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Dunno, pic is from internet. Interesting looking though. I wonder if it works without jamming?What is that drum?
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Dunno, pic is from internet. Interesting looking though. I wonder if it works without jamming?What is that drum?
And its all stored in the waterproof, dustproof, bouyant, buttstock..........The Henry is about $240.
One in every ten rds ftf or even completely destroyed would be my guess.Dunno, pic is from internet. Interesting looking though. I wonder if it works without jamming?
Good catch! Looks to be a modified American 180 drum maybe? I can't stand drums. Trying to get them to work on a 10/22 as a kid turned me off them for life.Looks like an AM15 upper drum.
I got to shoot an AM15 upper in full auto. The owner said I could shoot it as much as I wanted to as long as I loaded the mags. I only shot it once. Fun to shoot, b*tch to load.Good catch! Looks to be a modified American 180 drum maybe? I can't stand drums. Trying to get them to work on a 10/22 as a kid turned me off them for life.
found this fwiw on am 180 parts and info:
Interesting that company is located in riddle OR. Never heard of the place.
Not the same as full auto of course (and much lower rpm than that video maybe half?) but fwiw a binary trigger will get u 600rpm. I'm thinking maybe the frt trigger could get up to 800rpm (total guess) but the only .22 gun I know of it could work on is cmmg who makes an auto sear trip kit which allows the frt trigger to function.Very impressive. I stand corrected on magazine functionality.
I always wanted a rimfire bullet hose.
Cool! I wonder what rpm that is, 1100ish?Sounds incredibly high to me. Awesome!I got to shoot an AM15 upper in full auto. The owner said I could shoot it as much as I wanted to as long as I loaded the mags. I only shot it once. Fun to shoot, b*tch to load.
If you've ever had a straight blowback 22 this story might be familiar.Not the same as full auto of course but fwiw a binary trigger will get u 600rpm. I'm thinking maybe the frt trigger could get up to 800rpm (total guess) but the only .22 gun I know of it could work on is cmmg who makes an auto sear trip kit which allows the frt trigger to function.
I need to set the 15-22 bolt and an ar bolt side by side and see if the 15-22 bolt could be modified to act like the ar bolt (ie add a trip surface like the cmmg kit does). If it could then the frt trigger might work in the 15-22 which would be cool.
And .22WMR on the Pak Rifle!Let's see, I have four (?) .22 rimfire takedown rifles?
M6 Scout - .22/410
Pack Rifle (15 ounce single shot)
Ruger 10/22 takedown
Ruger 10/22 in a Magpul Hunter folding stock
The Pak Rifle is the lightest and most compact
View attachment 1019219
But also the slowest to shoot and reload.
I am given to understand that the guy who designed this broke off from the people who now manufacture it, and he makes (or did make) a kit to convert other rifles to ultralight takedowns.
Packable Rifle | The Ultralight Hiker
A packable .22 Winchester Magnum rifle at under 1 pound has to be a useful thing to own, surely? 'PRK is short for Pack Rifle Kit. The PRK converts your Crickett or Chipmunk youth rifle into a light weight, take down pack rifle. The PRK replaces the barrel and stock of of your Crickett orwww.theultralighthiker.com
I prefer the Magpul stock to the Ruger takedown - it is lighter, smaller and it can be used with other 10/22 rifles, not just the takedown model.
Yeah, that is what I am thinking I want - a .22 WMR lightweight takedown rifleAnd .22WMR on the Pak Rifle!
Weight is an issue for me too. I can't walk very far due to heart/lung condition and my back, but weight has always been an issue, even when I could get around fine. I have a .44 mag S&W 329PD, a S&W Airweight .22 and the Pack Rifle as aux firearms.I have struggled with the concept of having at the ready a firearm while I bowhunt (a legal practice). Politics and legalities aside, for all practical purposes while I hunt, I am a backpacker. I hunt on foot. There is ONE overriding factor that has been my constant obstacle:
The weight of ANY gun. I travel light, but with a daypack crammed with mostly hard gear, some shelter and survival items, food, and WATER. (If you've ever carried water on your back you know why it is capitalized here.)
On bowhunts where I believe I may need an alternate weapon, in Alaska it was a .357 or .41 Revolver. WAY too much weight. No usage to sweat ratio was favorable.
Best yet is a Contender, factory (slim octagon) barrel, slim (Phantom or Lobo) optic. .357 or (more recently) .256 Winchester Magnum.
Light weight. Minute of Grapefruit at 100 yards. Shove it in the pack and forget about it.
Operational, its the size of a medium-large handgun (which it is) at 1/2 the weight.
But it takes down from there and can be stashed in socks in the pack.
Don't do that without replacing the pins with Tandemkross upgrades. And a nylon bolt buffer too.
Losing ruger assembly pins is inevitable in the best of circumstances.
Y'know, these guys are right.The issue there is you have to be extra careful not to lose the bolt stop and FCG pins.
It's located in the great state of Jefferson.Interesting that company is located in riddle OR. Never heard of the place.