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  • Blog,  Ruger

    My Favorite Ruger 10/22

    May 10, 2022 /

    Let me begin by saying that I’m not much of a .22 rifle guy.  Like many youngsters who grew up in the late 1950s and early 1906s my Father taught me firearms safety and shooting at around age 10 to 12.  I learned to shoot on my Dad’s Marlin Model 81 bolt action rifle.  We shot at tin cans behind grandpa’s barn.  I inherited that rifle when my Father passed away in 1999.  Still own it.  A used Marlin Glenfield Model 25 bolt action rifle was my first firearm purchase after I turned 18 and had a steady, full-time job.  The price was $50 in 1973, which was all I…

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    The M14 Complete Assembly Guide

    M14 Assembly Guide – Table of Contents

    October 16, 2023

    Rock Island Rifle Model 1903 – Table of Contents

    March 15, 2023

    “US Infantry Weapons in Combat – Personal Experiences from World War II and Korea”

    May 30, 2023
  • AR-15,  Blog

    My First AR-15 (Part 2/3)

    March 25, 2022 /

    When my future wife and I started collecting martial arms, we followed a predictable progression.   First a M1 Garand.   Then a M1 Carbine.  As finances allowed, and opportunity knocked, a M1911, a Krag, a Trapdoor, and so on.  We loved the history they represented, but we were shooters as well.  We shot in Grandpap’s cow pasture, but kept scores and tried to maintain correct fundamentals of rifle marksmanship as best as any self-taught people could in the era before the internet. I always was deeply interested in the Vietnam War, after all, that was the war Dad was in.  Owning a M16 seemed “a bridge too far”, simply too expensive. …

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    My Latest AR-15 (Part 3/3)

    March 13, 2022

    My First AR-15

    February 21, 2022

    BOOK REVIEW: A Collectors Guide to the Colt AR-15 SP1 Sporter Rifle

    December 8, 2021
  • Blog,  M1 Garand

    My First M1 Garand (Part 1/3)

    March 24, 2022 /

    “Let’s begin the meeting.  Hello, my name is Michael, and I’m addicted to collecting U.S. Martial Arms.” Let me tell you how it began, what I call “The fatal moment of my life”.  I was a student at Pitt in 1996 and to break the monotony of our studies a friend and I attended the big gun show in Greensburg, PA. I was raised in a hunting family, and was no stranger to firearms, but viewed them more as tools rather than something you would want to own for its own sake.   A 16 oz. Plumb claw hammer is a nice hammer, but its job is to pound nails, not…

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    Nelson’s Summer Special

    August 29, 2024

    “US Infantry Weapons in Combat – Personal Experiences from World War II and Korea”

    May 30, 2023

    Sample of United States Rifle Model of 1917

    May 17, 2023
  • AR-15,  Blog

    My AR-15 Journey: The 1994 Assault Weapon Ban & the Global War on Terror (Part 2/3)

    March 18, 2022 /

    As I mentioned in Part 1, the Colt AR-15 SP1 rifle was by far more prevalent than the SP1 carbine.  But it seemed that as each year passed the carbine version was becoming more and more popular.   Initially the popularity of the Colt AR-15 SP1 rifle was driven by Vietnam War veterans and those of us who grew up watching that war on the six 0’clock news wanted to own a rifle like was used in Vietnam.  The same thing had happened after World War II and the Korean War with the M1 Garand and M1 Carbine, and later many veterans of the 1991 Gulf War wanted and AR-15A2. The…

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    BOOK REVIEW: A Collectors Guide to the Colt AR-15 SP1 Sporter Rifle

    December 8, 2021

    The Benefits of Learning to Maintain and Assemble Your Own AR-15

    February 10, 2025

    My First AR-15

    February 21, 2022
  • AR-15,  Blog

    My Latest AR-15 (Part 3/3)

    March 13, 2022 /

    In earlier installments in this series, I told you about my first M1 Garand and first AR-15.  Now I would like to tell you about my newest AR-15. My first AR was an SP-1.  She was as close as I could get to the M16 my Father held at Tan An bunker number 4 during a V.C. rocket attack.  A sleek, elegant and handy rifle, she’s a beauty, a joy to shoot.  Her new sister is nothing like her.  She’s not fat, but she’s definitely thick.  With a heavy stainless free floated barrel, 1:8 twist, Wylde chamber, half minute sights, detachable carry handle, and insanely long stock.  She is, of…

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    BOOK REVIEW: A Collectors Guide to the Colt AR-15 SP1 Sporter Rifle

    December 8, 2021

    My First AR-15

    February 21, 2022

    The Benefits of Learning to Maintain and Assemble Your Own AR-15

    February 10, 2025
  • AR-15,  Blog

    My AR-15 Journey: The Effects of the Global War on Terror and End of the Assault Weapon Ban (Part 3/3)

    March 11, 2022 /

    The wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and the expiration of the Assault Weapons Ban in September 2004 changed the civilian AR-15 as much as the military M16 was changed to the M4 by these wars.  The benefits of the military M4 were lighter, shorter and more adaptable than the rifle.  Returning veterans and civilians who watched the wars on the news wanted to own a civilian version of the M4 carbine.  The end to the Assault Weapons Ban made it possible.  The AR-15 market reacted to that demand and many companies were soon making an M4 carbine version for the fast growing civilian market. The 16.5” barrel of the civilian…

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    My First AR-15

    February 21, 2022

    My First AR-15 (Part 2/3)

    March 25, 2022

    The Benefits of Learning to Maintain and Assemble Your Own AR-15

    February 10, 2025
  • Blog

    My AR-15 Journey: The 1994 Assault Weapon Ban & the Global War on Terror (Part 1/3)

    March 8, 2022 /

    If you have been following my Blog posts, from my review of authors Perry Cox and Bruce Kaufman’s wonderful new book, A Collectors Guide to the Colt AR-15 SP1 Sporter Rifle, you know that I am a longtime fan of the Colt AR-15 SP1 Sporter Rifle.  When I bought my Colt SP1 in 1982 there were two choices in the purchase of the AR-15, a Colt SP1 Sporter rifle or a Colt SP1 Sporter carbine.  That was it as there were no other makers.  I chose the rifle.  The price was $500.  I shot my SP1 a lot back in the day and used that rifle to compete in early…

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    My First AR-15

    February 21, 2022

    The Ageless 10/22

    October 20, 2020

    The M1 Garand: World War II – Table of Contents

    September 8, 2023
  • Blog

    The Springfield Armory Model 1866 Rifle – Second Allin Conversion and the Wagon Box Fight (Part 2/2)

    March 1, 2022 /

    Following the Civil War, Army Ordnance sought a cost effective way of altering the large inventory of serviceable .58 caliber muzzle-loading rifle-muskets into breech-loading rifles chambered for a self-primed metallic cartridge.  Springfield Armory Master Armorer, Erskine S. Allin was assigned that task.  He developed a design to cut open the breech of old rifle-musket barrels and attach a “trapdoor” hinged breech mechanism for loading, firing and ejecting the cartridge. His first successful attempt was adopted as the “U.S. Rifle, Model 1865 Rifle-Musket” which utilized a .58 caliber rim fire metallic cartridge.  This rifle was also known as the First Allin Conversion.  Over 5,000 were produced by Springfield Armory.  Field reports…

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    The M1911 Complete Owner’s Guide – Table of Contents

    July 13, 2023

    Rogers & Hackathorn Holsters

    August 27, 2024

    Rock Island Rifle Model 1917 – Table of Contents

    March 28, 2023
  • AR-15,  Blog

    My First AR-15

    February 21, 2022 /

    “Write the book you’d want to read!” That was the impetus for the original AR-15 Complete Owner’s Guide.  To be honest, right through the ‘90’s I was disinterested in the AR-15 rifle.  I very much preferred the Ruger Mini-14.  During much of that time, the AR-15 market consisted of either pricey Colts or affordable small, dare I say, “no-name,” manufacturers.  At least, that’s how I saw it.  Then, after a time, the “ABC” brands became the “name” manufacturers: Armalite, Bushmaster, and Colt.  The Armalite of that day was not the Armalite that had developed the AR-15.  The Armalite company had ceased to exist many years prior.  The owner of Eagle…

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    My First AR-15 (Part 2/3)

    March 25, 2022

    My Latest AR-15 (Part 3/3)

    March 13, 2022

    BOOK REVIEW: A Collectors Guide to the Colt AR-15 SP1 Sporter Rifle

    December 8, 2021
  • Blog,  M1 Carbine,  M1 Garand,  M14,  M1911

    Seeing Double: Duplicate Serial Number – Springfield Armory and Winchester M1 Rifles

    February 7, 2022 /

    Most long time M1 rifle collectors know that duplicate World War II serial number Springfield and Winchester rifles exist.  This was revealed in the July 1960 issue of American Rifleman magazine by a brief article that included a photograph of an SA and WRA rifle both with serial number 2445470.  In 1987 I conducted a survey of serial numbers contributed by the Garand Collectors Association (GCA) membership, it revealed that several blocks of assigned serial numbers that were duplicated.  This information was presented in my book “The M1 Garand: World War II” in Chapter 4, Production, Deliveries, and Serial Numbers. Newer collectors may not have been aware of this duplication,…

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    The M1 Garand: World War II – Table of Contents

    September 8, 2023

    We Wish They Could Talk – Sometimes They Do (Part 1/2)

    June 4, 2021

    The M1 Garand: The Greatest Battle Implement Ever Devised

    February 5, 2025
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