I live downtown and I've been seeing a lot of gen z men (is that an oxymoron🤔) carrying what look to be fanny packs over their shoulders.
That said, if you have something that looks that overtly tactical you're entirely defeating the purpose of concealed carry. Might as well put a patch on it...
As far as I can remember, you couldn't open carry a rifle in OK like you can with a pistol now, but this dude is telling me I just imagined that??? Were you always able to open carry a rifle (as in, in public, vs hunting)? Or did something change? Or is he just making stuff up?
Everyone is doing it, in states where they penalize you for not doing, and reward you if you do do it. In california, you almost can't afford not to.
In states like Oklahoma where energy is extremely cheap to begin with and there aren't really any incentives to speak of, best case scenario...
Armsunlimited has the SP5k on sale atm. You can SBR it and put the actual foregrip and correct folding stock on it. The folders get imported from time to time, so they're pretty easy to get. Also clone folders out there if being genuine HK isn't a big deal to you.
Maybe it has and I'm just out of the loop. All I know is I followed it pretty closely for years as each new company would come out with what they claimed was safe, and then like two weeks later someone would be on youtube showing it squib. When the major ammo manufacturers get on board is when...
Are you 100% sure the hammer was actually striking the firing pin? The inertia of the firing pin all by itself will leave a pretty big dimple in the primer.
I'm not sure how that would make a difference, other than leading up the grooves and making the whole thing even more dangerous. All I can say is various companies have popped in and out over the last few decades promising a safe 223 sub, and all have ended up causing documented squibs. And...
I'm talking about attempts to make commercial subsonic 223s. Every single one has resulted in squibs. They're highly dangerous.
I can't speak for your handloads but it's a pretty big claim to say you've succeeded where commercial ammo manufacturers have failed, especially considering their...
Depends on the bullet weight, but assuming a 40 grain bullet, a sub would be ballistically identical, virtually speaking, to a 22lr. Actually a bit weaker, assuming we're talking about rifles. It would be about equivalent to a .22 from a revolver. 223 subs are going to be in the 80gr range...
A 12ga is what you want, with low brass birdshot and 00 buckshot. It can take anything from a squirrel to a bird to an elk and also serves well for self defense. A double barrel with a barrel selector would probably be the most practical.