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"I wish they made a ______?"

Ruger Deerfield in .500 S&W or .50 AE with a 15 round magazine.

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I like the
Make a nice unipole seat that is comfortable to carry and does well enough as a seat on uneven terrain consisting of some rocks and dirt.

Kinda like a wobble chair for adults with guns and a need to be quiet, comfortable, and stable for long periods of time.

Regular chairs of any type suck balls for setting up a shooting position on the side of a steep incline, and most are a bitch to finagle through the brush, too.

Adjustable legs take too much time and effort to setup, and you have to re-adjust often if you're on soft ground. Non-adjustable legs just don't work at all. If you could make do with only one leg to fuck wtih, I'd pay $39.99 for that SOB.

I like this idea. I know I had to make do with a folding chair/soft ice chest/backpack in my pop-up blind bow hunting. It was terrible. The biggest thing it lacked was a swivel. If I needed to turn, it always made a bunch of noise. And it was almost the right height. Almost.

I'm thinking put a swivel down toward the bottom of the leg. Now I have to figure out if it would ve better to have a straight tip or something that had three small legs. I am leaning toward the legs. I could put a u-joint down there to swivel and adjust angle, and have a locking mechanism for it that can be reached while seated.

I also would have to make sure it can support a lot of weight with just one leg. I haven't owned any good hunting chairs. Anybody have a style of seat they find particularly comfortable?

All of that would have to be designed with price in mind. I don't want to have anything made in China. If I can't make it in America, at least not in a communist country! But I saw some swivel hunting chairs at the NRA show, and they wanted something like $175 if I remember correctly. That is crazy high!
 
I like the


I like this idea. I know I had to make do with a folding chair/soft ice chest/backpack in my pop-up blind bow hunting. It was terrible. The biggest thing it lacked was a swivel. If I needed to turn, it always made a bunch of noise. And it was almost the right height. Almost.

I'm thinking put a swivel down toward the bottom of the leg. Now I have to figure out if it would ve better to have a straight tip or something that had three small legs. I am leaning toward the legs. I could put a u-joint down there to swivel and adjust angle, and have a locking mechanism for it that can be reached while seated.

I also would have to make sure it can support a lot of weight with just one leg. I haven't owned any good hunting chairs. Anybody have a style of seat they find particularly comfortable?

All of that would have to be designed with price in mind. I don't want to have anything made in China. If I can't make it in America, at least not in a communist country! But I saw some swivel hunting chairs at the NRA show, and they wanted something like $175 if I remember correctly. That is crazy high!

Swivel down low might work, legs at the bottom might work, too.

With just one pole, though, that's all built in for the most part. Probably needs to be 3" diameter or so, with a somewhat sharp point. Kinda like M80 ball.

Just a round seat big enough for my ass, and somewhere between firm and soft pillow, preferably made of some material that won't crack and fall apart after a few years.

Doesn't have to be very light, just needs to carry well and work for its intended purpose.
 
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Probably needs to be 3" diameter or so, with a somewhat sharp point. Kinda like M80 ball.

I was already thinking a sort of sharp point. If you just had one point it could sink too far into mud and the like, but with if it branched into three little legs at the bottom they would limit how far it could sink. 3" diameter sounds pretty big. I was picturing 2 at the most. The thing could be used as a walking stick and a shooting stick!
 
I was already thinking a sort of sharp point. If you just had one point it could sink too far into mud and the like, but with if it branched into three little legs at the bottom they would limit how far it could sink. 3" diameter sounds pretty big. I was picturing 2 at the most. The thing could be used as a walking stick and a shooting stick!

I ain't setting down in a hog waller.

You could have a round sleeve with a wide flange that was cut lengthwise on one side and put some kind of compression fitting on top of that (like a pipe clamp) which would help add surface area to resist sinking in past a certain point that would then be adjustable by sliding the disc to the desired position.

I think legs would just fuck everything up when rocks and roots get involved.
 
Honestly..... I would pay good money for an American made, modern, high quality, large bore inline muzzle loader.

Something like a 12/8/4 bore TC encore...

Coupled with some nicely figured walnut and a set of express sights

Fuck ide be all over that
 
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Hand-held UV light that kills skin bacteria so that I can eliminate B.O. on winter backpacking trips when washing with water is not possible.
There is a company that is starting to make ktm 500 2t that bolt into 300 frames

https://m.facebook.com/brcracingcanada/

Years ago I had a KTM 500 2 stroke. It was a ferocious machine, more to handle than a CR500, KX500, KTM525, IT490 or KTM505. The suspension sucked, so it felt like it was about to launch at all times. With a circular saw blade instead of a tire on the back that bike could have cut the earth in half.
 
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They have laser removal of kidney stones. Why not laser removal of arterial blockage?
arterial blockage is not as simple as blasting away crust. Firstly, many times, the plaques are integrated into the endothelium, so you would be hurting tissue as well. Secondly, if you simply blast any crust like plaque like you would in renal calculi, the fragments will flow distally and cause obstructions
 
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arterial blockage is not as simple as blasting away crust. Firstly, many times, the plaques are integrated into the endothelium, so you would be hurting tissue as well. Secondly, if you simply blast any crust like plaque like you would in renal calculi, the fragments will flow distally and cause obstructions
Party pooper..
 
As a result of reading on here which led me to read on precisionrifleblog.com, I struck on an idea for a breakthrough in muzzle break design. But since I do in fact intend on manufacturing it, I won't give paticulars until I get a provisional patent filed. Thanks to the people who gave some actual ideas!

Here's a product I'd like to see made: an extremely compact folding cart or other wheeled device that can be packed into the woods and be used to haul game out.

I once modified a ladder-stand to have detachable bicycle wheels so I could wheel the stand deep into a national wildlife refuge where I was allowed to bow hunt, but not bring a vehicle. Would have worked great to haul out a deer if I had seen any, but it was during a drought and they only moved at night. My kids liked going for rides on it though!
 
As a result of reading on here which led me to read on precisionrifleblog.com, I struck on an idea for a breakthrough in muzzle break design. But since I do in fact intend on manufacturing it, I won't give paticulars until I get a provisional patent filed. Thanks to the people who gave some actual ideas!

Here's a product I'd like to see made: an extremely compact folding cart or other wheeled device that can be packed into the woods and be used to haul game out.

I once modified a ladder-stand to have detachable bicycle wheels so I could wheel the stand deep into a national wildlife refuge where I was allowed to bow hunt, but not bring a vehicle. Would have worked great to haul out a deer if I had seen any, but it was during a drought and they only moved at night. My kids liked going for rides on it though!

Drag bag, or, my personal favorite, 15' 1" nylon tie strap. Works in almost every situation, including the ones that really suck.

https://jet.com/product/Huntings-A-...MI5Yn3iZ3D2wIVESOBCh3VigcmEAQYAyABEgLk0PD_BwE
 
Hand-held UV light that kills skin bacteria so that I can eliminate B.O. on winter backpacking trips when washing with water is not possible.


Years ago I had a KTM 500 2 stroke. It was a ferocious machine, more to handle than a CR500, KX500, KTM525, IT490 or KTM505. The suspension sucked, so it felt like it was about to launch at all times. With a circular saw blade instead of a tire on the back that bike could have cut the earth in half.
Steripen might do this.

R
 
Ideas are cheap. Implementing those ideas through to fruition is what separates the wheat from the chaff.

It takes commitment, money (usually more than you have), effort, time, and failure. Most quit at the first failure and throw all their efforts, and money, away. You have to be able to fail, get up and try, try again. If you believe, you shouldn't quit. Most success comes from lots of failure. Luckily it's simple on paper. It's all the stuff in-between that will make you quit.
 
Ideas are cheap. Implementing those ideas through to fruition is what separates the wheat from the chaff.

It takes commitment, money (usually more than you have), effort, time, and failure. Most quit at the first failure and throw all their efforts, and money, away. You have to be able to fail, get up and try, try again. If you believe, you shouldn't quit. Most success comes from lots of failure. Luckily it's simple on paper. It's all the stuff in-between that will make you quit.

this is something a lot of people, and most new engineers fail to realize....its not as easy as "have idea, make product"

an example....im currently working on some prototype ski bindings....we have over $10K invested in engineering, $3K invested in prototypes, $6K in patent fees, have about 2 years invested and have gone through roughly 10 different design changes.......and what do we have to show for it?.....a patent, 2 semi functional prototypes......and a hand full of designs that didnt work.


designing new products isnt easy......if it were, someone smarter than you would have done it already.