A chronicle of vile and pernicious truths.
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The right to keep and bear arms, occasional attempts at satire, frequent recourse to sarcasm, and anything else I can think of. Oh yeah, and pipe smoking. Sometimes H.P. Lovecraft. And obscure Monty Python references when applicable.

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What really happened to the Anasazi people? Was Jack the Ripper someone's second choice? What was the famous Ranger tracking in Gypsy's Gulch? These and other questions are answered in Hell's Hangmen: Horror in the Old West as twenty-two of today's most talented writers bring you fantastical tales with a Western Flavor. Thrill to those eerie days of yesteryear...

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Most recent update: 5 August 2007.
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View Article  Gratuitous .357 magnum pic
Over at Ninth Stage.  Very good quality picture, too.  Wallpaper worthy.
View Article  Oh, for $1,600 of surplus cash


A Coonan semi-auto is up for sale at GunsAmerica.
View Article  .357 Magnum loads at Front Sight, Press
Front Sight, Press has a great post about the .357 Magnum as a personal defense load.

For the information of anyone who cares:  I carry mine with Remington Golden Sabers.  This cartridge is in between .38+P and full-blown .357 magnum.  According to Remington, their .38+P is around 900 fps (muzzle velocity), Golden Saber .357 around 1200 fps, and full .357 around 1400 fps.

I also live in the country, and like having the option of loading it with something more powerful should the occasion arise.  I'm thinking those reloads I mentioned recently would be very potent wild hog medicine in my rifle.

The versatility of this round is amazing.  For the hunter, with varying loads it can be used for anything as small as rabbits up to medium-sized game like deer, or even some large game if you're really good.  For defense purposes, a new shooter can start out learning with lower-powered .38 loads, and then move up to more powerful loads without even having to change guns.

I would also like to take this opportunity to say that I'm going to create a new category just for the .38/.357 so I can put all these posts in there for easy reference.  I'll probably need to go back and re-categorize some of my old posts.
View Article  Your .357 magnum dose of the day
theluvofamother has a neat post about restoring a severly battered and beaten Smith & Wesson.

Here's the after pic:



Go check out the others.  A heartening post for anyone who hates to see a good gun ruined by misuse and neglect.
View Article  Range Report: E.M.F. Winchester 1892 .357 magnum


I was planning on taking the camera to the range today but I forgot it.  I went to our "private range."

I started with some factory PMC loaded with 158 grain JSP (jacketed soft point).  Recoil was pleasant but not intimidating, and it turned out that this was by far the most accurate (as in, already zeroed--no sight adjustment required) load for the range at which I was shooting, which was 50 yards.  The rifle was probably as accurate as it could be with me doing the shooting.  Although I would not have been able to drive nails with it, if my dad had been there I'm sure he would have said, "that'll drop a deer."

I had only 10 rounds or so of the PMC stuff left from previous handgun shooting, so it didn't take me long to finish it off and start on the various handloads that I have.  I didn't load them, but the person who did gave me all the details about them for my future reference.

The first batch was shooting 158 grain JSP's with 13.3 grains of Hercules 2400.  Maybe that means something to you reloaders, but it didn't mean much to me.  Until I shot it, that is.  These were some serious reloads.  The recoil even punched me pretty hard a couple of times when the butt wasn't seated in just exactly the right spot of my shoulder.  These loads shot high, but grouped well.  Next time I might try some 100-yard shooting and see how these work.  These might turn out to be good 100-yard loads, and judging by the recoil, they would easily drop a deer.

Also, our backstop is made of a couple of layers of heavy metal sheets angled to deflect the bullets downward.  The PMC factory loads just clanged and ricocheted into the dirt.  These reloads were hitting so hard the bullets were exploding into puffs of lead dust upon impact.  They were both loaded with the same kind of bullet.  Like I said, these were some serious reloads.  I'm amazed that I've actually used these in the SP-101 before.

After that I tried two other reloads, one a very lightly loaded .357 magnum and the other a plain old .38 Special.  Both were made to be very easy-recoiling target practice loads for snubby revolvers.  Shooting them in the rifle was an anticlimax and sort of disappointing after the first two loads.  The .38 Special was so wimpy they almost felt like squibs, but weren't.  Both of them shot very low.  I still have quite a few of these left, and will save them strictly for snubby practice.

Next step is to figure out exactly how the PMC factory stuff is loaded so I can duplicate it.  I think I may eventually start reloading just to keep myself supplied with .357.

As far as function, the rifle functioned well.  There were no serious cycling problems, only a few minor ones because I was sometimes ejecting carefully to keep from losing any brass.  When I worked the lever like I was supposed to, it worked perfectly.  The trigger is light and crisp, although I have no way to actually measure it.  One quibble is that although this is supposed to hold 10 rounds in the tube, I can't get more than 9 rounds in it.  Still, 9 rounds of .357 magnum from a rifle is some pretty good firepower, especially if you have another one or two .357 magnum revolvers nearby to back it up.

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View Article  I guess mine was a bargain...
Someone's asking $525 for a 4-inch barrel S&W Model 28 on GunsAmerica.

Mine's a 6-inch barrel, and I only paid $300 for it.  Finish looks about the same.  Great gun.  The trigger pull is so slick I still have a hard time believing it.
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