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Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Reality Check* Number TWO- the ‘500 Round Break In’

The 500-round break-in story is a very recent development, and one propagated by firearms manufacturers. I see internet posts from guys having problem after problem with brand-spanking new 1911s, and being told by the manufacturers that the need to run 500 rounds of Brand X ball through them before they send the gun back. This is a dodge to avoid or postpone a service issue.


I'd also say that 85% of those problems are directly attributable to poor extractors, glued-in ejectors that work loose, undersized 'match' chambers that were cut with a dull reamer; and lots of other stuff that wouldn't happen if folks were building them per the Ordnance Department specs, or Kuhnhausen's manual. Shooting such a gun for another 500-1000 rounds is a frustrating waste of time and ammunition. Folks in large numbers have been sold the 'break-in' line, and bought it. Folks in even greater numbers have repeated it as The Gospel Truth. They fail to understand that the 1911 design is no more complicated than a Briggs & Stratton engine. You take good-quality parts, assemble them correctly, and check things as you go. The finished product works. If you've got gas and spark in the proper amounts and in the right places, at the right times- it just can't help but run.

Hard-fit match 1911s are another story, but not entirely. Builders of match 1911s do most of the finishing touches by careful fitting and hand-cycling the heavily-oiled parts until they run smoothly. The first 150 rounds of ball should seat the parts and finish the process.

I find it interesting that for the first 85 years of the 1911’s life, we never heard of this critical '500 round break in'. This includes the National Match and Gold Cup Colts, and a host of similar guns built by AMU smiths and those who followed in their footsteps. Honest, ‘2” at 50 yards’ target 1911s. Match shooters weren’t buying these ‘softball’ guns and shooting a case of ‘hardball’ through them before taking them on the circuits. They were expected to work and shoot like a house afire when new; if they didn’t, they went back to the bench for correction. The government would never have adopted the design, if there were any truth to the notion that you can expect malfunctions for the first 500 rounds of the gun’s service life. If you build them right and feed them in-spec ammo- they will run.

This all applies to autos & revolvers equally. Revolvers are thought to be essentially immune to ammo-related reliability problems, and when they’re right- they just about are immune to them. I still am inclined to believe than an awful lot of revolver problems are owner-induced. One of the commonest revolver problems we read about is ‘misfires’ and about 9 times out of 10 the culprit is insufficient mainspring tension. Some folks just can’t leave well enough alone, and they swap out springs that were engineered to work under any conditions, with springs designed to give the perception of professional action work, where none was done. They fiddle around with something that 'can't help but run' and in their quest for a six-pound DA pull, they create a $500.00 doorstop. Seems to me that it would be a whole lot more sensible to just invest in ammunition, and learn to shoot the gun the way it came from the factory. The gun will smooth up significantly from use, and every round of ammo fired goes toward proving it- absolutely knowing that it will work for you when the chips are down.


The manufacturers have QC issues with revolvers, too. I have read numerous posts in the past two years where someone's new SP101 binds up on them at the range. I used to recommend the SP without reservation, because 3” model we had 5 years ago was perfect. The 2” SP we have now is just as good as the first one, and after a little judicious polishing it is even smoother. But Ruger seems to have let a number out that weren't properly assembled, and I just about have withdrawn that recommendation. If you get a good one, they're fine. If you don't get a good one, you'd be better off with a Kel-Tec 9mm.

A lot of factors can dictate whether a particular handgun is reliable or not and experience has taught me that 'auto or revolver' is way down on that list of deciding factors. Just like the Briggs & Stratton engine mentioned earlier, if they’re put together right- they will run. If they’re put together wrong however, you can pull on the rope until your eyeballs fall out- and while you might create some interesting expletives, you ain’t gonna fix the problem that's keeping it from running.

Any defense or hunting gun needs to be proven, which is something entirely different than this imaginary ‘break-in period’ to get them to run. If your new, unaltered handgun don’t work, press the issue with the manufacturer until they FIX it. Tell them that hand-feeding a case of ammo through a ‘broke’ gun, one or two rounds at a time, ain’t gonna fix a dang thing. That dog won’t hunt. Tell ‘em Sarge said so.

Anybody with common sense ought to know that. They’re just hoping you don’t have any.

*In 'Reality Checks' we will address some articles of pure fertilizer that have been unloaded onto the gun-buying public by gun manufacturers in recent years. Unfortunately they have found strong allies in certain gun writers, gun magazines, and purveyors of "Internet Wisdom'. I'm going to try to turn out about one of these a week, for the next 4-5 weeks.
Some old-school thinking is definitely called for here.

Most of you (I'm finding out) simply don't know any better, and if you believe what you read on most Internet Firearms Forums (and apparently you DO) you're never going to get a feel for what gun ownersip was was like under the tutelage of patriarchs like Keith, Skelton, Askins & Cooper. While I won't pretend to be worthy of changing their typewriter ribbons, I'm going to do my best to pass on the practical, reality-based thought processes they brought to bear on the firearms topics of their time. This is going to be fun.-Sarge

Thursday, July 19, 2007

'Reality Check'*, Installment Number One-NO MORE LOCKS!!!

Note to manufacturers supplying the US firearms market-I will NOT buy ANY firearm with an Integral Locking System. I also won't deactivate a factory-installed lock, in order to have a gun without one. I simply don't need a new gun bad enough to put up with this nonsense anymore.

How we "got here"...

About mid-1993, the folks who manufacture firearms for the US market decided that not unlike Idi Amin, Bill Klinton was going to be President For Life, and that their only means of corporate survival was to add so-called 'safety devices' that do nothing toward correcting a real problem- the unsafe handling of firearms. We began to see idiot buttons on classic lever-action rifles, and eventually that wonderful invention we have come to know as the ‘integral lock’ (hereinafter referred to as “IL”) appeared. It manifested itself as a pimple on the port side of S&W revolvers, and soon after Taurus, Ruger and a few others began sprouting them.

Well, SO WHAT!

Now just WHY, you might ask, should we even be bothered by this? Well, how’s about I just tell you why?

Simple Logic...

There is absolutely no rational reason to have an IL on your gun. If you really want to lock up your gun, law enforcement agencies all over the country and GIVING AWAY cable locks that are 100% effective, adaptable to any gun, and do not require alteration to reliable and proven firearms design. Or you could just throw it in a safe.

Stupid and Dangerous Thinking...

The presence of IL’s also furthers the fallacy that a properly-handled gun is somehow safer WITH a lock, than without it. This is dangerous thinking in and of itself. Refer to the Four Rules.

The Cultural De-volution...

You have to be an adult to buy a handgun, and adults should not accept being treated like a child that needs training wheels. The presence of IL’s is just another step in the Oprah-fication of the American male. “We must make the world ‘safe’, don’cha know?” If this nonsense is allowed to continue it will eventually render our handguns worthless for their original purpose- Immediate, Unhindered DEFENSE in Times of Emergency! If this ‘original purpose’ requires further explanation, I’d suggest that you go read some Jeff Cooper.

Begging for Trouble...

Now here’s a MAJOR sticking point- IL’s CAN break, and render the gun useless. In fact, IL’s are simply 'one more thing to go wrong'- and as Mr. Murphy has taught me over the years, If it CAN go wrong, it WILL. Doubt it? Smith & Wesson Forum has a detailed thread on this topic, complete with excellent photos of the unnecessary crap being engineered into handguns today: Smith & Wesson Internal Lock Failures

These things are enough to convince me that IL’s are a bad idea. Thirty-three years of the continual carrying and use of handguns, often in harm’s way, have convinced me that they are worse than useless. Gun safety is BETWEEN YOUR EARS- not manifested in some key at the bottom of your sock drawer. To believe otherwise is insanity. Would having and extra ignition switch on automobiles reduce traffic fatalaties, or eliminate drunk driving? Geez, people- wake up! Turn off the damn television, put down the ipod, get off MSN and start thinking for yourselves!

"The Emperor's New Clothes"...

The Emperor never likes to be told that he's parading around bare-ass naked. You’ll catch some flak from folks who contend that we should be grateful, and buy whatever the gunmakers produce. Some of them get downright annoyed when those of us who refuse to be stump-broke, share our opinion on this subject. We become ‘Lockjaws’, ‘Whiners’, Turd-Suckers’ and the like. Well, too damn bad. Some of us won't be harangued into backing up to the stump.

Follow the Money...

It should come as no surprise, but most of those trying to shove these abominations down our throats- also happen to be folks who benefit commercially from increased sales of handguns, handgun training, handgun books & articles, etc. Certain contemporary gunwriters, training gurus and of course handgun accessory makers trnd to gravitate toward the ‘Buy ‘em anyway!’ Camp. Having grown up reading Elmer Keith, Skeeter Skelton, Jeff Cooper & Charles Askins, I find this a little hard to swallow. These entirely credible old-school gunwriters carried handguns for more serious purposes than a trip to the range, or a canned buffalo hunt. Those boys would have called these contraptions for what they are- simply one more thing to go wrong with your life preserver.

"Po' Lil' Gunmakers"...

You’ll also hear the excuse that the poor manufacturers are just installing IL’s because of, or in anticipation of, legislation requiring them on guns ‘approved’ for sale to the public. This is a local problem, and one that should be addressed by the folks living in those little cultural Utopias who are affected by it. None of this internal-lock nonsense has been legislated federally, or by the 40 or so free states that we have left. I have no intention of letting the political climate San Fran-Sicko dictate what I’m going to shove in my holster, or sling over my shoulder when I head off to the big piney.

Look- I hated it when Colt quit making Detective Specials, but that was Colt's choice and now they aren't selling any. So I've got a no-lock Ruger SP101 instead. When the realization sunk in that I'd never crack open a new S&W catalog with the excitement I once knew- it was a let-down for sure. I hated it when Winchester quit making lever-actions that looked & worked like the guns I grew up with. I hated it when Winchester quit making them at all- but it was a predictable result of re-making a product into something it wasn't. I treasure the pre-lock Winchester I have, and a pre-64 Model 94 is on the "GET one!" list. Heck, I could even buy an old Marlin if I didn't have any self respect. (That was a joke, Marlin-ites.)

"They Ain't Goin' Away-Might As Well Get Used to Them"...

The other argument you’ll hear from the IL-appeasement camp is that the locks are ‘Here to stay- now suck it up & buy a gun." Horse manure. The manufacturers chose this path, which means they can un-choose it, too. If we can keep Congress at bay on the topic of gun legislation (and we have for quite some time now) what makes you think we can’t influence the manufacturers of those guns? As long as people buy guns with locks in them, they will keep making them. If sales take a nose-dive when a product is changed, any manufacturer will rethink that change. That is the reality of a market-driven economy.

YOU DO NOT HAVE TO BUY AN IL-EQUIPPED FIREARM.

You can get all the ‘old stuff’ you need on the used market. Don't be surprised when you get a better gun for less money, by taking this approach. Personally, it won’t affect me in the least if Smith & Winfrey or Rug-ah decide to put locks in all their guns. I’ll have mine without them, and my sons & grandsons will have them when I’m done. It doesn’t disturb me in the least if you & everyone else buy them. It’s your money, to do with as you please- same as mine.

You DO however have an opportunity to influence the US firearms market. If enough potential buyers refuse to buy IL-equipped firearms- the IL will go away. How many of us will it take? I have inside skinny that Ruger based their addition of an IL to the ‘New Vaquero’ on the notion that it would cost about 17% of their market, if they ‘lost’ California sales. S&W is hoping that new customers, who don’t don't care about IL’s, replace us cranky old bastards in sufficient time frames and numbers to keep the company afloat. I for one think that's an exceptionally-crappy way to treat customers who have been buying and recommending their products for 30+ years. Luckily, it's not too late for me correct both of those errors.

Turning the Tide...

In any event, I figure diverting 20% of new-gun sales to the used-gun market would FLAT get their attention. ONE in five new handgun buyers opting for a classic used gun instead, is all it would take to make them feel the ground shake. If 40%, or TWO in five would do this for a year? The 'fine art' would rattle off the walls at Corporate Headquarters.

Stand By For Guilt Trip #12,788...

I can hear the howling already- "What? You're actually proposing that we withold our business from already-embattled gun-makers who are still suffering under under Clinton-era lawsuits, etc.? How will we sell gun magazines?" Yes, that's exactly what I'm saying. Money is the only bit we have in the horse's mouth, and it's going to take a hard pop on the reins to get it under control- and headed back in the direction we want to go.

Whether or not the gunmakers ever reverse this ridiculous trend, principle alone is reason enough for opposing them. There's also the matter of our obligation to pass at least as much FREEDOM on to the next generation, as we had for ourselves. I will personally NEVER buy an IL-equipped firearm. I’ll also not throw in with aftermarket companies or gun publications who support them. I’ll go out of my way to end the careers of politicians who attempt to legislate them.

That’s just my opinion and remember- I ain’t trying to sell you anything. If you agree, sign up in the ‘Comments’ section at the bottom of this page. Feel free to forward the URL to this blog around. If a good long list of responses result, we’ll forward it to the folks making the guns. There’s certainly no harm in being heard on the subject.

Comments, curse-words, death threats etc which, for whatever reason, you do not wish to post in the Comments section may be emailed to:

sarge@thesixgunjournal.net

*In 'Reality Checks' we will address some other articles of pure fertilizer that have been unloaded onto the gun-buying public by gun manufacturers in recent years. Unfortunately they have found strong allies in certain gun writers, gun magazines, and purveyors of "Internet Wisdom'. I'm going to try to turn out about one of these a week, for the next 4-5 weeks. Some old-school thinking is definitely called for here.

Most of you (I'm finding out) simply don't know any better, and if you believe what you read on most Internet Firearms Forums (and apparently you DO) you're never going to get a feel for what gun ownersip was was like under the tutelage of patriarchs like Keith, Skelton, Askins & Cooper. While I won't pretend to be worthy of changing their typewriter ribbons, I'm going to do my best to pass on the practical, reality-based thought processes they brought to bear on the firearms topics of their time. This is going to be fun.-Sarge