.32s dont stack as well because they have a small rim and .380s are true rimless.
Thats why the Beretta 81s have a smaller capacity in .32 than the 84s in .380.
If nothing else, this will be great news for extra OEM .32 magazines which were getting scarce.
You can try epoxying a rod onto the stationary side, with a binary cement like JB Weld. That may give you enough leverage to turn it. Another option would be to drill into the stationary side and tap in an Eazy-out or bolt extractor.
I've had several 230/232s and never had an issue at all. In...
Mine ran great as long as it got a deep cleaning every 2-300 rounds and plenty of lube. The firing pin broke eventually, but I was able to fab a working replacement from a roofing nail. Only sold it to feed the kids....☹️
It's 24." I dunno why a lot of the old .22s had such long barrels- they really don't pick up any velocity after 18" or so, at least with modern ammo. Might have had something to do with slower powder burn rates prior to WW2....?
Nope, no provision for a scope. Its drilled and tapped at the...
Although you rarely notice it on Star Trek, James Doohan (Scotty) only had nine fingers and walked with a limp after being shot six times on D-Day (by friendly fire 😞). He returned to service and spent the rest of the war as an observation plane pilot and artillery spotter.
I had one shear the actual lug on the barrel itself once, splitting all the way into the chamber. I thought we were going to have to cut the slide in half to get it open, but a enough wacks with a rubber mallet eventually got it. It was a clearly used and abused Sheriffs Dept. gun. We replaced...
I saw a couple of the birdsheads in the flesh yesterday, they didn't win me over.
If they did a stainless or even blued steel square-butt frame, I might be back in.
Still kicking myself for selling my Type M. Picked it up on my lunch break, showed it to my boss and he offered me $400 cash more than I paid on the spot.
Never even made it home or shot it. Haven't seen another since.....🤪
Nice Microtech too!
I still like 92s, have a bucket full of them and...
Savage/Stevens made a whole series of .22 semi-autos under many model numbers and brand-names (87A being the most common) that featured cooling vents or "gills" on the sides of the receiver -
The bolt would remain open after firing if one held the trigger, slamming forward upon reset. This gave...
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