2/1/2020 4:08:05 PM
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Section 8: Handguns Subject: Latest Ruger .22 Msg# 1075228
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Just a couple of years ago and yet...
I had no recollection of that thread or of the novel I mentioned in it. Had to look up the book I had referenced to see what it was all about. Let's hear it for old age! I wasn't a fan of fancy-colored guns but I'll tolerate them these days with a couple of stipulations. First is that they can't be confused with toys; no orange tips or other decorations that would make a kid think they were okay to point at someone! Second, they're okay for sport and competition use but not defense. I still think the appearance of the gun you use to protect your life is important. My preference is dark colors - especially matte black - for better concealment, with maybe a stainless muzzle so the bad guy's eye is drawn to it and he realizes the mistake he is making. So if someone wants to shoot his colorful Ruger at the club's weekly shoots, more power to him! And if he wants to call the barrel enclosure on it the receiver, that's okay, too; I realize that it really is part of the frame on such a gun. And it was fun little thread, wasn't it? Stu |
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For reference, the above message is a reply to a message where: I saw this photo on the Home Page, then discovered a fun little thread flowed from it a couple years ago, which I reread--anytime there is an attached thread the forum will take you right to it with a single click. I had simply wanted to comment that however ugly some of us found that blue Ruger pistol to be two-plus years ago, it is simply one of MANY that exist today in a range of bright colors, many with threaded barrels due to the unGodly loud report of the .22LR. No fear, Ruger has us covered with a million ways to buy a .22 MkIV, including the plastic (22/45) version of the MKIV if your tastes run that way, or a compact (SR22) if you want a "trainer," or now a sub-compact (LCP II). Ruger no doubt wants to be the .22 rimfire supplier to the everyman and everywoman. But really, it's the colorful Mk IV series that really sets Ruger apart.... |