Now it can be told...

by Tam in View From The Porch on 2026-07-17T13:51:16Z

The reason I was in Nebraska last month was for a product launch event for a new Leupold optic, the LCO Pro F2. The format of the event was a 1½ day class, followed a mini carbine match, during which I had the opportunity to put several hundred rounds downrange using the new dot.

Hornady hosted the event at the excellent Heartland Public Shooting Park just outside Grand Island.

Kyle Lamb instructed us media types in the use of the carbine...

...aided by Doug Koenig.

I'll expand further in print elsewhere, but in short, Leupold is gearing up to go hard into the high-end duty grade electro optics biz again, since they're one of a small handful of companies who can credibly play in that end of the pool.

Chris Cerino lighting up a target.



. 

Testing 9×39 SP6 AP Ammo Against Body Armor

by Ian McCollum in Forgotten Weapons on 2026-07-17T13:27:32Z

Today I have a chance to test out a couple rounds of SP6 armor-piercing 9x39mm ammo, using an ex-Russian AS Val rifle. First I’ll try an MNIJ Level 3A soft vest, which is rated for [...]

The post Testing 9×39 SP6 AP Ammo Against Body Armor first appeared on Forgotten Weapons.

MAGAZINES

by Mas in on 2026-07-17T13:00:00Z

If you have firearms that work with detachable box magazines, you darn sure want more than one. The magazine is one of the major causes of malfunctions. If you only have one and it goes belly up, your gun just became a single shot. Going to a shooting match? You probably want to bring a […]
Quote of the Day The federal government has filed a motion to voluntarily dismiss its appeal in a case challenging the ban on possessing and carrying firearms in U. S. Post Offices, making the Second Amendment Foundation’s (SAF) win final. In September, … Continue reading
The International Game Fish Association (IGFA) has expanded its record and recognition programs with the addition of a new Trophy Fish Club species and two new All-Tackle Length World Record categories.

VA: Lynchburg - Domestic Defense? Man Shot, Car Crashed

by Dean Weingarten in GUN WATCH on 2026-07-17T11:34:17Z

First responders found a man and a woman, the only occupants of the vehicle involved in the crash. The man, Corey Beaddles, 32, was found to be suffering from an apparent gunshot wound, according to police. He was transported to a hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.

The woman was checked for injuries by medics on scene.

Police say they determined that just before the crash, Beaddles was driving recklessly while reportedly assaulting the woman. He was apparently shot during the incident, according to police, who haven’t revealed specifics.

Beaddles is charged with assault and battery, reckless driving, abduction and attempted malicious wounding.

Police say they found a gun at the scene and they are not seeking anyone else believed to be involved. They say there is no ongoing threat to the community.


More Here


Rochester police said a disturbance broke out inside Condado Bar and Grill around 1:30 a.m. The man was removed by security and left the area.

Police said the man then went to a parked vehicle, retrieved a handgun and returned to the bar while holding the weapon. As he approached the entrance, security confronted him and attempted to stop him from re-entering.

Multiple verbal commands were given, but police said the man ignored them, pointed the gun at a security officer and opened the entrance door. The security officer then fired multiple rounds from a legally possessed handgun, striking the man.


More Here


Friday Memes!

by Tam in View From The Porch on 2026-07-17T11:21:11Z




Weekend Knowledge Dump- July 17, 2026

by Greg Ellifritz in Active Response Training on 2026-07-17T10:31:58Z

Knowledge to make your life better.  If you have some free time, check out some of these links this weekend.   Not Just The Big Booms – Repeated Blast Pressure A very interesting article about how a relatively minimal amount of gunfire can cause brain-harming overpressure events under some circumstances.     Defensive Shotgun Selection: […]

It’s like ebonics, but lazier

by Midwest Chick in Midwest Chick's Place on 2026-07-17T10:30:00Z

In California, naturally, there is a push to normalize black slang in the classroom. Black Californians United for Early Care & Education (BlackECE), a nonprofit advocacy organization, is promoting what it describes as an effort to challenge “harmful language hierarchies and affirm black English as a legitimate, rule-governed language rooted in black history, culture, and community.” […]
Ghost gun company ordered to pay $100M in death of Kentucky teen in historic verdict – ABC News: A ghost gun company has been ordered to pay more than $100 million in the death of a Kentucky teenager who had purchased the … Continue reading
GRPC is the annual Gun Rights Policy Conference. I have been three times. Two of those times were as a speaker. I highly recommend it. With Benitez as the keynote speaker even more so.

Sound money?

by TPOL Nathan in The Price of Liberty on 2026-07-17T01:00:00Z

Sound money - is this another dream or wish? Or can we hope for better than what we have? Continue reading
If you have been following along, you know I have already put time into both the Beretta 21A Bobcat Covert  in 22LR and the Beretta 3032 Tomcat Covert  in .32 ACP over on our sister site AllOutdoor. Both came factory-threaded with dark walnut grips and both were a pleasure to review. Something always nagged at me about stopping at two, though. The original Beretta pocket pistol, the one that started all of this, was the 950 Jetfire in .25 ACP. The 21A carried that torch for a while before Beretta pulled the plug on the chambering, and they did that well before the Covert lineup existed. Nobody is rushing out to buy a .25 ACP as a primary carry gun. “Better than nothing” does not exactly move product. Still, there is no Beretta 21A Bobcat Covert .25 ACP. Beretta never made one. So I did.
Few firearms carry as much cultural weight as the MP5K. Its silhouette is immediately recognizable to anyone who has paid attention to special operations units over the past four decades, and the SP5K-PDW is HK's answer for those who want the genuine article in a civilian-legal configuration. Manufactured at Heckler & Koch's factory in Oberndorf, Germany, on the same production lines and by the same workforce that has been building MP5s for years, it shares the roller-delayed blowback operating system that defines the platform's reputation for smooth shooting and mechanical precision.
Welcome back to another edition of Concealed Carry Corner. Last week, we discussed the basics of printing and how to avoid printing. If you happened to miss that article, be sure to click the link here  to check it out. This week, I want to take a closer look at some of the unique challenges of riding a motorcycle that are different from riding in a vehicle or other options. Let's take a deeper dive into concealing on a motorcycle.

Free Books- Part 341

by Greg Ellifritz in Active Response Training on 2026-07-16T18:53:26Z

Amazon has a tremendous number of FREE ebooks on their website.  You can find thousands of free kindle books on Amazon’s site every day.  These books can be downloaded to a Kindle reader or a free App on your phone or personal computer.  Even if you don’t have a Kindle, you can download a free […]

Court Day

by Pawpaw in PawPaw's House on 2026-07-16T17:35:18Z

 Back in May, I got into a little fender-bender.  Got a ticket.  I called the Sheriff's office to see whart I owed them.

"Oh, no, PawPaw" says the lady on the phone.  "You have a mandatory court date."

I admit I was a bit baffled. No one injured, just a little bent sheet metal which the insurance covered, and I had to be in court.  So, this morning I showed up in court.  I waited about an hour for my name to be called, then went to the bar and told the judge what happened. She asked if insurance had covered it, and I said Yep.  she gave me a small fine, which I happily paid. Court costs are exorbitant, but I still got out of there for under $250.

The lady collecting the fines seemed a bit surprised that I wanted to pay it all at once.

I was a cop for 37 years.  The first 20, I spent a lot of time in the court room.   Today was the first time in maybe 15 years I had been inside a court room.  After the Oyer we said a pledge of Allegiance and Her Honor got down to business. The bailiff was a bit Foghorn Leghorn, but that is part of the job. All in all, it was not totally unpleasant.

Candid Camera VII

by Commander Zero in Notes From The Bunker on 2026-07-16T15:43:12Z

Biggest antlers of anything I’ve caught on camera so far……. That spot at the top of the road sure gets a lot of traffic…elk, whitetail, mulies, bear, rabbit, fox… I think I’ll just park my butt at the bottom of … Continue reading

Mad Mountain Science: West Virginia’s Boutique AKs

by James Slaughter in Recoil on 2026-07-16T15:35:41Z

Some of the best things come from where you least expect them! JMac is a small business with huge results.
Doves are migratory birds, but they can be hunted with lead shot, unlike waterfowl such as geese or ducks. But although many hunters believe lead shot is superior to steel shot in many ways, the reality is that modern shotshell design can find performance advantages to new non-toxic pellets as well.

Armor Piercing ammo

by Borepatch in Borepatch on 2026-07-16T13:47:08Z

Jacob e3mails to point out an interesting article discussing the various AP rounds that the Department of War uses. If you're interested in this sort of thing, you'll find this interesting.

The one thing that the article doesn't discuss is the type of "Armor Piercing" ammunition that normal citizens can get.  There's a brief discussion of this on this Reddit thread. (Yeah, yeah, I know - Reddit.  But the info seems reasonable)

He also has an interesting post up comparing .300 Blackout with 5.56 NATO

On today's episode of TFB's Behind the Gun Podcast, I'm happy to welcome Jeremy Hammons and Drew Markel, the founder and co-owner of One Horse , a brand-new 100% American-made AR-15 manufacturer out of Brownstown, Indiana, with a little bit of pedigree from Anderson Manufacturing, which recently shut its doors for good. Today we'll dig into the One Horse origin story, what their current lineup looks like, including their new One Horse Express , and where the company is headed next in this constantly changing market. Please give a warm welcome to Jeremy and Drew!

They Never Learn

by Joe in The View From North Central Idaho on 2026-07-16T13:00:00Z

Quote of the Day Nothing much has changed with the New York Times over the years. In the 1930s, thanks to Walter Duranty, the so-called “newspaper of record” was effectively cheerleading for Joseph Stalin’s communism. Today, in Jia Lynn Yang’s “How American … Continue reading
In this video from the National Shooting Sports Foundation, titled “Guide To Your First Competition | Competition Shooting Tips with Dianna Muller,” pro-shooter Dianna Muller runs through what a shooting competition will look like, and why it’s important to adhere to safety rules.
The news and social media are full of reports about the extreme heat affecting much of the country, Virginia included. For my part, I accept that it’s July in Virginia. Temperatures approaching 100° are neither unusual nor unexpected. However, with “feels like” temperatures nearing 110° predicted over the next couple of days, I decided to get an early start on watering the lawn while enjoying a cigar on the screened porch, when the actual temperature was only 92°.

I searched for a light, refreshing digestif and settled on Amaro Montenegro. I’ve been slowly acquiring an assortment of amari. These Italian herbal liqueurs are crafted from a variety of botanicals infused or macerated in alcohol. Although bitterness lies at their core, they offer a wide spectrum of flavors ranging from sweet citrus and floral notes to warming spices and earthy herbs. They are typically served neat as a digestif, though many also shine in cocktails.



Amaro Montenegro is one of the gentlest and most approachable of the amari. With a restrained bitterness, it offers notes of candied orange peel, vanilla, and honey. The floral sweetness balances bitterness without being cloying or syrupy. 

I selected a Southern Draw Evening Primrose for the cigar accompaniment. I've had some in the 5½ x 54 Robusto size in the humidor since June 2025. The cigar features an Ecuadorian Habano Rosado wrapper, an Indonesian Sumatra binder, and fillers from several growing regions of Nicaragua. Though the cigar features a moderate pepper component, it is balanced by a subtle floral sweetness layered with cedar, toasted nuts, citrus, and delicate floral aromas.

It was that underlying floral sweetness that led me to pair the Evening Primrose with the Amaro Montenegro.

The initial draw delivered a substantial burst of pepper and cedar, which briefly gave me pause about the pairing. Almost immediately, however, those bold flavors were tempered by notes of toasted bread and a creamy floral sweetness. I spent several minutes simply enjoying the cigar’s balanced complexity before reaching for the amaro. The combination of gentle pepper, toasted bread, roasted nuts, soft spices, and sweet citrus was thoroughly enjoyable on its own.



Taking my first sip of the amaro confirmed that I had made the right choice. Despite their contrasting flavor profiles, the pairing was remarkably complementary. Montenegro’s orange and honey notes softened the cigar’s early pepper, making the smoke seem creamier. As the cigar developed richer cedar and toasted nut flavors, the amaro contributed hints of vanilla and baking spice that seemed to emerge naturally from the cigar rather than stand apart from it.

The floral interplay between the two was particularly striking. The Evening Primrose’s subtle floral nuances were gently elevated by Montenegro’s delicate botanicals, bringing those notes to the forefront and lending the cigar even greater elegance.

As the hour-long smoke drew to a close, the cigar developed deeper roasted flavors. Amaro Montenegro’s restrained bitterness and honeyed sweetness refreshed the palate between puffs, allowing the cigar’s complexity to continue unfolding. Rather than overwhelming the cigar, the amaro accentuated its more delicate flavors, creating a balanced and sophisticated after-dinner pairing.

Despite the oppressive heat and humidity that pushed the “feels like” temperature close to 100°, the complementary flavors of the Southern Draw Evening Primrose and Amaro Montenegro provided a refreshing counterpoint to the evening. As I settled into the pairing, time passed quickly, and the summer heat seemed almost an afterthought.

Cheers!


[ This content originated at Musings Over a Barrel ]

Wolf Attack in 2012 Contains Clues to Wolf Mystery of 1939

by Dean Weingarten in GUN WATCH on 2026-07-16T11:03:38Z

Image generated with Grok 4.1

In January, 2012, Glenn Villeneuve was attacked by a pack of 20 wolves. It was a very unusual event.

Villeneuvea detailed the event, including pictures of the extremely large pack. He gave an extensive interview to Joe Rogan. Villeneuve has been one of the stars of the reality show, Life Below Zero. The attack event is discussed starting at 13:30 on the video.  Villeneuve explains he never expected such an attack to happen. It was far outside many years of experience dealing with wolves. He does not know why the wolves came after him that day. They had never been aggressive toward him before.  The reason for the attack may have something to do with the extremely large wolf pack.

The discussion of the wolf event starts at 13:30 on the video. Glenn Villeneuve sees a pack of 20 wolves on a kill on the lake ice, 500 yards from his cabin. This is an extremely large pack of wolves for the area. It is very unusual. His cabin is far above the arctic circle. In January, it is twilight in the middle of the day.

At first, Villeneuve grabs a camera and walks to about 350 yards from the pack of wolves to take pictures.  It is not clear if he is armed on this first foray. His batteries go bad and he starts to go back to cabin to get fresh batteries.  Villeneuve looks back and the wolves are running at him. He is 30 yards from the cabin. He sprints to the cabin and gets inside. He looks out the window. The 20 wolves are milling around 50 yards from the cabin. In a short time, the wolves go back to the kill on the lake. Villeneuve goes back out to take more pictures. This time he has his rifle with him, but no spare ammunition.

Villeneuve goes out about 150 yards from the cabin. The wolves are about 350 yards away. Some of the wolves start moving toward him, but slowly, hesitantly. He slowly retreats. The wolves move a little closer. When he is about 100 yards from the cabin, they start galloping toward him. Again he sprints to the cabin. He drops the camera tripod. He has only 4-5 rounds in his rifle, and is unsure whether he could stop the attack.  Again the wolves are milling around 50 yards from the cabin when he is inside. Again the wolves go back to the kill on the ice.

Villeneuve thinks about the situation. He needs to teach the wolves he is not prey. He needs to teach them he is a dangerous predator to be avoided. He decides to see if he can lure the wolves closer to the cabin before he starts shooting. He makes sure he is ready. He checks his rifle, a .30-06, and grabs extra ammunition. He goes outside the cabin. To lure the wolves closer, he starts running back and forth from the cabin to the lake shore, about 50 yards. The wolves come running at him again. This time he sits down at the lake shore and takes aim.

He starts shooting when the wolves are 264 yards away, killing one wolf. He shoots two more as they keep coming. They are no longer all galloping toward him, but continue coming in spurts, some milling about. As the third wolf is hit, the wolf pack has had enough. The "prey" is far too dangerous; they run off. The tracks show some wolves came as close as 50 yards from Villeneuve before they all retreated.  The shooting probably took less than a minute. It took that long because Villeneuve had to reload with individual cartridges while the wolves were coming at him. His rifle only has a four round magazine. He does not say how many shots he fired, presumably somewhere between six and nine. One wolf's back had been broken, but it was still alive. Villeneuve ran back to the cabin to obtain his .22 rimfire to finish off the wolf which was wounded, becuase  it is important to minimize destruction of the fur. Wolf fur is valuable to construct parka hoods. He discovers the animal they had killed on the lake ice was a 1 1/2 year old bull moose.

Glenn Villeneuve is very careful to explain this is an extremely rare event. The circumstances remind me of the case of Crist Kolby, who was almost certainly killed by wolves in 1939, at his trap line on the Thorn River, on Prince of Wales Island in Alaska. When Kolby did not return as expected, an investigation was mounted. The evidence recovered indicated Kolby was on his trapline when he found the mainspring on his new Smith & Wesson .357 magnum revolver was broken. On the way back to his cabin, he was pursued and attacked by wolves. His remains were found near the shoreline of a lake, just short of trees he might have been able to climb. These sort of attacks are very rare, but consider what might have happened to Glen Villeneuve if he was miles from his cabin, and did not have a working firearm. No one knows why the wolves came after Villeneuve or Kolby. Perhaps it was because he retreated. Maybe the size of the pack is important. Perhaps this was what happened with Kolby. A single man, without firearms, can be brought down by a pack of wolves. A small team of men, even two or three, armed with spears and clubs, presents a far more difficult problem for a pack of wolves.

Wolves have learned over many millennia to respect and fear humans. Historically, as recounted in "The Gray Wolf Revealed" by Kaj Granlund & Will Graves, p.127, most wolf attacks on humans are on children, then on women, then on lone men. The vast majority (88%) of human victims of wolves were people under the age of 20. Above the age of 20, 86% of the victims were women.

A person with a working firearm, if they have rudimentary skill, will nearly always win in a fight against wolves.

©2026 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.

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Thursday’s Almost to Friday Meme Drop 7-16-26

by Midwest Chick in Midwest Chick's Place on 2026-07-16T10:30:00Z

AL: - Tuscaloosa Gas Station Shooting, Self Defense?

by Dean Weingarten in GUN WATCH on 2026-07-16T10:19:52Z

A Sunday evening shooting at a Tuscaloosa gas station could be a case of self-defense, authorities said.

Tuscaloosa police responded at 6:41 p.m. to the shooting at Circle K at 6718 Highway 69 South,

Violent Crimes Unit Capt. Jack Kennedy said one person was found with critical injuries and taken to DCH Regional Medical Center.



More Here


HiPower…another

by Commander Zero in Notes From The Bunker on 2026-07-16T03:50:56Z

Bluehost, the folks that host this website, apparently had some hiccups earlier. Thus, if you came here earlier and got a page saying things timed out or couldnt be found…thats what it was. Next time, check this link to see … Continue reading

Limited government: myth or future fact?

by TPOL Nathan in The Price of Liberty on 2026-07-16T01:00:00Z

Can we ever have a truly limited government that survives more than a few years? Or is minarchism just a myth that diverts us from seeking liberty? Continue reading
I recently had a great opportunity to try out Zeiss’ new V3 Lineup of Rifle Scopes on a beautiful ranch in Oklahoma. While I had always known about the scopes that Zeiss makes, I honestly think of them as a photo and video lens company first, given my background as a photographer and videographer. Nonetheless, Zeiss invited me out to a media event last week to show off these optics and let us writers get some trigger time behind them.
Photo Of The Day: When precision matters and the clock is against you, a solid rifle-optic pairing becomes non-negotiable. The Schmeisser Pro Hunter, dressed in Flat Dark Earth with its 18-inch barrel and .223 Remington chamber, paired with the Schmidt & Bender 3–18×42 META scope, represents exactly that kind of no-nonsense approach to distance work. This is one of Europe’s finest AR-15s, with one of the best optics.
If there was ever a company with street cred in the concealed carry game, it is Charter Arms. Their Bulldog revolver of the late 1970s, chambered in .44 Special, was a hard-hitting, no-nonsense hideaway piece that had the lines of a classic European hand cannon of the late 1800s (think: Webley’s MP, or their classic British Bull Dog revolver). When most American hideout guns were chambered in .32 rimfire or .22LR, the British (and their Belgian copycats) were making hard-hitting pocket pistols for gentlemen of taste.

This is cool:

After a secret trip across the English Channel, the Bayeux Tapestry is back on English soil for the first time since it was made 900 years ago. It has been loaned to the British Museum by France after a major conservation project to stabilize the fragile textile

...

The wool thread embroidery-on-linen tapestry created as a visual record of the William of Normandy’s invasion of England in 1066, was woven in the Canterbury area around 1077. It was commissioned by Odo, Bishop of Bayeux, William the Conqueror’s brother, so when it was complete, the tapestry moved to Normandy and has stayed there ever since.

...

It will be exhibited at the British Museum from September 10, 2026, until July 2027. Pre-sales of tickets are already through the roof, with 100,000 sold since tickets for the first four months of the exhibition went on sale July 1.

In exchange for the loan of one of the greatest historic artifacts in French and English history, museums in Normandy will be loaned of the British Museum’s most famous objects, including pieces from the Sutton Hoo Anglo-Saxon ship burial and the Lewis Chessmen.

The tapestry is so famous that people make memes using it.

 

If you're planning a trip to London in the next year, this should be on your list to see.  Or you can go see it in Bayeux  in Normandy and see the D-Day beaches.

CCW Safe, a national leader in Self Defense Legal Services, is celebrating one year since welcoming members of the Armed Citizens’ Legal Defense Network Inc. (ACLDN) into the CCW Safe family.

The Meridian Defense Corp Trench-103 Rifle

by Eric B in The Firearm Blog on 2026-07-15T15:00:00Z

Meridian Defense's new Trench-103 doesn't chase the worn-in aesthetic; it claims to earn it. Inspired by improvised field-painted rifles emerging from modern trench warfare, the rifle pairs a hand-finished Cerakote treatment with a production process that refuses shortcuts. Every Trench-103 is individually finished by hand, meaning each example wears its own scars, or spray marks at least. No assembly-line "battle-worn" cosmetics, no cookie-cutter paint templates.
Dealing in firearms internationally is a trade scrutinized pretty closely by governments, and its practitioners can often end up acting as agents for government priorities, and also victims of said priorities changing. Val Forgett of [...]

The post That Fine Line Between Smuggling and Legal Trade: Anecdotes from Val Forgett first appeared on Forgotten Weapons.

Jackie Richardson gathers up her crew, dons her Icebug Eli sneakers, and heads to the creek for the perfect rocks for a fun garden craft.
Weatherby's new 250th Anniversary Mark V isn't just another limited-edition rifle timed to capitalize on patriotic sentiment. It's a deliberate declaration, built on a frame that's been holding American hunters' ambitions since 1957, honoring 250 years of the freedom that let Roy Weatherby walk into a California storefront with nothing but an idea. That same freedom built this company into a Wyoming dynasty. That same freedom built a nation. This rifle is where those stories intersect.

Turkey President Erdogan Gives Revolvers and Ammo to NATO Heads

by Dean Weingarten in GUN WATCH on 2026-07-15T11:51:03Z

 

 

On July 8, 2026,Turkey's President, Recep Tayyip Erdogan gave presents to the other leaders of North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) member nations. The gifts were given at the meeting in Turkey. The present appears to be a rare Gümüsay .357 revolver, which was made by the Turkish company MKE about 30 years ago. Giving presents to NATO leaders is not unusual.

Giving firearms to leaders of other countries was not unusual before WWI. Over a hundred years of demonization of civilian ownership of firearms has made it unusual. The revolver came in a presentation box which seems to have a lower compartment. What might be in the lower compartment has not been revealed.

While most of these revolvers will never be fired, the present has been reported to include live ammunition. Reuters reported the revolver presented to Prime Minister Kier Starmer included 500 rounds of ammunition and a cleaning kit. This is a wonderful joke and poke in the eye to England, which has outlawed the possession of handguns by its citizens.

Reaction to the gift varied considerably by country. Reuters reported some leaders are waiting to have the revolver deactivated before sending it to their home, others are having it processed by their customs services. All appear to be careful to follow the legal procedures their governments have in place. It appears all the revolvers are identical except for the engraving. They were likely made in one run of presentation revolvers for such purposes. As such, they may be one of the rarest of production revolvers in existence.

Armyrecognition.com reports the Gümüsay is not a clone of the Colt Python .357 revolver, but has a simplified lockwork. Overall production of the Gümüsay   revolvers in all barrel lengths is unknown and estimated at between 500 and 10,000. The revolvers are reported as being produced with 2.5, 4, and 6 inch barrels.  Also unknown is whether the presentation revolvers were a batch which was held in inventory, recovered and refurbished from some other stock in government or private hands, or newly manufactured using previous drawings, tooling or components created for this one run.

As shown, the revolver has a bright finish. It seems unlikely to be made in stainless steel. This correspondent has not found any information to indicate if it has a nickle plated or chrome plated finish.

The Turkish firearms industry has established itself as a major exporter of rifles, shotguns, and handguns in the international market. The United States has the largest market for civilian owned firearms in the world. It seems likely a large portion of Turkish made firearms for civilian use end up in the United States. Reviews of various Turkish made pistols have revealed them to be serviceable firearms. Much depends on individual models and manufacturers.

Turkey is exporting .357 magnum revolvers made by Sarsilmaz at present. The Sarsilmaz revolvers look very similar to Smith & Wesson revolvers. The internal parts of the mechanism may be different. Colt is making a new version of the Python in the United States. A bright finished Colt Python with a six inch barrel has a suggested retail price of $1,699.00.

Analysis: The gift of presentation revolvers by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has been a master stroke of marketing. The exposure of Turkish firearms to the world has been on a viral scale which is difficult to achieve without expenditure of enormous amounts of money. There may be another unintended consequence. Other world leaders could follow Erdogan's example. It might again become a mark of prestige for a firearm to be presented to world leaders as a gift.

©2026 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.

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CA: Longbeach - Off Duty Officer and Suspects Gunfight, no Hits

by Dean Weingarten in GUN WATCH on 2026-07-15T11:42:29Z

The shooting happened around 1:30 p.m. in the area of Bixby Road and Orange Avenue.

Long Beach police say two suspects approached the off-duty officer and tried to rob him. One of the suspects was reportedly pointing what appeared to be a firearm, while the other robbed the off-duty officer.

That's when police say the off-duty officer fired shots at the suspects.

The men fled, and it's unknown if either of them was shot. The officer was not hurt.



More Here


Tuxedos and Origin Stories

by Tam in View From The Porch on 2026-07-15T11:36:26Z

Gorillafritz has an interesting tale on professional attire for firearms instructors and the origins of the "tactical tuxedo".

"I was there, Gandalf..." (photo by Oleg Volk)

The shoot-me-first vest in that photo is an O.G. one from Royal Robbins. I bought it in late '01 or very early '02, before there was a company called "5.11 Tactical"*. The buttons still have the little hiking dude from the famously granola-y outdoor apparel company.

To this day I prefer Royal Robbins for my gun burkhas.


*The Wikipedia article has a good history of how 5.11 Tactical came to be.

.
Apparently the House of Representatives passed a bill ending the twice yearly clock changing that we all have had to deal with for our entire lives. And this is a good thing. So now it’s going to the Senate where we’ll see what happens. Of course medical groups have to be a buzz-kill and want […]
NEW from Zeiss is the V3 line of SFP hunting scopes! We’ve been sitting on this information for over 6 months now so we’re pretty excited to be able to finally talk about it. From major changes in the Zeiss business model to production changes to a new focus for the company, there is a lot to unpack. Plus, a... more

Five ATF cases that still need to be fixed

by Lee Williams in The Gun Writer on 2026-07-15T10:00:39Z

Will ATF's new director do the right thing for these families?

Deep Thoughts

by Joe in The View From North Central Idaho on 2026-07-15T10:00:00Z

Quote of the Day Reality is tough. Really, really tough. The revealing of reality could be the toughest problem of all time. I’ve said this many times before and frequently remind people at work: We have to formulate the correct … Continue reading

Video – ‘The Dog Stars’ final trailer

by Commander Zero in Notes From The Bunker on 2026-07-15T06:43:54Z

Deviating from the book, unfortunately, but I’ll see it anyway. If you haven’t read the book, I highly recommend doing so before seeing the movie so you can appreciate the movie a bit more. The trailer seems to emphasize the … Continue reading
I have mentioned using ethanol free gasoline to avoid paying some of the Washington state gas tax. I also discovered that my car gets much better gas mileage with premium ethanol free gas. So much so that even when driving … Continue reading

Bizarre Reasoning Screaming for Cert

by Clayton Cramer in Clayton Cramer. on 2026-07-15T01:28:56Z

 Barnett v. Raoul Nos. 24-3060, 24-3061, 24-3062 & 24-3063.(6th Cir. 2026). Curiously:

Contrary to the dissenting opinion's efforts (often without citation) to conclusively link Bowie knives to criminality, however, Bowie knives were both widespread and used for lawful purposes. One expert in the history of arms in America, for example, explained that in the nineteenth century, "European visitors who ventured beyond the Appalachians found [the Bowie knife] such an integral part of the American way of life that they felt compelled to comment on it at length in accounts of their adventures.... In many communities, no man, whether hunter, gambler, tradesman or political leader felt himself fully clothed without one." Peterson, supra, at 25. Similarly, the historian who (literally) wrote the book on Bowie knives noted they were "widely carried by Americans of all stripes"; "served everyone equally, upstanding citizens and villains" alike; were "wide[ly] popular[], in the North and South" during the Civil War; and were "common[]"—"a weapon carried by men of all walks of life." Norm Flayderman, The Bowie Knife: Unsheathing an American Legend 20, 125, 130 (2004). Other scholars agree. See David B. Kopel, Clayton E. Cramer & Joseph Edward Olson, Knives and the Second Amendment, 47 U. Mich. J.L. Reform 167, 184 (2013) ("During the nineteenth century, Bowie knives were commonly present in many areas of the United States. Contemporary sources leave no question that Bowie knives, Arkansas Toothpicks, and similar knives were a common part of American life until well after the Civil War....").

The test that Heller imposed recognized that arms in common use are protected. Their dangerousness did not matter; their commonness did matter.

The contrast between the States' Independence Day and France's Bastille Day is often not clear to either Americans or the French. It is, however, as important to the future as we can imagine. Continue reading

TFB Review: SDS Imports MAC IX 9mm Pistol

by Sam.S in The Firearm Blog on 2026-07-15T00:00:00Z

Military Armament Corporation is an SDS Arms brand, and they have been putting out some interesting guns at prices that are hard to argue with. The MAC IX  is their newest offering, a 9mm direct blowback pistol that feeds from MP5-style magazines and runs on AR-15 controls. It is a hybrid concept that works better than it sounds: familiar ergonomics, widely available magazines, and a suppressor-ready barrel right out of the box. SDS was kind enough to send yours truly a sample. Let's dive right into the TFB review of the MAC IX !
I belong to several firearms instructor groups on Facebook.  In one such group, a member recently asked the following question:   “Are shorts acceptable for an instructor? Range or classroom? Would you consider them “professional attire” for someone in an instructor role?”   I have a rather unique lens through which to view such questions. […]
Not all limited editions are created equal, and only a few become a Photo Of The Day here on TFB. When Show Low Manufacturing and CNC Firearms teamed up on the Blackjack Omega, they put together a genuinely spec'd build rather than just slapping a special finish on a catalog gun.
Dead Air and Medford have carved out their own lanes in their respective markets: one built on precision sound suppression, the other on knives engineered like they're designed to outlast their owners. This collaboration feels inevitable in retrospect. The Dead Air x Medford Knuckle Knife is a limited run of 150 serialized blades that takes a page from actual trench-knife design and runs it through Medford's overbuilt playbook. The result is a knife that doesn't compromise on utility or toughness, which is exactly what you'd expect from both brands.

Springfield Armory Unveils the NEW Echelon Alpha

by Adam Scepaniak in The Firearm Blog on 2026-07-14T17:00:00Z

The Springfield Armory Echelon is the pistol of choice for a lot of shooters because of its wide package of accoutrements and modern features. The only gripe that some shooters raise is that the more tricked out variations might be too expensive for their budget. So, Springfield has heard that request and lowered their price-point with the unveiling of the Echelon Alpha !

Dad Joke CCCLXVII - I was told there would be no math

by Borepatch in Borepatch on 2026-07-14T16:19:05Z

Did you know that 10 + 10 is the same as 11 + 11?

10 + 10 is twenty; 11 + 11 is twenty, too.

(From The Queen Of The World) 

KAK Industry has a new bolt carrier designed for optimal use with forced reset triggers. The Dead Blow Carrier (DBC) uses special internal weights to help keep everything operating in sync. Let’s dig into it.

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