Not All Good Ideas are Good For Us
Having worked both “razzle booths” and “flat stores” in carnivals, I know any skill game, no matter how small it appears, can be rigged.
Having worked both “razzle booths” and “flat stores” in carnivals, I know any skill game, no matter how small it appears, can be rigged.
But the buzz conversation isn’t about products or sales, it’s what everyone sees as an eventual confrontation between European powerhouse Beretta Holding, SA, and Sturm, Ruger & Company.
Shortly after the close of the stock market yesterday, the board of directors of Sturm, Ruger & Company announced the
Any European conglomerate buying a chunk of a U. S. competitor is wonderful grist for the industry gossip mill.
This event separates great specialty shooters from the shooters who have the ability to pivot from one discipline to another.
That’s what makes this competition interesting. Everyone will step to the line using unfamiliar guns, from precision air pistols to shotguns, practical defensive pistols and single action six-guns, as well as rimfire rifles and long-range rifles.
Friday’s opening of the Smith & Wesson Academy’s training facilities on their 236 acre campus seemed more like a welcoming party for the newest neighbor on the block then S&W’s return to the training category.
As the name implies, it’s a downsized version of their full-size Echelon modular pistol. With a shorter barrel (four inches), smaller grip module and a 1.25” grip width, you might expect the 9mm unit to be a bit more, er…snappy.
For several years, the optic sitting atop my well-worn “field grade” .22 rimfire hasn’t changed. The rifle and the Burris
Most of the buzz has focused on the patent’s statement regarding the P320’s safety system which, AST’s 2023 announcement stated “exposed an element of risk for its users due to documented unintended discharge” and the fact the inventor, Brian McDonald, was at one point an employee of SIG SAUER.