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What’s your cold bore ritual, that one thing you always do before your first shot to set yourself up for success? Winner gets new limited edition Hide merch. Remember, subscribers have a better chance of winning!
Join contest SubscribeThe grandson drinks coffee and watches the news with me each morning before I leave for work. Got him his own vacuum mug for his morning brewRural King has everything
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Well it’s too early for beer that time of day.coffee for the little man? isnt that child abuse? i dont think my daughter at 20 has even had a sip, my wife gives her the sideways glance when i ask if she wants coffee in the morning LOL
Well it’s too early for beer that time of day.
But not for bourbon...Well it’s too early for beer that time of day.
But not for bourbon...
Sirhr
Just use a primed case, no powder. I have some rubber 45 cal practice bullets that are made like a skirted pellet for airguns. I used an old surplus blanket hung over a dowell rod with a target taped to it. A regular LP primer will put that rubber pellet through at least 6 free-hanging layers of that blanket at 25 ft.Demo Ranch did a whole video. Apparently the Lego heads are too light to allow for complete burn of the powder, and they are pretty arnemic overall.
This... your own simmunitions...Just use a primed case, no powder. I have some rubber 45 cal practice bullets that are made like a skirted pellet for airguns. I used an old surplus blanket hung over a dowell rod with a target taped to it. A regular LP primer will put that rubber pellet through at least 6 free-hanging layers of that blanket at 25 ft.
You can't drink all day if you don't start early in the morning!Well it’s too early for beer that time of day.
Haha - I was just typing that in!You can't drink all day if you don't start early in the morning!
whats that from?
Random pic, although I'd guess it's a gun from one battleship or another, either at some foundry/shop probably in Pennsylvania or Washington Navy yard, or one of the Naval yards where they built em, Brooklyn? Boston, Philly, Norfolk (?) - can't recall where else we built battleships.
Pretty fair sized barrel, isn't it?
Maybe I'll check tineye.com to see where else that picture appeared. I found it without context or comments, so just guessing.
Let's see... Tineye kicked this out:
Higher res shows build date on Flatcar of 1939, so that's probably an Iowa class gun...
A pangolin.
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Pangolin - Wikipedia
en.m.wikipedia.org
Is this the reference material for the NFA classifying guns larger that 50-caliber as destructive devices?Ok, here we go. I took the address from the photo-match that Tineye found (site:lehigh.happeningmag.com) did a search under that url for shipping + gun and voila:
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Area Servicemen to be Honored During SteelStacks’ Memorial Day Celebration May 28-30 - Lehigh Happening
This year’s event includes programs honoring ‘Our Hometown Heroes’ and the Veterans who worked at Bethlehem Steel From May 28-30, the community is invited to join Embassy Bank and ArtsQuest in honoring the men and women who have made the ultimate sacrifice while serving our country during the...lehigh.happeningmag.com
"Area Servicemen to be Honored During SteelStacks’ Memorial Day Celebration May 28-30
This year’s event includes programs honoring ‘Our Hometown Heroes’ and the Veterans who worked at Bethlehem Steel
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Bethlehem Steel Corp. produced more than 73 million tons of steel for the U.S. Military during World War II including armor plating, Naval guns and more. On May 28, David Venditta will talk about the steel giant’s important role during the war. This image, courtesy of the National Museum of Industrial History, shows a 50-caliber battleship gun being pulled out of the plant’s No. 8 Machine Shop in the early 1940s."
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This... your own simmunitions...
Sirhr
Is this the reference material for the NFA classifying guns larger that 50-caliber as destructive devices?