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Practically Shooting

G-MAN

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Posts posted by G-MAN

  1. Finally got to shoot the 4006 yesterday. It's a sweet shooting gun. At 25 yards from a semi-rest (on the hood of my friend's pickup) my first ten shots were all in a 6" circle. This was with WWB ammo. Trigger is gritty and after talking with JayPee he says it just needs a good tear down and cleaning to clear that up.

  2. I'm pretty sure all the 59 series mags are interchangeable.

    How the heck do I buy a firearm from CDNN? Their site sucks (well the PDF catalog is pretty cool) - no info on ordering a firearm. I think I asked this once before....phone only?

    Call them up and see if they have a FFL in your area already on their list. If not, you can get a dealer to fax them a copy of his FFL. Pay over the phone and they ship the gun to your FFL.

  3. Originally Posted By: G-MAN
    I'd prefer a 5906 and CDNN has a got a great deal on those right now.

    That does look like a sweet price. I assume they take the same magazines?

    Not sure if the mags are interchangeable.

  4. How many books is this now Gary? More to come?

    This is my fourth novel. I've currently got six books total for sale on Amazon: three novels and three short stories (e-book only).

    For you gun guys, here are the firearms that have supporting roles in A Death on the Wolf: S&W Model 27, Colt Detective Special, Colt 1911, Fox 12 ga side-by-side, and the Browning Sweet Sixteen.

    My next project is tentatively a collection of short stories.

  5. Just an update. I finished this novel on Oct 22, three months and one day from when I started it. Final length is about 90,000 words. It's in final editing now, then will be proofed, and should be on sale by Thanksgiving in both trade paperback and e-book formats.

  6. I like it.

    I feel another book is coming!

    BTW - The whole writing gig is extremely cool. Now we know the real reason for starting this site. grin

    I've been writing a long, long time. Just set it aside for about a decade until last spring.

    I don't get the comment about this site. This is Wayne's site, not mine, and it doesn't have anything to do with my writing.

  7. Originally Posted By: G-MAN
    The best looking American car of the 1960s.

    WOW, beauty is in the eye of the beholder i guess, I certainly would disagree with that statement!

    However my interest in this book is definitely piqued! any time frame when it will be released?

    The book should be out in November.

    Yes, beauty is in the eye of the beholder. But when you look at the target car for the GT Hawk, I don't think there is any comparison:

  8. I want to say a Studebaker of some sort?

    Yep. A 62 GT Hawk. The best looking American car of the 1960s. Totally under appreciated at the time, you cold pick one up for a next to nothing by 69. Studebaker aimed this car squarely at the Thunderbird.

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  9. Can you tell us what car the young man gets?

    Keep in mind the story is set in 1969. This is the car he gets. Belonged to a NASA engineer at MTF where the boy's uncle works. Know what it is? (Hint: It's a 1962 model.)

  10. I'd think one could buy one for that then.

    Let me know if you find something with the actual price. I would not worry about it except that the character in the story has been ogling the gun in the hardware store for months, so he knows the price. He's expecting it for Christmas, but getting it for is birthday (along with a car) is a big surprise.

  11. Guys, I need your help. I need to find out what the list price was for a Browning Sweet Sixteen in 1969. The main character in the novel I'm writing gets one for his sixteenth birthday and I need to know the cost. I've done Google searches and all I'm getting is the current price of Sweet Sixteens from 1969.

  12. That show is terrible! It offends me as a gun enthusiast and a fabricator/machinist/engineer. What a bunch of hacks doing stuff "that's never been done before" but a little googling shows it to be nothing new.

    Will Hayden is the hack. I think he's got a couple of competent gunsmiths working for him, and you can hear (and see) the tension between them when their expertise conflicts with his seat-of-the-pants "just get it done" mentality.

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