Mega Rad Gun Thread

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I'm looking for a pistol that I can use for conceal carry (once I get the license). Needs to be in a $300-$500 price range and has to have a good punching power to boot. So, what would I buy? :thinking:
 
I advise against using brass cleaner on any brass you want to reload.

Noted. My brother's been sitting on a stockpile of .303 rounds from WWII with bandoleers and stripper clips, and I've been trying to figure out how to clean them for him for a while.
 
Noted. My brother's been sitting on a stockpile of .303 rounds from WWII with bandoleers and stripper clips, and I've been trying to figure out how to clean them for him for a while.
I'd fire them, put them in a tumbler, and see how they look. Brasso contains ammonia, and that will definitely weaken cartridges.

I'm sure you'd have better sense than to put live rounds into a tumbler.

Brass steel wool is not a bad idea.

I'm looking for a pistol that I can use for conceal carry (once I get the license). Needs to be in a $300-$500 price range and has to have a good punching power to boot. So, what would I buy? :thinking:
If you have the good fortune to live near a range that rents pistols, try three or four in that price range and see what you like. I'd want to know more about your level of experience, any preferences you know of, and so on before I advised further.
 
Are parts as readily available as other models? I've heard that not all Tristar or Carnik handguns are compatible with CZ parts.
the CZ75 is widely cloned and not all clones will have completely compatible parts. this is a fact of life. Tristar can work with several original parts, but you may need to use CZ75 or Canik 55 or Tangfolio Witness or Jericho or Bren, et c parts if you do not have Tristar OEM parts available (Century Arms has the majority of parts IIRC, and the Canik 55 pistol has the highest parts compatibility like pins and springs and i think the compact version uses the same barrel.

they all can largely use the same magazine with minor fitting, and most will take CZ parts like the sights or hammer. if you are worried about parts, just buy a pistol that has more parts out in the wild: the CZ 75.
I'd heard the two were related in the past. I take it Stoegers are pretty decent too?
Stoeger made guns in the past, went out of business and became a name as part of a holding company that was bought by the Chinese, then was bought by Benelli which was then bought by Beretta. they are effectively just an importer now. the Beretta and Stoeger Cougar pistols differ only in minor details, with the Stoeger Cougar being cheaper as it's made in Turkey where COGS is less.
I can't find anything about verdigris'ed ammo on the internet
probably because modern brass cases do not oxidize the same way as they contain more brass (by pecent) as well as cupronickel, zinc, and tin in a gliding metal alloy and virtually no copper at all. old ammunition was usually annealed brass cases formed by a brass/copper alloy which was prone to oxidation. old hands will know this receipe and it works for any verdigris'd copper or brass objects, not just ammo:

1. pour table salt on your workpiece just enough to cover it
2. squeeze about a tea spoon of lemon juice over it, let it turn to a paste (like borax)
3. use the lemon slice to scrub the verdigris away. what you're doing is "reverse plating" the verdigris off the metal.
4. rinse with hot soapy water after a while, dry immediately, and repeat until you like the patina. for just shooting the ammo (i wouldn't reload ammunition that was corroded), scrub until you can't feel any roughness with your fingernail.
5. use vinegar or naval jelly and a polish brush if you want to get some luster back.

the "easy" way is to scrub it all down with Brasso, however that takes a while. the method above you can do a whole can of ammo in an hour, and if you understand that you are electrolyzing and polishing off the corrosion, you will understand the idea of how to speed up the process.

other methods from the 60's include sulfuric acid bath plus scrubbing with hydrogen peroxide and 0000 steel wool. a method from the 1800's was nitric acid...
 
@Club Sandwich
ok, so just to be clear, the idea is to get all the cartridges covered with the lemon juice-salt paste and use the lemon slice to scrub off the verdigris after that?

That doesn't sound so bad. I remember most of the verdigris patches being already pretty smooth to the touch, though I'll have to try with the fingernail to see if it's any different.
 
millais said:
ok, so just to be clear, the idea is to get all the cartridges covered with the lemon juice-salt paste and use the lemon slice to scrub off the verdigris after that?
more or less. if you've ever scrubbed hardwood floors or tile with borax powder and water and newspaper or polished hardwood with boiled tung/linseed oil and salt water, that's the gist of it.
 
VSS is my gunfu
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I sinned and bought another gun. A .338 federal savage scout. These new acustocks are pretty sweet and for 630 it was like buy me. Someday I will need a gun support group.
 

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I sinned and bought another gun. A .338 federal savage scout. These new acustocks are pretty sweet and for 630 it was like buy me. Someday I will need a gun support group.
Scout rifles are dank AF.

What made you go 338? Do you reload?

On my short list since i'm a wild cat addict I'm getting a LCR 327 soon.
 
Scout rifles are dank AF.

What made you go 338? Do you reload?

On my short list since i'm a wild cat addict I'm getting a LCR 327 soon.

I dont have time for reloading sadly. .338 federal in case I go bear hunting or elk hunting. That and I like some of the lesser loved calibers
 
I bought myself a .22 ruger 10/22 charger. Still waiting for it to come to my house. Also I’m probably pretty late to this one but I’ve been seeing an odd resurgence of 10mm pistols all the sudden. At my gun store they’re selling the colt delta elite, ruger super redhawk chambered in 10mm, a glock 20 chambered in 10mm and sig p200 hunter. Just odd to see that round pop up again
 
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My normal carry is a g20, I've always been a sucker for that round and it's meme status. 10 is a beast I had a p220 in 10 when they first came out and wound up flipping it for a profit and really it just wasn't so amazing I wanted to reduce my round count vs my g10. Coming from a hammer gun nazi that should say how much I trust my g20, it's ported and trigger work so pretty off the shelf.

10 is one of those cases it earns it's memes. It won't replace a rifle round but it's a damn good hand gun round.
 
I've yet to actually get a hold of a 10mm chambered pistol yet. My uncle has a Hi-Point 1095ts 10mm and despite the reputation Hi-Point garners for being cheap and whatnot its actually a damn good gun for its price. Fun as hell to shoot when I go to the range with him.
 
I'm looking for a pistol that I can use for conceal carry (once I get the license). Needs to be in a $300-$500 price range and has to have a good punching power to boot. So, what would I buy? :thinking:

The CZ P07 and P09 are worth a look. Lots of features and value for the scratch, and CZs tend to be robust, reliable, and plenty accurate for a fighting handgun. The P07 and P09 are basically updated versions of the venerable CZ75 with modern features and polymer frames. They can be had for under $475 pretty easily.

I bought myself a .22 ruger 10/22 charger. Still waiting for it to come to my house. Also I’m probably pretty late to this one but I’ve been seeing an odd resurgence of 10mm pistols all the sudden. At my gun store they’re selling the colt delta elite, ruger super redhawk chambered in 10mm, a glock 20 chambered in 10mm and sig p200 hunter. Just odd to see that round pop up again

10mm is an awesome cartridge. If you get rounds loaded to their full potential, not that pussy-ass FBI light load shit, then you've got an autoloader with .357 Magnum muzzle energy, fast reloads, and capacity rivaling some 9mm pistols depending on the model. I had a Smith and Wesson 1076, which was the pistol the FBI adopted back in the early 90s to replace their snubby .38s and 9mms. Think of a Third Generation S&W auto with a SIG Sauer-style decock lever. In fact, mine was a former FBI service pistol. I sadly had to sell it along with the majority of my old collection to make ends meet, but I would love another 10mm one day, especially for a carry pistol. In my opinion, the 10mm is starting to gain the recognition that it has always deserved.
 
I got my hands on one of the blackpowder 1860 Colt Army reproductions. We'll see this weekend if I can make it through a cylinder without blowing myself up. I've never done the blackpowder thing before.
I've yet to actually get a hold of a 10mm chambered pistol yet. My uncle has a Hi-Point 1095ts 10mm and despite the reputation Hi-Point garners for being cheap and whatnot its actually a damn good gun for its price. Fun as hell to shoot when I go to the range with him.
The only bad thing about 10mm from what I understand is that the full-power cartridge is ROUGH on a typical semiauto frame and parts. I know my cousin had one of the Delta Elites that he replaced the spring in at least twice.
 
The only bad thing about 10mm from what I understand is that the full-power cartridge is ROUGH on a typical semiauto frame and parts. I know my cousin had one of the Delta Elites that he replaced the spring in at least twice.

Full house 10mm can be rough on frames, especially if it's chambered in a firearm not designed around the cartridge or if the recoil spring wears out. If the weapon is designed with the cartridge in mind or properly beefed up, then you're less likely to have issues. You can always use rounds loaded to the FBI Light Load specs, which most 10mm ammunition is loaded to these days, but then you may as well just shoot a .40 S&W, since that's what birthed the .40 in the first place. It was designed to take the same weight and caliber bullet traveling at the same velocities and generate the same muzzle energy, just with a shorter case to fit in a smaller frame pistol. IMHO, if you're going to shoot 10mm it should be loaded to it's full potential, and there are a lot more full house options these days then there were even ten years ago.
 
I got my hands on one of the blackpowder 1860 Colt Army reproductions. We'll see this weekend if I can make it through a cylinder without blowing myself up. I've never done the blackpowder thing before.

The only bad thing about 10mm from what I understand is that the full-power cartridge is ROUGH on a typical semiauto frame and parts. I know my cousin had one of the Delta Elites that he replaced the spring in at least twice.
I hear you don't need to worry about the cylinder chainfiring if you smear lube over the cylinder mouths after seating the ball and powder.
 
I hear you don't need to worry about the cylinder chainfiring if you smear lube over the cylinder mouths after seating the ball and powder.
I'm not terribly worried about it (I was being hyperbolic), but due to my inexperience with black powder I'm taking it slow and making sure I do everything by the book.
 
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