Legion Wrote:Was thinking about getting a Glock 26 or 27, but am now considering just going for a Bersa Thunder380 CC or maybe follow our boy jack and go for a AMT 380 back-up.
If you're thinking about a Bersa, first check to see if extra magazines are available. I understand that they're pretty hard to find. Forget about the 380 back-up. It's a piece of crap. The trigger is better than it used to be, but you need a hammer and two . . . TWO . . . different kinds of drifts/punches to remove the slide. It's VERY cheaply built.
Quote:Then again the 45 is always a possibility. Smith and Wesson Chief's Special Model CS45 is a gorgeous little auto.
Unfortunately, it has an aluminum frame. Which means that it will -- with its light weight -- have massive recoil, and aluminum just doesn't stand up to the battering as well as steel or stainless does.
Quote:I had a scare last time I shot. I was using my brothers SKS for the first time. Outdoor range, thank god. I loaded the magazine ( with the safety on ) and let the slide go, just like I had always done. Well, I had my cousins with me and they were crowding around so I had the barrel aimed ALMOST straight up when I did. Damned thing went off. Put a perfectly circular little hole in the corrugated plastic roof of the range. Thought the old vets they have for range monitors were gonna shit. Nobody but our party noticed.
I told my brother that if it hit anything we'd know in about five minutes since we were right by the state police barracks. Nobody showed. *Phew..*.
Turns out its a common flaw with the Chinese SKS. Some part, I forget what, floats
If I remember correctly, it's the firing pin. It's a free-floating pin, and when the bolt is released, the firing pin -- which is a bit heavy -- will continue forward after the bolt has slammed closed, and ignite the primer. This mostly happens with commercial ammunition, which has a softer primer cup than the intended military ammunition. This is the exact opposite of what I've seen with the Ruger Mini-Thirty, which has (had?) a light weight firing pin, and therefore would
not fire 7.63X39 military ammo. The firing pin would just not hit hard enough to light off the primer. Commercial ammo was okay, but not military ammo.
Quote:and it can do that even when not being loaded and just sitting still.
I find that hard to believe.
Ken V.