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Crony-Capitalism is A Great Way to Kill a Gun Company
Townhall.com ^ | July 19, 2014 | Michael Schaus

Posted on 07/19/2014 11:31:50 AM PDT by Kaslin

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To: vette6387

I agree, We could all pray that the liberal owners would agree to sell the company to someone who actually wants to be in the gun business.


21 posted on 07/19/2014 3:04:59 PM PDT by Monorprise
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To: Kaslin

Never was a Colt fan. Overpriced for what you get.

Recently bought a piston driven Ruger for 1900....and AR in .308. A Colt in .308 (gas impingement) sell for $2500!

They are nuts!


22 posted on 07/19/2014 6:00:58 PM PDT by Red in Blue PA (When Injustice becomes Law, Resistance Becomes Duty.-Thomas Jefferson)
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To: jameslalor

Any info on Daniel Defense? I would really like one of their guns.....either in .223 or .300 Blackout.


23 posted on 07/19/2014 6:03:33 PM PDT by Red in Blue PA (When Injustice becomes Law, Resistance Becomes Duty.-Thomas Jefferson)
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To: Yorlik803

I own 2 Colt pistols. One is a MK 4 Series 80 Combat Commander in stainless which I bought sometime in the 80s. I love it. The other is a 4” Colt Python which is a simply magnificent handgun.

Colt couldn’t produce either today. Good riddance to them.


24 posted on 07/19/2014 6:07:06 PM PDT by Lurker (Violence is rarely the answer. But when it is it is the only answer.)
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To: Kaslin

So author Schaus thinks that selling guns to the Republic of Texas, and the US War Dept, before 1850, is just as bad as today’s “crony capitalism”?

If he thinks we should swallow that, it says more about today’s “journalism” than it does about gunmaking.


25 posted on 07/19/2014 9:46:11 PM PDT by schurmann
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To: Red in Blue PA

“Any info on Daniel Defense? I would really like one of their guns.....either in .223 or .300 Blackout.”

I don’t see the company mentioned on any of the lists of gun companies boycotting state agencies in ban-states. I haven’t seen any announcements from the company to that effect either. Sadly. I’ve heard good things about their rifles though.

I’ve been looking into the .300 BLK as well. I’ve been torn between Noveske and Wilson Combat so far, liking certain features on each company’s offerings. But given Wilson Combat’s principled stand in the wake of recent state-level bans I think they’re going to be getting a few grand from me before long.


26 posted on 07/20/2014 2:38:03 AM PDT by jameslalor
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To: Kaslin
Heck, it was only within the last few years that Colt finally got around to deciding that a pocket pistol (the .380 Mustang) might be a good idea.

Only after Sig revived the 1911-ish micro .380.

And not to forget that Star did it, ages ago.

27 posted on 07/20/2014 6:04:02 AM PDT by Lee N. Field ("How can there be peace when the sorceries and whordoms of your mother TBN are so many?")
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To: RicocheT
If I had the money, I’d buy custom shop remakes of the snubby 6 shot detective revolver, the Python .357 four inch and any of the cowboy revolvers. I’ve seen used Pythons at gun shows and very used ones go for almost $1500. The Python trigger pull is so smooth, much better than most other revolvers.

The least expensive revolver on the market now, the Armscor, is a clone of the old Colt DA.

How good a clone, I do not know. Those I've seen with mine own eyes (albeit years ago) looked rough, but Interwebz Gunboard Hearsay (YMMV) on them is good.

28 posted on 07/20/2014 6:06:54 AM PDT by Lee N. Field ("How can there be peace when the sorceries and whordoms of your mother TBN are so many?")
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To: CdMGuy
Connecticut, which used to be THE gun manufacturing state in the US has lost almost all of that industry. Thousands of jobs are gone, many now having migrated to the South.

Is Ruger still there? Most everything I see of theirs now says "Prescott, AZ" on it.

29 posted on 07/20/2014 6:08:20 AM PDT by Lee N. Field ("How can there be peace when the sorceries and whordoms of your mother TBN are so many?")
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To: FBRhawk; All

The Texan used a Python to stop the killing.

http://gunwatch.blogspot.com/2013/08/one-year-later-long-range-peach-house.html


30 posted on 07/20/2014 6:46:22 AM PDT by marktwain (The old media must die for the Republic to live. Long live the new media!)
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To: Lee N. Field

“Heck, it was only within the last few years that Colt finally got around to deciding that a pocket pistol (the .380 Mustang) might be a good idea.
Only after Sig revived the 1911-ish micro .380.

And not to forget that Star did it, ages ago.”

Colt was ahead of everybody else, introducing the 380 ACP in its Model M (aka Pocket Hammerless) in 1908. It went out of production during WWII and was not reintroduced after the war, after over 130,000 were made. It’s widely believed that barrels and magazines will interchange with the more-common M1903 Pocket Hammerless chambered in 32 ACP (over 570,000 made), but that is not the case, though the factory did give both of them the same frame size letter designation.

Colt introduced its first Pony in the 1960s, copying a Star design which had been imported by Garcia and Interarms. From it, they developed the Series 80 Government 380. One of the few locked-breech 380s ever made, it descends not from Colt’s O frame (M1911 or Government Model) line, but from a very long line of small-frame single action autos originating in Europe, which did stem from the basic Government Model configuration.

Colt enjoyed a long association with Spanish gunmakers, marketing Astra’s Cub in 25 ACP and 22 Short from the 1950s into the 1970s as the Colt Junior. The slides were roll-stamped “Made in Spain for Colt’s”.

The Series 80 380 guns went out of production when Colt stopped making most autos and revolvers in the late 1990s.

The SIG-Sauer P238 is a very close copy of Colt’s Series 80 Mustang, but few parts will swap. One infers Colt finally got the news that concealed-carry guns are in demand, since they have revived the latter-day Mustang.


31 posted on 07/20/2014 9:54:14 AM PDT by schurmann
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