dhermann1
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 9,132
- Location
- Da Bronx, NY, USA
My brother has our father's 1931 vintage Fox Sterlingworth 12 gauge *******. He was in the ***** club in high school. My brother says the comment on this *** was that it's not a good cheap ***, it's a cheap good ***. I think ***** and trap shooting are very vintagey activities, somehow.
When I was in Marine Corps bootcamp in 1966 our standard issue weapon was the M-14. This was just before the M-16 came in. The M-14 was a very serviceable weapon, with strengths and weaknesses. I learned to operate it pretty competently. But in ITR (Infantry Training Regiment) they gave us old WWII vintage M-1's. We were all used to the big 20 round magazines on the M-14, and couldn't deal with the m-1's little clips. Our company commander grabbed one from a recruit's hand and loped through the "John Wayne course" in seconds. making that M-1 absolutely sing. We gave it a try and quickly got the hang of it. I must say, handling the M-1, for those short few weeks, became a real pleasure. It's just an elegant old *****, a real work of art. You really felt like a *****man carrying it.
When I was in Marine Corps bootcamp in 1966 our standard issue weapon was the M-14. This was just before the M-16 came in. The M-14 was a very serviceable weapon, with strengths and weaknesses. I learned to operate it pretty competently. But in ITR (Infantry Training Regiment) they gave us old WWII vintage M-1's. We were all used to the big 20 round magazines on the M-14, and couldn't deal with the m-1's little clips. Our company commander grabbed one from a recruit's hand and loped through the "John Wayne course" in seconds. making that M-1 absolutely sing. We gave it a try and quickly got the hang of it. I must say, handling the M-1, for those short few weeks, became a real pleasure. It's just an elegant old *****, a real work of art. You really felt like a *****man carrying it.


