Results 16 to 30 of 1335
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17 April 2009, 10:14 #16
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17 April 2009, 11:57 #17WWW.TACTICALYELLOWVISOR.NET
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18 April 2009, 04:05 #18
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18 April 2009, 04:10 #19
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19 April 2009, 04:56 #20
This doesent fit the thread, but I happen to like this pic
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19 April 2009, 07:09 #21
My Remington 700 SA .308 Mil-spec Stainless Special w/ 5R barrel, HS Precision stock w/ HS Precision 10-rd box mag and trigger guard, TPS 30mm TSR medium height rings w/ TPS Rem 700 20 MOA cant Picatinny base, TPS tactical bolt knob, Shotter's Ridge Rock Mount 9-13" bipod, Blackhawk sling, and Blackhawk cheek pad (not pictured).
- Federalist22
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19 April 2009, 07:49 #22
FN Patrol Bolt Rifle, AI Mag conversion, Mcmillan A2 stock, assorted fixin's.
"There he goes. One of God's own prototypes. Some kind of high powered mutant never even considered for mass production. Too weird to live, and too rare to die."
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19 April 2009, 07:52 #23
love the stainless barrel
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19 April 2009, 08:24 #24
I'm going to shark one of my previous posts from another part of the board to include my primary hunting arm here in Germany ...
This is a BRNO-produced (under German occupation) ex-6th SS Nord G.33/40 hunting re-work in 8mm Mauser. The carbine is topped with an S&B 1.5-6x42 FD7 (FlashDot) Zenith on EAW swing mounts which gives it a repeatable zero capability. This particular weapon has a known provenance, as it was one of several G.33/40s sourced from a battle area in the Spessart mountains in the spring of 1945 when US troops encountered a pocket of fierce resistance from the evading SS formation.
The German master riflesmith who recovered it in 1945 is now deceased, but his son and two grandsons operate the business today. This long-forgotten barreled action was found in the shop's backstock in 2007, and was re-worked according to the pattern developed by the old man in the 1950s. If you know anything about the G.33/40, then you know how light and compact this carbine truly is -- it's actually quite comparable to the M1 carbine in terms of form factor.
As I indicated prevoiusly, the light weight and heavy loading make it something of a punisher for firing any extended sessions, but there isn't much on the planet that it won't stop. Like the M4, the G.33/40 was proof that good things do indeed come in small packages.
ACStand your ground; don't fire unless fired upon, but if they mean to have a war, let it begin here. -- Captain John Parker, Lexington, 1775.
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19 April 2009, 21:47 #25Member
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A pair of T/C Contenders:
LRB M-14:
Some Pod-Claws:
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23 April 2009, 22:42 #26
My issued weapons
A couple of my issued weapons of choice. Not personally owned but enjoyable just the same!
- Zak
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23 April 2009, 22:59 #27
Welcome aboard Zak, those bring back some memories.
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23 April 2009, 23:09 #28
Stick, I'm impressed! With the rifle that is...the photos are a given. I assume thats an original, correct? Looks like its seen some combat in another era. Very nice
-Mitch-
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23 April 2009, 23:23 #29
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24 April 2009, 01:12 #30
"dropped only once!"