

http://www.gunsamerica.com/blog/juggern ... is-system/
Yep, Glocks are pure purty next to that thing. I wouldn't do that to my Scout if you provided the parts and bought another Scout. I just can't be that cruel, even to an inanimate object.pwl44m wrote:And They say My Glock Is Ugly. hmmmm
Perry
Ever since the 60s and woman's movement, and bra burning, and hippies drugs and liberals, REAL MEN have been bread out of the species. MEN who can handle a real rifle are few and far between today.jnyork wrote:Guess I am just too old to appreciate either one of those, would much rather have a real M1A with wood stock and iron sights in original configuration, now that's a real MAN'S rifle.
J Miller wrote: Ever since the 60s and woman's movement, and bra burning, and hippies drugs and liberals, REAL MEN have been bread out of the species. MEN who can handle a real rifle are few and far between today.
So now they have 'things' like that tactical junque to make the pseudo men think they are real.
Joe
Har har!!!4t5 wrote:Bull pup maybe,Bull poop surely!
I stumbled upon it at Rock River Arms a while back. They were selling plain walnut sets for $150 with a stock A2 pistol grip. While they don't sell them anymore, I believe that they got them from Precision Firearms. The rifle length is on the first page for $149, second from the bottom while the carbine length is below it. I made the grip by adding some wood to build up the beavertail on an old DPMS wood one I found at the funshow some years ago. If you want to spring for a more custom one, MacTec has some nice wood grips but they are spendy.jeepnik wrote:Steve, I agree with J on the wood. Where'd you get it?
What scope magnification...? I know I could barely see an apple at 100 yards with a 4x scope, so assume that for 460 yards, I'd need at least a 20x scope to even see the durned apple...!COSteve wrote:At Pawnee National Grasslands about 7 weeks ago, I was shooting apples at 460 yards!
Actually, as an Armorer at that time, we found that the stocks were no weaker than the M1 Garand's in that area, it's just that the instructors were letting them be abused. The quality and attitude of the trainees was quite different from those entering during WWII.Moondawg wrote:The original wooden stock M-14 had a fatal flaw. The stock was weak at the pistol grip and prone to break. We broke a lot of stocks doing horizontal butt stokes, during bayonet drill, on the bayonet dummies. The Army started replacing the broken wooden stocks with a heavy fiberglass stock that was much more durable. The M-14 was a pretty good battle rifle, except for the jungles and rice paddies of Vietnam. Unfortunately, that was the only war we had at the time.