have an FN SPR A1 that I bought in "as new" condition from a police supply place in FL. I have bedded the action and adjusted the trigger to 2-1/2lbs.

Accuracy: This rifle is not the tack driver that other people report (I have three FN SPRs myself). It will at least throw "normal" groups in the 1.5 MOA range, but in search of acceptable accuracy I've noticed an extremely wierd phenomenon...I have never, ever shot an otherwise good group that didn't contain a wild flier...like 1/2 - 1 mil off. At this point I have at least 7-8, (5) shot groups that have four rounds in a half inch or less...and one that is 2-3" out of the group...and never in the same direction. The other wild part is that this rifle just flat out shotgun patterns with any load that is even the slightest bit into the medium-range of charge weights.

Example: with 168gr Nosler Custom Competitions, over IMR-4064 in Federal brass, I have a node from 42.1 - 42.8gr where I get the 4+1 fliers. From 43.0 - 43.5 it just shoots 1.5 MOA. From 43.5 - 44.5 we're talking progressively opening up to 3 MOA. I've used 168gr and 175gr SMK as well, and Varget powder too. Same results.

Troubleshooting: 1) ammo: I tried my 168gr handloads for this SPR in one of my others, and shot all five shots into a .7 MOA group at 170 yards the other day. I then put five rounds of 175gr factory FGMM into my bad SPR and got another 4+1 group with a shot 3" out at the same distance. I repeated this process again the next day with a 168gr Hornady AMAX handload, but the bad SPR printed a 5-1/4" SHOTGUN PATTERN. I did it a third time with a proven load in one of my other SPRs, and got the same result for the third time. I've reloaded tens of thousands of rounds for many rifles over the last few decades, and while nobody is immune to a stupid moment...I think we can rule out my handloads at this point. I'm literally using the same components from the same tray, box and jug.

2) skill: I'm no Eric Cortina or whoever is the bad-ass marksmanship dude in your mind. However I have a decent background in marksmanship myself. This is an area where people often refuse to believe that they could be the problem. I still throw fliers, but that is a 2-3% of the time deal, not a 20% of the time problem. Let's just say that I have several rifles that are reliable 1/2 MOA or better.

3) Addressing the shot: I have this accuracy problem with the rifle shot off a rest, or a bipod. It makes no difference here. Bench or prone - no difference either.

4) Optics: I was using a Burris XTR II, which was on another rifle for a while and never gave me issues. I checked all screws twice, and nothing was loose (I use blue Loctite).

5) Bedding: I've bedded a dozen rifles or so in my life, and while I'm no amazing gunsmith I've never had a problem yet. When I pulled this rifle apart the bedding looked fine as in nothing had chipped etc... For being a McMillan stock, this A3 is the roughest I've ever seen in the action inlet (I've owned 4 not including the factory FN rifles). The barrel actually sits a few thousandths off in the channel, but is still fully free floated. It was one if the reasons why I bedded the action.

6) Crown: I swabbed the crown of the barrel with a q-tip and nothing caught.

***

So that leaves me with guessing if I have a problem with the barrel (which is my guess), or potentially somewhere else that I can't think of (firing pin spring?).

The fact that this rifle turns into a Mosin Nagant the moment you get halfway up the charge weight is enough for me to rebarrel, but I'm sitting here wondering if I've overlooked something common that is going to turn this into another headache once I get the new tube screwed on.

I know that there were a few years where the chrome was coming off inside the barrel, but this rifle is a USRAC, New Haven gun and an FN 103xx serial. I think this was before the issues, and I've certainly never seen anything wierd coming off on the patches.

I really need to buy a borescope.

Sorry for the length, but I don't want to waste anyone's time on a suggestion that I might have already addressed.

So what do the experts think is going on here?

ELR calibers for over a mile

Anybody have personal experience shooting ELR big calibers? I'm looking to get into the game and have a way to shoot out to a mile on some private land. I've only got a 6.5 creedmoor and want to invest in something that is better suited for that task but don't know where to start. What are the go to big boy calibers and cartridges for the ELR game? Opinions and personal experience welcome!

UPS says no more "gun parts"

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Another "angry" riot planned for Akron, Ohio? (Updated Video)


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Edit: Officers report being shot at during chase AND a gun was found in suspect's car (but they are calling him "unarmed").

Video from less conference starts at 23:00

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Looking for a Plott hound puppy

We have a six year old Plott hound. She's by far the best dog I've ever had. We're wanting to get another puppy. Female preferably. Anyone happen to know of a litter any where. We're in upstate NY and willing travel to get one. We've been having a little trouble finding any.

If I'm out of line asking this here in the bear pit instead of the for sale section please let me know and I'll delete the post.
I'm hoping since its just a puppy I'm looking for and not something firearms related that it's ok.

'Genderfluid' 'Puppy' Begins Work at Department of Energy


Brinton-730x0.jpg


Back in the days of Roman imperial decadence, at least according to legend, the emperor Caligula demonstrated his unfitness for office and the dangers of public indifference and complacency when he appointed his horse Incitatus a senator. Woke America hasn’t reached such an advanced stage of imperial decadence that we have a horse in the Senate; all we have is a dog in the Department of Energy.

Sam Brinton (“they/them”) tweeted happily on Wednesday: “It’s official. As of June 19th, I now serve my nation as the Deputy Assistant Secretary for Spent Fuel and Waste Disposition in the Office of Nuclear Energy in the Department of Energy.” He attached a photo of himself that was apparently taken in his office; in it, a smirking, lipsticked Brinton, hands on hips, is wearing a belted sleeveless red jumpsuit (or something) with American flag-themed high heels and a chain necklace.


It’s official. As of June 19th, I now serve my nation as the Deputy Assistant Secretary for Spent Fuel and Waste Disposition in the Office of Nuclear Energy in the Department of Energy. pic.twitter.com/zLq3Bf97X2
— Sam Brinton (@sbrinton) June 29, 2022

Brinton modestly omits mention of the fact that he is the first canine to serve in the Department of Energy. In a 2016 article in Metro Weekly, he speaks at length about “puppy play” (he is identified only by his first name, but an accompanying photo makes it clear that Sam in the article is Brinton. The new Deputy Assistant Secretary explains: “I actually have trouble when we transition from pup play to having sex. Like, ‘No, I can’t have you whimper like that when we’re having sex,’ because I don’t want to mix that world. It’s interesting, because he doesn’t have to come out of pup mode to have me f**k him. I personally have to bring him out of pup perception for me. But then I’m still treating him as a submissive to me.”

The nuclear energy expert defends all this against those strait-laced bigots who might object: “I’ve honestly had people ask, ‘Wait, you have sex with animals?’ They believe it’s abusive, that it’s taking advantage of someone who may not be acting up to a level of human responsibility…. The other misperception is that I have some really messed up background, like, did I have some horrible childhood trauma that made me like to have sex with animals.”

He may not have mentioned all this Wednesday because, in typical Leftist fashion, he claims that an earlier announcement of his appointment had led to him receiving threats. It’s funny how Leftists are responsible for the overwhelming majority of the political violence in America today, yet Leftist politicians and officials routinely claim that they’re constantly being harassed by racist, redneck, MAGA hat-wearing yahoos. Brinton tweeted: “Due to the concern of negative and threatening responses like we saw in my previous announcement, including more than a hundred death threats and more vitriol than I could have imagined, I held off announcing my official start until I could be safe and secure in my new role.”

Now, apparently, he is safe and secure, and so it is time to par-tay: “But goodness is this a time for celebration! It’s really really official! The beautiful irony that the months-long process of getting me into this role culminated in a Pride month start date is not lost on me.” How marvelous: Brinton not only took office but did so during his holy month.

Brinton continued: “As one of if not the very first openly genderfluid individuals in federal government leadership, I was welcomed with open arms into the Department of Energy all the way up to the Secretary whom I shared the stage with in a Pride month celebration panel just today.”

That’s wonderful, and Brinton went on to assure us that not only was he “genderfluid,” but was fully qualified for his new job: “I’ve prepared for this moment in a technical sense for a decade. Graduating with not one but two degrees from MIT led to working at multiple think tanks where I produced the first-of-a-kind reports and maps on consent-based siting and advanced reactor innovation.” To a well-wisher who complimented his outfit, Brinton replied: “Thanks! One side goal is to bring as much fashion as I can to the DOE, haha.”

Should that really be a priority? Should the human being in charge of taking care of the nation’s nuclear waste really preoccupy himself with the perceived fluidity of his gender and on bringing “fashion” to the Department of Energy, rather than concentrating on his responsibilities as overseer of a “staff of hundreds and a budget of millions (with a Nuclear Waste Fund I’m responsible for at over $45 billion)”?

Brinton puts a lot of time and energy into making sure that people know all about his proclivities. A student who attended his speech at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in 2017 reported: “Throughout the entire talk, Brinton was open about his experiences, the kinks he partakes in, and the nature of his relationships. He left us with countless anecdotes, like how he enjoys tying up his significant other like a table, and eating his dinner on him while he watches Star Trek.”

Nor has Brinton ever been reticent about his bizarre sexuality while at work in the U.S. government. According to the bio he provided to the “LGBTQ Religious Archives Network,” “Sam has worn his stilettos to Congress to advise legislators about nuclear policy and to the White House where he advised President Obama and Michelle Obama on LGBT issues.”

A modest proposal for Mr. Brinton: stop flaunting your gender fluidity and your “puppy play.” Devote the time you thereby save to focusing on your responsibilities in the DOE and executing them well. You may end up being a better Deputy Assistant Secretary for Spent Fuel and Waste Disposition in the Office of Nuclear Energy in the Department of Energy if you actually focus on your job than what your appointment symbolizes about America today. But I know there is no chance you’ll take my advice because to do would negate the purpose of your appointment in the first place.


My thoughts on why the Biden administration is putting freaks like this in place is to make it impossible to get rid of them. Every possible reason to kick them to the curb will be met with a claim of discrimination.

Dead Air Mask vs TBAC Takedown?

Hi fellas, new to the 22 world and looking to pick up my first can.

Can't decide between these two cans. Based on my research here, they're both very similar. The best price I could find for the Mask is $365 shipped, versus $335 for the Takedown. Are these good prices?

Also considering the Rugged Oculus, but is it even worth shooting in the short configuration on pistols?
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