those .30 are known for the pellet hiting the baffles inside the barrel rendering them inaccurate! there is a video on here about it. but you can take the cap off the end of the barrel then that rifle is accurate!
@@jayree379 yes, but SSK builds a turkey barrel for the Contender that will take turkeys out to 50 yards. With the Judge, you have one firearm that shoots 45 or 410. The Commander and Encore are not limited to that. One or two screws, one pin, new gun anything from 17 Bee to 45/70. New TC firearms are returning to the market this fall. The Contender / Encore platform is superior in all respects other than it being single shot. But all you need is one good shot. Personally I wouldn't attempt hunting with a 5” barrel. Not enough velocity. 10” is my minimum. The SSK barrel is 15”.
The Legend isn't a rimmed pistol cartridge and the Maximum is. You can get a 350 Legend barrel in a Contender or Encore but you are limited to a single cartridge. The Max Contender barrel can chamber and fire 357 Max, 360 Dan Wesson, 357 Magnum, 38 Special and 38 Colt.
The river comes up, the river goes down. Sometimes more, sometimes less. 46 years of watching her go up and down. People freak out when its low, they freak out when its high. Those of us who work on her just go with the flow.
@@keithfelt6949 we have high water and low water conditions every year. Sometimes we have extremes. The media seems to think its static. It isn’t. I prefer high water. More room to navigate and that is the case most of the year. Plenty water to navigate. A good healthy river means we can run the point ways by the islands and towheads. Use the slack water holes and upstream eddies to make better time northbound. Summer time low water is trickier to navigate. At the moment we have 20 feet more water than we had last year and the Baton Rouge gauge won’t drop below 28 feet until June 22nd. Its a more normal year.
Airboats become a flying wing at certain speeds. Somethings arent built to do 70+mph. You can bolt 300 hp on the back of a 16ft skiff. It doesnt mean you should.
Those who are familiar with the weapon know there are only two screws. One that holds the stock on the barrel and one that prevents the bolt from falling out. The ejector simply clips on.
You’ll have to punch the pivot pin out pull the trigger and barrel release at the same time . When apart mic the and match the other barrel lock and file and needed
It is in. It might not be quite far enough and I might have to remove some material from the barrel, but I did paint white out on the lugs and its going all the way in. For the other barrel, I removed material and I have a .005 frame to barrel gal and .002 head space. It's locking up fine. The hammer is quite weak on the bottom of the stroke, really all the way through. Springs get here tomorrow. I don't believe the hammer is striking the interlock
I think a lot has changed from the original TCs to the next generation TCs . I have issues with barrel to frame clearances but frames are 1980s and 1990s - 2000 TCs is totally different
Disclaimer…. I work for a living and have a little grip. Not as strong as when I was younger, but it's a firm grip. When you open this gun, you have to squeeze like you mean it. They pivot up, not back.
As in not shore water. The pier gets you out past the bar. Further than you can cast from the beach without a drone. The end of the pier is 300 yards off the beach. The 61 St. Pier is shorter. Only 174 yards off the beach.
Wow 10 thousand dollars in equipment and a whole day gone for 10 cents in gold. Hey newbies this is a perfect example of what not to do! You should find material worth running before you go all out.
The assayed 2 ounces of gold, 2 ounces of silver per ton. I had a small Tupperware bowl full of pickers from that batch. They didn't show up till the 4th bucket in.
And all that equipment was south of ten grand. The whole turnkey system was $60,000 at the time. I just bought the jaw. I know how to build my own now. My partner and I had a falling out a couple of years after this was shot and he ended up with my jaw. So I had to start over and I did that lowball. I use a Falcon MD 20 and I high-grade that stuff. I don't work it on site either. I crush it, bag it and bring it home in ore bags. Sometimes I just direct smelt it.