Posted on 02/03/2019 3:24:28 PM PST by marktwain
Lots of good ideas never caught on. This however sounds like a bad idea I hope doesn’t catch on.
Is the ammo feed electric?
I agree, once there is an “alternative” to a semi-auto it could become mandatory at some point. Wish they hadn’t gone there...
I wish the Remington 5mm rimfire magnum had caught on. Those who bought one have a hard time finding ammo. I think Remington does do run of the ammo every few years.
No.
Never can figure ahead on this stuff sometimes. Guess they made a LOT of T/C Contender Barrels for that round also.
I have read that .22 magnum is the most popular barrel for the Contender. I had one which was inaccurate. That is even with a Burris scope attached.
I traded it off at a gun show. A few years later I bought one at a gun show. Darned if it wasn’t that same barrel. It had made the rounds.
Why?
I can’t think of a single reason for it’s existence.
Another answer to a question nobody asked.
incredible, What’s the chances of that? :)
Lol... Well said.
The question was asked on post #3.
At a time when they are trying to outlaw all Semi-automatics someone goes off and hands them an “alternative” in a popular “looking” format. The timing is bad.
Not even a political one?
There are many reasons why the mechanical double action never went past revolvers. And rightfully so. It’s a step backwards.
It’s gotta have a frigging 20 pound trigger pull to do all that. Pulling the trigger unlocks the bolt, rotates it 23 degrees, cycles the bolt carrier back, ejects the spent round, and if I understand correctly, when the trigger pull bottoms out, the bolt slams home and fires. That’s gotta me massive pull length, heavy as hell and full of creep
belly laugh on that
I felt the pull on the prototype, with an empty magazine, at the shot show.
I did not measure it.
I estimate it was 12-15 lbs.
A heavy double-action trigger pull...
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.