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Going to catch a plane?
.41 mag is a "failed" caliber.. shouldnt be but it is, and I still reload for it, altho the .357 can probably do pretty much anything a .41 will do..How about an almost one off. the Winchester .348 only chambered in the Model 71 Winchester lever action and now days you can find some of the Model 1885 replica single shots chambered in it.
444 Marlin when I was a kid around 1968 My dad and his buddies were all smitten with it and now NOTHING.
tac,
Did the grip on your XP's seem too "centered" on the gun?
My dad always complained about that. Made the recoil worse than it should've been in his opinion.
Dean
Has anyone mentioned the .17 Mach 2?
There have been a lot of great responses to this thread. Many of the cartridges mentioned I recall, though a few not.
One I was recently reminded of, whilst reading a revolver book from the 80s, was the 9mm Federal. It was basically a rimmed 9㎜ Parabellum. It was only produced from 89-91 and then Charter Arms, the only manufacturer of a revolver in said, went belly up.
Reportedly, the cartridge could also be stuffed and fired in antique, weak, break-action, some blackpowder-only, .38 S&W wheelguns. What could go wrong?
View attachment 462767
At least its American and doesn't use that metric schit. The 10mm is the roundabout of cartridges. Just another thing trying to be European by using that metric garbage.
I'm pretty sure he was joking about "metric garbage".
That's why I bought an L1A1 instead of an FAL. I wanted a good, solid, British inch pattern gun, not some silly metric thing!
I went metric, for the superior Austrian cold hammer forged barrels (best barrels FALs could receive!).I'm pretty sure he was joking about "metric garbage".
That's why I bought an L1A1 instead of an FAL. I wanted a good, solid, British inch pattern gun, not some silly metric thing!