Previously Gunsite Gossip
Vol. 4, No. 7 June, 1996
Summer is Icumen In
June is busting out all over - as the
song has it. May we now look forward to "a summer of roses and
wine" - or is such an idea repulsive to the Puritans among us?
The thing about summer is that it is usually too hot for comfort, a
fact that bothers some people more than others. Excessive heat does
indeed discourage trips to the range and hikes back and forth to
the target area, but we must steel ourselves to this and continue
our shooting practice as conscientiously as we do in spring and
fall. Shooting skill is lost more quickly than we would like to
admit, and unless you keep up your practice you cannot expect to
maintain your command of the situation. I find this to be more true
of the pistol than the rifle, but this may be because bench rest
precision is a talent of a lower order than rifle snap or a par
Presidente. Be that as it may, try not to let the heat of summer
discourage you. The "one-box-a-year" hunter may never aspire to the
laurel wreath.
We were somewhat startled recently to see
a "Springfield Scout" proclaimed on the cover of the American
Rifleman. We investigated immediately and found to our relief
that the piece referred to bore no resemblance either to the
production scout now about ready for release in Austria, or to
daughter Lindy's Springfield "pseudo-scout," which distinguished
itself recently in Africa. Certainly no one owns a copyright on the
term "scout," but I do my best to keep the concept
consistent.
Those dismal people who make an issue of
denying us our cultural heritage keep right on trying to censor the
literary classics of the ages. This attempt at thought control,
which was so forcefully repudiated by Thomas Jefferson as "tyranny
over the mind of man" seems most rampant in those very places where
freedom of thought should be held inviolate - specifically the
groves of academe.
In this connection I would like to propose the descriptive logo
NPC for "Not Politically Correct." This trade mark could
then be stamped upon almost everything of value anyone of adequate
liberal education should regard as required reading. The list would
include, for starters, the Old Testament, the Koran, the Merchant
of Venice, the Arthurian Legends, Huckleberry Finn, Jock of the
Bushveldt, Denatured Africa, Greenhills of Africa, many of the
works of Rudyard Kipling, most of Edgar Rice Burroughs, and
(modestly) Another Country - amongst many, many others.
If we could bring ourselves to label the good books of the world
NPC, we might save a lot of wasted reading time. As far as I
can tell when someone is careful to be "politically correct" today
he talks like a fool.
I enjoy controversy, and I am annoyed by
the fact that those who agree with me are the ones who write to me
personally, whereas those who wish to discredit my preachings write
to the editor of the magazine, in the possible hope that I will not
take on their arguments personally. Fortunately the editors usually
send the hostile communications right on to me, and I enjoy getting
my teeth into them. When I am wrong I wish to learn about it, as
only thus can I improve my awareness of the subject. On the other
hand, when someone chooses to denigrate me when I am in actuality
right, it is rather fun to deflate his hostile arguments with the
rapier rather than with the axe.
In this line a correspondent recently complained to the magazine
(not to me) about my mention of the "shot-cock" system as a means
of operating the trigger-cocking pistol. This shot-cock system, in
case you have not caught the argument, is a firing stroke by which
the shooter plants his first round as quickly as he possibly can
from the hammer-down position, cocking with the trigger. He pays
little attention to precise control of the shot, but concentrates
on getting it off as rapidly as possible so that he can place his
second shot from the cocked position - with accompanying
precision. The correspondent in this case claims that I must be out
of my mind in that such a procedure is an invitation to negligent
discharge. In the first place it is not, since the shooter fires
his first shot in the general direction of his adversary. It may
actually hit, though it usually does not, but it is not a negligent
discharge. Certainly I do not teach this system, since I consider
it a sloppy answer to an unfortunate mechanical contrivance, but to
deny that it exists would be foolish. I have seen it work on the
range, and I know of a case where it was used on the street in
Phoenix with decisive success. On the range I once saw a student
place second in the shoot off, though not once did he hit his
target with his first shot. I had not taught him this but he had
worked it out for himself, and I cannot condemn him for that.
Our critic goes on further to say that the thumb-cocking system, by
means of which the pistol is cocked with the left thumb as it comes
up on target, is technically unworkable. In class work I always
permit any student who is stuck with a trigger-cocking pistol
either to thumb-cock or to use the crunch-tick system, whichever
seems best to him. Thumb-cocking wins almost every time.
It seems that my correspondent is operating from an unsound base,
not having had the experience to see what works in practice, but
rather worrying primarily about the deadly danger of negligent
discharge. I have taught thousands of pistol shooters, and I cannot
remember the last time we had a negligent discharge on the
range.
Curiously enough, the hostility I detect expends itself in personal
insult rather than attention to the facts. One does not win
arguments by casting aspersions at one's opposition, but rather by
careful presentation of the pertinent facts, but then we do not
teach debating skills in schools anymore, as far as I
know.
The question as to whether the
10-millimeter (40-caliber) pistol cartridge, in any of its forms,
is a satisfactory fight-stopper remains open. I have no doubt that
the original Ten, as made up and loaded for the Bren Ten, had all
the necessary attributes, firing as it did a 40-caliber, 200-grain,
flat-point projectile at upwards of 1,200 feet per second. The
"Attenuated Tens," as now loaded and sold, are way short of this,
but I suspect that they are still quite a bit ahead of the
Parabellum cartridge. Time will tell.
"Environmentalists do not want to live in or work with
nature, they want to manage it from a distance."
Chilton Williamson in Chronicles
By now seven correspondents have informed
me about the theoretical operation of the muzzle-brake, and I thank
all of them profusely. I wrote that I knew muzzle-brakes worked,
but I did not know how, because the rearward impetus applied to the
firearm must be completely exerted by the time the projectile
leaves the muzzle, and therefore cannot be reduced by anything
forward of the muzzle. The crux of this matter, as it turns out, is
time. The rearward impetus applied to the firearm is indeed
initiated before any sort of muzzle-brake can take effect, but time
is necessary for the rearward impetus to be transmitted into
motion. Recoil effect is produced by the rearward velocity of the
weapon, and that velocity does not have time to build up before the
forward impetus of the muzzle-brake takes hold. Upon discharge the
weapon starts to the rear, but before it can really get started it
is pulled quickly forward by the muzzle-brake. Thus it is.
Still, one gets nothing free. The drawback of the muzzle-brake is
apparent blast as the propelling gases are deflected sidewise, and
in some cases rearward toward the shooter. Whether a novice shooter
is inclined to flinch more from recoil than from blast is a matter
of the individual. I prefer to leave muzzle-brakes off the weapon
unless they are definitely needed, and that need can only be really
determined by the shooter himself.
We left the "Co-pilot", which is an
18-inch 45-70 with a muzzle-brake, with Danie van Graan in Africa.
In firing it I did not notice a disturbing blast, but I did notice
that the weapon recoiled somewhat less than I anticipated. In
chronographing, Danie discovered a very interesting thing. It
appears that his 18-inch 45-70 was starting 400-grain bullets about
60f/s faster than his 24-inch 45-70, which he has been using as a
lion stopper for a long time. It does not seem possible that this
could be a chronograph error since the comparison between the two
weapons was done with the same machine, nor does it seem possible
that the muzzle-brake itself would increase velocity. Danie's gun
profits by the very latest in manufacturing technology, and it is
possible that the barrel in the "Co-pilot" is a little smoother
than that in his old gun, though this does seem unlikely. Fred
Wells of Prescott is of the opinion that what we have here is bore
friction, and that for each loading there is a barrel length which
utilizes the power of the load most efficiently. Beyond this
critical length the bullet is exerting drag on the rifling, thus
reducing its initial velocity. This could indeed be the case. What
is most interesting is that Danie has not only not lost any
velocity in his short-barreled gun, but with his loadings he has
gained a bit.
Who'd a thunk it!
Note that laser pointers for pistols are
now verboten in Germany. That certainly should solve the crime
problem!
As you know, the British subject is
effectively forbidden the use of firearms in defense of his life.
So now we read in the English press of one retired army officer who
overcame this problem by repelling boarders with his sword. When
three goblins broke into his house with knives, he produced his
regimental sabre and gave battle. He ran those birds out of his
house and well down the street, though the account does not say
that he damaged any of them severely. Swordsmanship is effectively
a lost art, but I doubt if the world's miscreants are fully aware
of that.
Our man in Australia informs us that the
Australian parliament has decided to banish all self-loading
smallarms and all "military calibers." Prospective legislation also
forbids the presence of minors on any shooting range and sets up a
federal "gun police" organization to execute the disarmament of the
Australian people.
Just how far this legislation has progressed we are not sure, but
apparently this semi-auto ban has passed.
Do you suppose that the dubious social heritage of the Australian
people has brought about this situation? When one considers that
the previous prime minister was presented with a grandchild
permanently addicted to heroin, we might lend support to this
theory. Let us remember that "an armed society is a polite society"
and a disarmed society is a rude society, as the history of the
20th century forcefully emphasizes.
"Better a 4-inch rifle with a fine
trigger than a 1-inch rifle with a bad one."
The Guru
I take this opportunity to make known to
all that the rifle match scheduled at Whittington Shooting Center
must not be referred to as a "Jeff Cooper Bolt-Action Contest,"
despite advanced notice to the contrary. From the beginning I have
utilized whatever influence I may possess to avoid categorizing
marksmanship contests by action type, despite considerable pressure
to do so. No match of which I approve will ever separate
contestants by the action of the weapons they use, and in no case
should mechanics be allowed to take precedence over marksmanship.
The match will be held as scheduled, and I will present the
Guru's Gold to the winner, but it will not be a
"bolt-action" contest.
Those of you who are interested in rifle
competition should note that one Harald Slemwag of Norway recently
shot the first recorded possible (600x600) on the international
rifle course. This involves 20 shots prone, slow-fire, at an x-ring
100 millimeters (about 4 inches) in diameter, at 300 meters (about
330 yards). We should note that this is not a bench rest record,
but fired from the prone position, unsupported.
Note that piracy is up, worldwide. In
this spineless age, in which the aim of the majority seems to be to
produce a culture of spiritual eunuchs, this is not to be wondered
at. When you are out of sight of land in your personal vessel you
certainly should be prepared and ready to protect yourself against
felonious attack, day or night, but if you try to prepare yourself
for this you will provoke unwelcome attention from almost any coast
guard service in the world. (A sword is not much use under these
circumstances.)
Is it not annoying that in the Age of
the Wimp the adjective macho, and its accompanying noun
machismo, have come to be regarded as derogatory? There is no exact
translation into English of this Spanish term, but it signifies a
combination of dignity, elan vital, courage and "copability." An
example that comes to mind is that of Rene Barrientos, who was at
the time president of Bolivia. It appears that a political scandal
arose when a couple of military aviators died when their parachutes
failed to open. It was adduced by the political opposition that
Barrientos was profiteering off of second rate parachutes discarded
by the US
Rather than arguing the point, the president decreed a press
conference at dawn the following morning. He arrived promptly,
dressed in full flying gear, and told the assembled reporters to
pick out a spokesman. When this was done the president escorted the
spokesman to the storehouse in which all parachutes were stored and
had him pick out any one at random. When this was done the
president donned the parachute and climbed aboard a two-seater jet
fighter plane, piloting it himself. He circled the field, and when
ready, rolled on his back and bailed out. In the parachute he
guided himself to a stand-up landing in front of the press corps,
whereupon he shrugged out of his harness and said, "Now, let's
everybody get back to work."
That was macho. Don't put it down.
"Without freedom there will be no firearms among the
people; without firearms among the people there will not long be
freedom. Certainly there are examples of countries where the people
remain relatively free after the people have been disarmed, but
there are no examples of a totalitarian state being created or
existing where the people have personal arms."
Neal Knox
Family member and Orange Gunsite
rangemaster Dave Harris reports a personal contact from up in
northern California. He handled it perfectly, and he attributes
this to his thorough indoctrination in the combat mind-set. On
conclusion he was asked by his fellow police officers if he did not
feel shock and distress after having disposed of a goblin. His
answer was, of course, "Certainly not. I feel fine. How about
you?"
But there are people who still push this "post operational trauma"
foolishness, and far too many of them are in the police service. As
we have sometimes said, "There is nothing wrong with winning a
fight. There is a great deal wrong with losing one."
For many years we have been taught and
believed that any sort of "take-down" system was to be avoided as
injurious to practical accuracy. Perhaps times have changed, or
perhaps the thesis was never fully correct, but we have used two
take-down rifles recently which suggest that we may have been wrong
all these years. Riflemaster John Gannaway recently ran a full test
on the Blaser R93 rifle, which comes neatly apart for shipment. It
is an astonishingly accurate rifle, and it loses no accuracy
whatever by being dismantled and reassembled.
This matter may also affect our view on detachable telescope
sights, which in the past have not proved satisfactory. It is
possible that modern technology and modern metallurgy have changed
this, and while we still think it a poor idea to take the telescope
off a rifle without re-zeroing, we will have to study this matter
more fully.
There still exists a certain amount of
ignorance about the use of the rifle sling as a shooting aid.
Evidently many shooters simply do not know how to use it, and the
accessory suppliers are no help. Under the right circumstances, the
shooting sling increases hit probability as much as a third. In
well over half a century of field riflery I have used the loop to
secure over half my kills. That is just one man's experience, but
it should not be ignored.
A good many of the unenlightened feel that the shooting sling is
too slow into operation, apparently never having practiced its
quick acquisition. The military loop sling can be locked on in five
seconds - the speed slings (CW and Ching) in about one.
Clearly the shooting sling is of no value in the offhand position,
nor from a rest, but in the tundra or the desert it comes on
strongly - and often in orchard bush. (I once decked a running
buffalo with Baby, shooting from "jackass prone" and using the
Ching Sling. This was the longest buffalo shot I know of - 175
paces.)
Modern flush sockets, used with the hammerhead attachments, make a
speed sling instantly ready to mount or to remove. "Don't leave
home without it."
Lest we forget it on Memorial Day, the
murderers of Nicole Simpson, Vince Foster, and Vicki Weaver still
walk free - without risk or stigma. All we get from the media
on this subject is a big yawn.
Please Note. These "Commentaries" are for personal
use only. Not for publication.