Using profanity on this site is not necessary. I believe I am safe with the Savage. I have fired it 500 times with 60 gr Hornady HP's. No malfunctions. It is my decision. For one thing I think it is...
Type: Posts; User: Doug Bowser
Using profanity on this site is not necessary. I believe I am safe with the Savage. I have fired it 500 times with 60 gr Hornady HP's. No malfunctions. It is my decision. For one thing I think it is...
Some of you are not very gentlemanly. I will carry what I want. I will also carry the P225. That's the end of it for me.
The Savage was way ahead of it's time. It can be carried safely with the hammer down on a live round. The safety is more positive than the 1903 Colt. It actually holds the striker back away from the...
I know you have a point but the obsolete firearms are what I personally enjoy using. Some gun is better than no gun.
When I was shooting the Swiss 1911, the GP11 ammo was not available. I lucked up on 300 rounds of Norma brass. I found the 168 gr International Match bullets by Sierra were the most accurate. The...
I would not want to be on the receiving end of 50,000 150 gr .30 bullets.
I carry it with no round in the chamber. I have practiced operating the slide so many times, I could do it blindfolded.
A single action hammerless pistol is not the best thing to carry in a pocket or waistband. I carry a Savage Model 1907, in my pocket, but it never has a round in the chamber. If I ant to carry fully...
That is true but I find a lot of old revolvers with thin front sights, bent that way.
I always carry in church. There are at least 6 of us who carry every Sunday. I don't believe in hiding. Turn and fight is my motto.
It is small and really concealable. I am a good enough shot to make head shots with it out to 20 yards.
A moderate snowfall can be 48". I have seen 150" in the Mexico, NY area. You can really get lost up there.
MY DAD AND THE MIDNIGHT VISITOR
When I was a youngster and up to my 16th Birthday, my Godfather had a Camp on the Tug Hill Plateau in Lewis County, New York. It was far into the North woods and...
SHOOTING A $17.00 SWISS 7.5X55MM RIFLE
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This is an illustration of a Swiss Schmidt-Rubin Model 1896/11 Rifle
I was in "Cooter Carter's Shooter's Shop" in Brookhaven, MS. It was the fall...
A Rifle Returned from England after WW2
During WW2 the British Home Guard did not have enough firearms to arm them. Through the NRA, American Sportsmen donated a large number of various sporting...
AN INCIDENT AT THE BATTLE OF ST. MIHIEL
My Father’s Unit, the Third Ohio Machinegun Battalion, was at St. Mihiel in September 12-15, 1918. The attack was made by 550,000 US Troops and 48,000...
DOUG BOWSER
As the 100 year Anniversary of World War 1 approaches, I remember the stories my Father told me about his service in France. He was a First Sergeant in the 3rd Ohio Machinegun...
MY FATHER’S LAST BATTLE IN WW1
My Father , John William Bowser (1890-1960) and his younger brother, McKinley “Mack” Bowser, joined the US Army on April 7th, 1917. That was one day after President...
MY EXPERIENCES WITH THE 1873 TRAPDOOR SPRINGFIELD
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When I was 16 years old, my Dad and I drove from Syracuse to Homer, New York. The big attraction in Homer was Jerry Crozier's Gun...
Sorry about the typo. I know it is Colt's
They have a wooden backstrap.
Doug
No Star pistols of any caliber are safe with the hammer down on a loaded chamber.
This particular revolver has the chambers factory drilled straight through. A .38 Special will enter the chambers with no problem. As a matter of fact a .357 magnum will also chamber. I would shoot...
The Colt’s Police Positive revolver in .32 Colt PP
I picked up a serviceable Colt’s Police Positive Revolver. It is in .38 Colt Police Positive. This cartridge is interchangeable with the .38 Smith...
It is about like a USGI 1911-A-1