I mean why would my 1911 have all this done to it if there weren't SOME parts of the design that couldn't be improved:
1. Polished integrated ramped, match bull barrel with a fully supported chamber (for .45super)Sure, some of those are personal preference items; but a couple of them address serious issues with the original design.
2. Titanium firing pin
3. Tuned custom hammer and trigger group with a 3.25# pull
4. Ultra short, ultra light, adjustable trigger
5. Tuned extractor
6. Tuned ejector
7. Dual captured recoil system with 22# wolff springs (for .45 super)
8. Tightened and trued frame and slide (but not too tightened)
9. Checkered arched mainspring housing
10. Wraparound hogue finger groove grips
11. Torx head grip screws
12. Lowerd and flared ejection port
13. Lowered, extended, and thinned tool steel ambi-dextrous safety
14. Lowered, extended, and thinned tool steel slide stop
15. Beveled mag well
16. Novak lo-profile combat sights with tritium inserts.
17. Recessed angle cut muzzle crown
18. Wilson mags with steel ultrathin base plates
19. Full wolff sring set
20. Slide flats trued and polished, the rest of the gun bead blasted
So, what are the problems that I see with the classic 1911:
1. Ejection port
2. Unsupported chamber
3. Frame feed ramp
4. Original plain grip safety
5. Spur hammer
6. Recoil spring plug
7. Barrel bushing (plus and minus on that one)
8. Stock safety
9. Stock slide stop release
10. ANY Grip safety at all (plus and minus on that one)
11. Overly sensitive to mag springs
12. Overly sensitive to all the other springs too
13. Non-existent sights
Actually, all of those aren't really THAT big deal... but there is one thing that is the WORST feature of the 1911...
The internal tension spring extractor
The internal extractor has caused more serious problems for more users than anything other than bad magazines (which I don't blame on the design really, and which are a problem for ALL auto pistols).
Even an otherwise perfect 1911 can become unreliable after a few hundred rounds of "bad" ammo, that can detension the extractor. In fact even a Wilson hardcore extractor (about the toughest and highest end you can get) can be detensioned by just 20-50 rounds of ammo thats rim is too thick, too hard, or extracts just a little bit wrong.
You do it to yourself even faster if you drop the slide on a chambered round.
Generally speaking, the strategy in dealing with this HAS been to get a good heavy duty extractor, tension it properly, then tune it up every few hundred rounds.
In the last few years though, Kimber, S&W and others have started producing external extractor 1911's. That really is the proper solution to this issue; because it doesnt need regular retuning, and it isnt subject to metal fatigue etc...
Actually extraction and ejection issues are probably the most serious issues for ANY auto pistol, but just about every other design has moved to an external extractor. Sometimes "they" are right, and god forbid, John Moses Browning was wrong (actually HE thought the extractor was the weak point too).
Now I wouldn't know anything at all about any of these next few. Really this has never happened at any company I've ever worked for.
Or something...
"COWS
Is it just me, or does anyone else find it amazing that our government can track a cow born in Canada almost three years ago, right to the stall where she sleeps in the state of Washington And they tracked her calves to their stalls. But they are unable to locate 11 million illegal aliens wandering around our country. Maybe we should give them all a cow.
CONSTITUTION
They keep talking about drafting a Constitution for Iraq. Why don't we just give them ours? It was written by a lot of really smart guys, it's worked for over 200 years and we're not using it anymore.
TEN COMMANDMENTS
The real reason that we can't have the Ten Commandments in a Courthouse? You cannot post "Thou Shalt Not Steal," "Thou Shalt Not Commit Adultery" and "Thou Shall Not Lie" in a building full of lawyers, judges and politicians! It creates a hostile work environment!
MARTHA STEWART
Boy, I feel a lot safer now that she's behind bars. O.J. Simpson and Kobe Bryant are still walking around; Osama Bin Laden too, but they take the one woman in America willing to cook, clean, and work in the yard,
and haul her ass off to jail."
Okay, so it's a few months out of date, but one comment particularly struck me...
"They keep talking about drafting a Constitution for Iraq. Why don't we just give them ours? It was written by a lot of really smart guys, it's worked for over 200 years and we're not using it anymore."
"Hello, I am sure this has been asked before but I just didnt know where to look... I am an aspiring author and one of my characters will use a gun regularly. As such I was hoping someone would be able to tell me what the difference between a .38 and a 9mm is, in power and accuracy, or direct me to a link that explains it. Any help you all can give me will be most apreciated."Doesn't it really irritate you when an otherwise good author, who should really know better because their audience consists of many gun savvy people; gets basic firearms details entirely wrong?
She DOES however have a lot of friends who do (she lives in St. Louis, which is STILL trying to resist the Missouri state CCW law BTW), and they generally help her out.
Well, to all aspiring authors... here goes.
First, go to your nearest range, and TALK TO PEOPLE. Get to know how they shoot, what they are shooting, and why. Pick up and handle a few guns. Ask questions. Then get on the range with an instructor, and fire a few boxes of cartridges (generic ammo usually comes in boxes of 50), from a couple of different guns.
Do your research, and you will come away with an INFINITELY better understanding of what you are writing.
Now on to direct answers...
First (in this section anyway), bullets aren't... or rather what most people call bullets are actually cartridges (also called rounds), which consist of the following:
The proper way to refer to a generic class of guns that fire the same type of cartridges is their "chambering". For example the Glock 17 is chambered for the 9mm parabellum; and when refering to the type of cartridges it fires you would say "its chambering", or "The number of pistols chambering 9mm is very large" etc...
Now our aspiring author actually chose two very good examples, because they are among the most commonly used pistol chamberings, especially in police and detective fiction; and are also among the most mis-understood. To some people any revolver must be a "38" and any auto-loader must be a "9", especially if it's black and partially plastic.
They are also a great example, because the .38spl and the 9mm are two very different cartridges, using almost the same sized bullets, and which were intended to serve a similar purpose; issue to military and police (in fact the full name of the 9x19 cartridge that most of us just call 9mm, is actually the "9mm x 19mm parabellum" which means "For War" in latin).
The other major similarity, is that 9mm is pretty close to the same diameter as .38spl (which isn't really .38", it's actually .357").
NOTE: A word on cartridge designations. In the english speaking world it is customary to refer to a chambering by its "caliber", expressed as a decimal fraction of an inch. For example, .22 is jsut over 1/5" .30 is just under 1/3", and .45 is just under .5". The only problem with that designation method, is that there are a lot of chamberings where the bullet is the same diameter, but the cases that the bullet are shoved into are very different length. Even worse, there are a lot of numeric designations, that arent the real measurement of the size of the bullet.Oh and coincidentally the .38spl and the 9mm parabellum were also both introduced in the same year (1902).For example, the .38spl and the .357 magnum share the same bullet diameter (in fact they sometimes use the exact same bullets), but the case of the magnum is longer, so that it can't be fired in a pistol designed to fire the less powerful .38spl.
In the rest of the world, and since WW1 in England and Australia, it has been more common to refer to the actual (or nominal, which is close but not perfect) diameter of the bullet in millimeters, with either the manufacturers name (7.65 browning) or the length of the cartridge case (7.65x17) appended to the end.
Given all those similarities, you would think they were very similar cartridges, but in fact they are completely different; because they were designed to be fired in different types of guns.
The 9mm was explicitly developed for the then-new auto-loading pistol; the .38spl was designed as an improvement over an older revolver chambering.
Revolvers work by loading cartridges into a cylinder with chambers bored into it. Pulling the hammer back (or in most cases pulling the trigger), rotates the cylinder so that the chambers will come into line with the barrel. Pulling the trigger all the way through, then releases the hammer to fall forward, sending the firing pin into the primer in the base of the cartridge and BANG! Once you've expended all the rounds in the chambers, you pop the empty cartridge casings out manually, and reload the cartridges either by hand or with a speed loading device (speed loader, moon clip, speed strip or something similar).
Auto-loaders generally take their cartridges from a stacked magazine (NOT a clip, as is so commonly misused), most often in the butt of the gun, but occaisonally in front of, or behind it. The force of the bullet being fired causes the action to move, pulling the spent (and very hot) cartridge case out of the chamber (which in an auto-loader is part of the barrel instead of acylinder like in a revolver), and throwing it onto the ground (or into your eyes, or hair, or face, or frequently for women down their cleavage); then stripping a new cartridge from the top of the magazine and pushing it back into the chamber, ready to be fired. When all the rounds in the magazine have been fired, you press a button or move a catch, remove the magazine; and replace it with another that has the cartridges preloaded.
Please note, in autoloading pistols (or rifles for that matter), only ONE round is fired every time you pull the trigger; unless the weapon is specially designed (and in most places licensed) to fire more than one. There are NO pistols, rifles, or other weapons designed to do this, and manufactured for sale to anyone but the military or law enforcement in the United States since 1986. It is POSSIBLE to purchase weapons made before this that were designed to do so, however they are very rare, and VERY expensive (starting at about $5000 for the worst piece of junk).
Hey while we are at it (busting myths that is):
You can't make a gun out of all plastic to get it through the metal detectors at an airport. It is entirely possible to sneak a gun onto a plane, but not by making it out of non-metallic materials; and there are no guns currently made, or possible to hand make, that will give you a useful handgun without setting off a metal detector (springs, catches and the like). This MAY be possible in the future, but not until we figure out how to make polymers act like metals. Also there are explosive sniffers at airports that can detect residues from ammunition and gunfire (I've been stopped a couple times actually).Back on direct topic, the .38 was, and still is used extensively in the U.S. for personal defense. It was the dominant chambering for police weapons until the late 1970s and early 1980s when police on the whole switched to 9mm semi-automatics (another word for auto-loaders, generally shortened to automatics, or just autos).
The main problem with .38 as a police or personal defense round, is that it is a low pressure, slow round. It doesn't have great penetration, or expansion. This is why the .357 magnum was developed (first by hand loaders for sport, and then at the request of the FBI for law enforcement). Starting in the 1930's law enforcement agencies that had to deal with more dangerous criminals, or criminals in vehicles (which the .38 doesn't penetrate well) switched to more powerful calibers such as the .357 magnum. In fact, by the 1970's most police outside of the major cities had standardized on the .357 (just in time to start changing to automatics).
The .357 was and is historically the best civilian "manstopper" of any of the major calibers. More people have been shot and successfully stopped with .357mag than any other chambering (in civilian use). The main difference between the .38spl, and .357, is that the .357 is longer, and loaded with a more powerful powder charge, which produces more presure and makes the bullet go faster. This expands the bullet to a greater diameter when it hits th body, and transfers more force into the body (a lighter punch versus a harder one), which does more damage, and causes more shock; thus is often (though not always) more likely to stop a hostile subject quicker.
Since the rise of the auto pistols in the 70's the .38spl has largely fallen into the role of backup gun, using it as practice ammo for the .357 magnum (which can fire .38spl, but .38s cant fire .357); in ULTRA small revolvers for deep concealment; or for people who have limited hand strength, and can't handle the recoil of more powerful rounds in smaller guns (it is ideal in this role).
Also many people purchase .357 magnum chambered revolvers, and load them with special higher pressure .38spl cartridges, so that they can more easily control the weapon (and are less likely to be blinded by the bright flash of the magnum) in the event of social unpleasantness in the middle of the night.
The other drawback of the .38spl of course, is that it is designed only to be fired from revolvers (ammunition for revolvers is generally not compatible with autos and vice versa, though there are exceptions). The revolver is limited to 6 or in some cases 7 or 8 round capacity, which is often seen as a disadvantage.
The 9mm faces a similar problem as the .38. Though it is loaded to a far higher pressure and velocity, it is still quite a small and light bullet. Although recent advances in bullet technology have helped increase the stopping capability of the 9mm (through reliable expansion of hollowpoint bullets, which the .38 at lower pressures has a bigger problem with); it has proven over time to be a somewhat less effective chambering for ending violent conflict quickly (of course NO pistol cartridge is going to do that job well, they are all just a compromise; and a way to fight your way back to a real weapon like a rifle or shotgun).
The 9mm was popularized by the Austrian/German Luger self loading pistol; which is why 9mm is often referred to as 9mm luger (this is generally incorrect, as 9mm luger is a very specific loading of the 9mm cartridge, with a single weight of bullet, and strength of powder charge). The real advantage of the 9mm has been that it IS a very small round, and therefore you can fit far more of them in a magazine, than more powerful rounds such as the .45acp (For comparison, you can fit up to 18 9mm rounds in the magazine of a full sized service pistol in 9mm. That same pistol in .45 would most likely only hold 13 rounds)
More on this subject later in the post...
Now, I've mentioned the .45 here... and that bears some expanding.
The .45acp, first widely issued in 1912 along with the Colt government model pistol of 1911 (also known as the Gov't model, or the 1911), are together the most popular hand gun, and most popular chambering in the U.S. by far. This is because that historically the .45acp has proven to be a very effective cartridge with proper ammunition chocie, and because the pistols chambered for it are seen by many as the best in the world to shoot (of course some violently disagree).
That said, more badguys have been killed by the U.S. military with .45 than any other pistol caliber. It was our designated service pistol from 1911 to 1986 (yes, thats 75 years), and has in fact never completely left military service (for special operations units. also it is used with swat teams, and the FBI extensively). A lot of people figure that counts for something.
THe .45 caliber bullet used in the .45 aACP chambering is big. It's almost half an inch across. It's also havey for a bullet, at up to 230 grains, which is about equal to a half an ounce/ It's also a relatively slow bullet at 800 - 1250 feet per second, vs 1000-1400 for the much lighter (about half the weight actually) 9mm. That big, heavy bullet, when loaded to the top end of the pressure range, and with a good modern hollowpoint bullet is one hell of a manstopper. And that is taking in to account bullet construction. if for some reason you are stuck with military style ball ammo (FMJ or full metal jacket as mandated by the hague convention. It's a lot less effective and damaging than what civilians can use), the extra mass and size of the .45 seem to be far more effective at stopping a fight than the small and light 9mm.
Another myth to bust:
The military actually uses less dangerous ammunition than is available to police and civilians. This is not however because of the Geneva convention, or even the Hague convention (which sets out the rules of land warfare). We limit them as a courtesy to other nations; because we are not signatory to either treaty, though we are a member of the U/N/ which references both treaties in ITS rules for warfare.There are a lot of strong feelings about the .45 vs. 9mm issue; in part because the people who preferred the 9mm round said a lot of very bad (untrue), and some moderately bad (true) things about .45s when they were trying to sell the world 9mm's
Of course the reverse is true of .45 zealots who were resisting the 9mm...
Gun people are both very opinionated, and very resistant to change. Get used to it.
Relating to that, most people who use firearms extensively have a strong perference for EITHER revolvers or auto-loading pistols; though some use both (including myself, though I generally prefer autos). This is more of a religious preference than anything else, though there are valid points on both sides.
Auto partisans talk about cartridge capacity (from 6 at the low end to 20 on the high end for autos, vs 5-8 for revolvers), speed of reloading, and natural pointability. Revolver evangelists make much of the fact that it's very difficult to jam up a revolver, and if you have a misfire you just pull the trigger again and the gun goes bang. Also if you have weak hands, the strong springs used in automatics can make them difficult for you to operate.
Irrespective of action type, professionals who use and carry firearms on a daily basis have by and large moved to (or moved back to) larger and more powerful chamberings such as .40 S&W, and .45 ACP for their primary weapons; or to chamberings that approximate more powerful revolver loads, in auto pistols (the .357 sig for the .357 mag; the 10mm for the .41mag or .44spl).
These days (in the Unites States anyway) generally 9mm and .38spl are considered backup calibers, or calibers for smaller very easily concealable guns.
Many of us here carry on a daily basis (including myself) and I can tell you my deep cover gun (for concealment without larger covering garments like a large shirt, jacket, or coat) is a compact 9mm; and my primary carry guns are both .45acp.
Police departments on the whole have switched (or are switching) from 9mm to .40S&w or .357sig.
Now all of this talk assumes that you are setting your characters in the modern day United States. Certainly different time periods, and diferent locations, require different weapons choices for accuracy. For example in most of the world outside the U.S, revolvers are far less common; and 9mm is the dominant caliber by at least a factor of two (most likely more). Also, in Europe and Asia, smaller calibers such as the .380acp (9mm kurz), the 32acp (7.65x17 browning) and the .25acp (6.5x15.5 browning) are taken more seriously.
In the U.S. even relatively recent times have seen radically different weapons choices. For example the .40S&W wasn't introduced as a mainstream offering until '92, when the FBI decided to pull back from their choice of the much more powerful 10mm cartridge .
The .40 was actually developed directly from the 10mm; they are the same diameter, but the 10mm is longer, and can use heavier bullets and more powder. The 10mm was initially chosen by the FBI for it's excellent penetration, and expansion in testing. It is a very powerful, chambering, but not so powerful as to caus a hazard for people behind the person being shot (as can be the case with large magnums, or some rifle chamberings).
The problem is, the 10mm is a VERY powerful chambering (it's one of my favorites actually). Many smaller agents found the recoil to be difficult to control, and it was very hard on the weapons. To help with this, the FBI developed a reduced power 10mm load called appropriately enough "the FBI load". Smith and Wesson, the primary contractor to the FBI for 10mm pistols, saw that the cartridge with the reduced charge didn't have to be so long, so they cut it down, and the .40 S&W was born.
Law enforcement users immediately found it to be far superior to the 9mm for their needs, and began adopting it quite quickly. The .40 then really took off in civilian non-police sales, after the supply of 11-19 round magazines for "wundernines" dried up in the mid '90s
NOTE: The use of larger calibers as a whole was falling into decline throughout the 80s as the very high capacity (up to 19 rounds) 9mm pistols rose into prominence. This also was the era of final transition away from revolvers for most law enforcement organizations.With the passage of the 10rd magazine ban in '94, the high capacity 9s were now limited to 10rds, and people started looking for more potent calibers to compensate for the loss of capacity. Ever since then, the trend has been larger calibers in smaller packages. Just in the last few years, stuffing the .45 ACP into the smallest possible package has become quite popular. With improved metallurgy, it has also become possible to produce INCREDIBLY light weight and compact revolvers chambering the .357 magnum (as light as 10oz!).
Next gun myth:
The assault weapon ban didnt actually ban assault weapons. It banned normal sem-automatics that LOOKED like real assault weapons; made in other countries; from being imported for sale her ein th U.S. It also banned the new manufacture of some guns that LOOKED like real assault weapons here in the U.S. based on certain features like threaded barrels, folding stocks, detachable magazines (whcih almsot all guns have), ... basically if ti looked like the military would use it, they wanted to ban it.It appears that the sunset of the AWB last september, and the availability of new full capacity magazines isn't going to reverse the trend towards smaller pistols in larger calibers (or even smaller 9mms like the Rorbaugh), and very compact revolvers in .357 magnum.Of course the ban was jsut based on looks. Civilians in America (except police) havent been able to buy real fully automatic assault weapons made since '86; and they havent been able to buy anything fully auto since 1934 without paying a special tax, and getting a huge and lengthly (6-18 months depending on your background) background investigation by the ATF and FBI. Those weapons they can buy are incredibly rare and expensive.
Finally, it banned the new manufacture or importation of magazines holding more than 10 rounds. Of course since you can't shoot more than one round at a time, why should the number of rounds in a single magazine matter... Not to mention the fact that there were already millions of them in circulation, and you cant have an ex-post facto seizure law in this country.
Oh and I can show you conclusive prrof the AWB hasnt done a thing for or against crime. Crime has been on the decline in this country since 1978, and especially since 1987. In fact crime is falling faster now that the AWB has expired.
It seems the general realization has dawned that fewer shots, placed more accurately, with a more effective caliber; are far more effective than spraying large quantities of underpowered pellets, at ending an active social disagreement.
So what do cops, security guards, private detectives, and the military use?
Well the easist one is the Military, because there's a standard, and its the Beretta M9, a 16 shot, full sized, 9mm pistol. It is also very popular with the police, and other civilian shooters.
That may be changing soon, to an H&K USP pistol, or one of it's derivatives. Also some smaller units, and special operations units use SIG or H&K pistols already. Some also still use (or have gone back to) high end 1911 style pistols in .45acp.
Look through my site on the articles about military guns for more info.
Rent-a-cop type security guards are generally not the savviest about guns. Generally whatever gun is the cheapest, that the company specifies is OK. Most commonly they would have Glock, Ruger, or S&W autos; though some use Berettas.
Private security on the other hand tend to be very weapon savvy indeed (and they are also frequently ex military), and tend to use .357 sig or .45 acp from Glock, SIG, H&K, or in a high end 1911.
Private investigators run the gamut from "whatever the cops in my area used to use 10 years ago" to "Hottest and slickest shit you can buy". "Hard Boiled" detectives however almsot invariably used a snub nosed .38 (chiefs special or detectives special).
As to the police and other law enforcement agencies, they are more varied, but still generally they will have one of the following
1. Glock in 9mm, .40s&w, or .357 sig (more than half of all police departments issue Glocks)
2. Beretta auto pistol in 9mm or .40s&w (several models)
3. SIG p226, 228, or 229 in 9mm, .40s&w, or .357 sig
4. Smith and Wesson auto pistol in 9mm or .40S&W (there are a ot of models)
5. Ruger auto pistol in 9mm or .40 S&W (several models)
6. Some departments will allow 1911s, or other .45acp pistols, but it is relatively rare
The largest police department in the country, the NYPD, issues 9MM Glocks, and allows officers to carry the Kahr K9, the Smith and Wesson chiefs special (a .38spl revolver), and the Colt detective special (also a .38 revolver), as a backup weapon, or a primary weapon for plainclothes officers.
The FBI currently issues either Glocks, or SIG's (and has allowed choices before) in 9mm, .40, and .357 sig depending on when the weapon was issued, and out of what office. Most other federal law enforcement agencies have standardised on the SIG in one of those three calibers, everyone else uses the Glock, or the HK, except for special operations teams.
Many SWAT or other special operations teams use SIG or HK pistols; and many also use 1911 style pistols in .45 acp. A few still use a Browning Hi-Power variant (13 shot 9mm).
Any questions? No? Good.... (actually feel free to ask away).
A reader from the NoR asks the questions "Is it so hard to keep a 2000 person network running?"
"Why is it that the IT people here can never actually get the computers to work for a whole 2 months straight? I'm sitting here again with people breathing down my neck for TPS reports (no, not really) and I can't work for more then 10 minutes without the damn computer locking up on me. The entire department, and from what I hear, sections of other floors in the building have this problem too. I've pretty much given up trying to work and am spending the day picking my ass and surfing. Grrrrrr........
Is keeping a 2000 person network consistently up and running that difficult? I honestly don't know. IT guys, what do you say?"
Computers are stupid and unreliable. So are people (as opposed to persons).
To figure out how often a system will go down (at least partially) take the MTBF for each critical component, and divide it by the number of critical components.
For example, the MTBF for modern SCSI hard drives is staggeringly high (in excess of 10 years)... actually they've started using something called an anualized failure rate, which is between 1% and 0.5%.
Of course in an organization with 2400 users, and over 20 terabytes of storage arrays, there are something like 5000 hard drives in the organization. That means in an average year, we are going to lose 50 hard drives.
Actually it's probably more like 100 or so.
And that's just dead drives, never mind major data errors...
And then theres user error...
The critical MTBF for the operator is harder to determine. The best bet is that for every 100 people, someone will do something stupid that will cause a critical system to fail, once per week.
This number doubles for healthcare or government workers. It quadruples for programmers, but in most companies they are kept away from the production systems.
Not in my company.
Yes, I'm changing that. I may need a shotgun and a baseball bat to do it; but it is getting done.
March of CambreathThats the "March of Cambreath" from Heather Alexander, and is another fast Irish march like "Follow Me Up to Carlow" from t'other day.[chorus]
Axes flash, broad sword swingShining armors piercing ring
Horses run with a polished shield
Fight those bastards 'til they yield[chorus 2]
Midnight mare and blood red roan
Fight to keep this land your own
Sound the horn and call the cry
How many of them can we make die?Follow orders as you're told
Make their yellow blood run cold
Fight until you die or drop
A force like ours is hard to stopClose your mind to stress and pain
Fight 'til you're no longer sane
Let not one damn cur pass by
How many of them can we make die?Guard your women, children well
Send these bastards back to hell
We'll teach them the ways of war
And they won't come here anymoreUse your shield and use your head
Fight 'til everyone is dead
Raise the flag up to the sky
How many of them can we make die?[bridge]
Dawn has broke the time has come
Move your feet to the marching drum
We'll win the war and pay the toll
We'll fight as one in heart and soul[chorus 2]
[chorus]
[chorus 2]
How many of them can we make die?
How many of them can we make die?
How many of them can we make die... That's an interesting question isn't it? It's the question asked by a man in a last stand, against the hordes; fighting for everything he holds dear. He knows he's going to die, HE'S JUST GONNA TAKE EVERY LAST MOTHERFUCKER WITH HIM.
Sometimes there are fights you can't win; That doesn't mean you don't have to fight them. That doesnt mean you dont have to die in the process. Sometimes you have to go out, there's nothing that says you don't have to come back.
The question remains:
And yea though I walk through the valley in the shadow of death I shall fear no evil For I am the meanest motherfucker in the valleyOh and who would the action plan be used ag'in? Well, let's just use your imagination then shall we; I'm sure you can come up with a worthy answer.
Whooooo boy.... that's one hell of a can of worms with my family...
I'm a descendant of many famous murderers, robbers, bandits, revolutionaries rogues, and malcontents... I'm Irish and my name is Byrne. Kind of goes with the teritory.
In particular, I'm descended from Feagh McHugh O'Byrne. Fun guy.
Then more recently, my father was one of the biggest drug and gun smugglers caught during the 80s (no I'm not kidding. He spent most of my life in prison).
Hell, they even wrote a song about us:
Follow Me Up To Carlow (Fast Irish March)Lift MacCahir Og your face
Brooding o'er the old disgrace
That black FitzWilliam stormed your place,
Drove you to the Fern
Grey said victory was sure
Soon the firebrand he'd secure;Until he met at Glenmalure
With Feagh MacHugh O'Byrne.Curse and swear Lord Kildare,
Feagh will do what Feagh will dare
Now FitzWilliam, have a care
Fallen is your star, low.
Up with halberd out with sword
On we'll go for by the lordFeagh MacHugh has given the word,
Follow me up to Carlow.From Tassagart to Clonmore,
There flows a stream of Saxon gore
Oh, great is Rory Oge O'More,
At sending loons to Hades.
White is sick and Lane is fled,
Now for black FitzWilliam's headWe'll send it over, dripping red,
To Liza and her ladies.Curse and swear Lord Kildare,
Feagh will do what Feagh will dare
Now FitzWilliam, have a care
Fallen is your star, low.
Up with halberd out with sword
On we'll go for by the lordFeagh MacHugh has given the word,
Follow me up to Carlow.See the swords of Glen Imayle,
Flashing o'er the English pale
See all the children of the Gael,
Beneath O'Byrne's banners
Rooster of the fighting stock,
Would you let a Saxon cockCrow out upon an Irish rock,
Fly up and teach him manners.Curse and swear Lord Kildare,
Feagh will do what Feagh will dare
Now FitzWilliam, have a care
Fallen is your star, low.
Up with halberd out with sword
On we'll go for by the lordFeagh MacHugh has given the word,
Feagh MacHugh has given the word,
Feagh MacHugh has given the word,
Follow me up to Carlow!
Dont worry, this will be rememdied tomorrow. Friday is actually the first weekday Id missed since I started this blog, and that kind of irritates me. was going for the perfect attendance record and all that.
Anyway, LOTS of stuff forthcoming. The thoughts are very definitely still pounding their way through my head up there; I jsut havent had the time to let them out through the keyboard.
Held: The city’s proposed disposition of petitioners’ property qualifies as a “public use” within the meaning of the Takings Clause. Pp. 6—20.(a) Though the city could not take petitioners’ land simply to confer a private benefit on a particular private party, see, e.g., Midkiff, 467 U.S., at 245, the takings at issue here would be executed pursuant to a carefully considered development plan, which was not adopted “to benefit a particular class of identifiable individuals,” ibid. Moreover, while the city is not planning to open the condemned land–at least not in its entirety–to use by the general public, this “Court long ago rejected any literal requirement that condemned property be put into use for the … public.” Id., at 244. Rather, it has embraced the broader and more natural interpretation of public use as “public purpose.” See, e.g., Fallbrook Irrigation Dist. v. Bradley, 164 U.S. 112, 158—164. Without exception, the Court has defined that concept broadly, reflecting its longstanding policy of deference to legislative judgments as to what public needs justify the use of the takings power. Berman, 348 U.S. 26; Midkiff, 467 U.S. 229; Ruckelshaus v. Monsanto Co., 467 U.S. 986. Pp. 6—13.
The court split 5-4 with the liberals being predictably collectivist, the conservatives being predictably individualist (their ruling on Raich aside) and Kennedy being the decider in favor of destroying our liberties.
No, that isnt hyperbole, thats jsut the truth. The most fundamental right within a society, is the right to privcate property. Without private property rights, you have no other rights that the government doesnt choose to give you. In effect all your inherent rights have been taken away and replaced with constructed rights.
Which is jsut what the collectivists want of course.
Kennedy apparently thinks this meaningless hedge makes up for it, but he's worng. All they have done today is take us yet another step down the road of revolution.
For those of you who think I'm crazy, rest assured I am not.
For those who think I am kidding, rest assured I am not.
The day government officials try and take what is mine is the day I start killing them. My property is mine, by right. It is not by grant of the state, and cannot be taken from me by the state. It is mine, and I WILL defend it to the death... and by that I mean YOUR death first you state worshiping assholes.
Its nevr just my blackberry, its always my damn, or my gods be damned blackberrym it is monikered thusly for its tendency to wake me from a sound sleep at 5:22, with my irritated girlfriend grumbling (justifiably) next to me.
I hate this damned thing, but I have to admit, it let's me work more efficiently, which IS the point of it afterall.
Anyway we had one hell of a thunderbanger round about sundown. Just happens to be the time I was drivin home from work. Had a niCe bit og chain lightning, hailan the works. And of course this bein arizona, it's all hapnin at 80 degrees.
There were half a dozen downed trees or large branches and the roads were pretty well covered with tree debris. Meanwhile, the fire dept. Is goin nuts (there's a fire station 1/4 mile from my condo)...
All in all, an intersting time really.
The funniest thing though, the power didn't go down until the storm was over, and has been trying valiantly ever since to come bqck up, succeeding for a few seconds then flickering and dying. I guess they lost the wrong xformer or stub box (those big green yellow or beighe neighborhood boxes)...
Well the power just came back for a whole 5 mins, then died again... 3 mins later back on...
As I was saying, this is what happens when you lose enough overcapacity that the strain starts to take out segments. Then when the strain eases a bit, and you get a box back up, its enough for a minute, but then the load spikes again, and it fails again.
Let's just say I'm leaving my candles where I can get to them.
... And off again...
But the biggest thing that strikes me about this whole situation, is that there isn't a working electric light within sight, and yet here I am writing on the internet.
Man we live in an amazing world.
1. Liberals dont trust people to make the best decisions for themselves, their children, or society (Social spending, Education, "hate", Religion)
2. Based on this distrust, liberals believe that government should make legislation to force people to do that which they believe is correct
3. Conservatives dont trust people to make the best decisions for themselves, their children, or society (Drugs, Sex, "Love", Religion)
4. Based on this distrust, conservatives believe that government should make legislation to force people to do that which they believe is correct (or not do what they believe is incorrect)
5. The government is made up of comittees of people
6. The intelligence and wisdom of a commitee is almost invariably equal to that of the stupidest member, divided by the number of members in the committee
7. There are 435 members of the house of representatives and 100 members of the senate
8. There are 9 members of the supreme court
9. There is one president
10. If neither liberals, nor conservatives trust people to make good decisions for themselves or their children; why do they trust the government, with a collective IQ of (to be charitable) 120 divided by 545 ( 0.22) to implement legislation making decisions for OTHER peoples lives and children?
"Honey, whatcha doin"
"Tryin to write honey"
"Why are you doing that when you should be over here snuggling with me"
"Because I told you I had to write some things, I'll be done in a few minutes"
"But I want attention now"
This is followed by the stroking of tender bits and various pleasurable noises from the GF.
Now there are two things you can do at this point. Make your stand and keep writing, in which case you will have an unhappy girlfriend, and an unhppy Mr. happy; or give it up as a bad job, put the laptop away, and go at it like mad bunnies.
The time and date on this post is reflecting theactual time I wrote it... I didn't actually get around to posting it until I recovered... at 8 or so the next day.
Criminal?
Hey, You Evaded 84 Muggings |
They say home is where the heart is, and South Africa could be your home. You would fit very well into a life of crime here, That is if you could get out of jail and get enough money to get over here. I would advise it - very good career move. Joking aside - for more information on South Africa please visit Thanks for taking my test, I hope that you enjoyed it!
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My test tracked 1 variable How you compared to other people your age and gender:
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Link: The Could you survive South Africa Test written by angove on Ok Cupid |
Step two KNOW LOCALS WITH GUNS, WHO WILL GIVE YOU SOME
Actually all the locals I used to know are either too nasty for even me to deal with anymore, left for greener pastures, or are dead.
You scored as Classical Liberal. You are a classical liberal. You are sceptical about much of the historicity of the Bible, and the most important thing Jesus has done is to set us a good moral example that we are to follow. Doctrines like the trinity and the incarnation are speculative and not really important, and in the face of science and philosophy the surest way we can be certain about God is by our inner awareness of him. Discipleship is expressed by good moral behaviour, but inward religious feeling is most important.
What's your theological worldview? created with QuizFarm.com |
Considering I was raised a Catholic, and politically I'm a minarchist libertarian/classical liberal... well duh.
HT: Yogimus Maximus
So I engaged in the manly ritual of home car maintenance the other day; finally getting around to changing the brake pads and wear sensor that had been complaining for the last couple months.
Oh and thank you very much to the reader who donated the Minitex high performance low dust brake pads, and wear sensor (you know who you are, and feel free to sound off if you like; I just didn't want to do so without your say so). Vastly increased braking performance over the stock pads that came with the car; even though they are jsut the direct replacement part number.
Honestly, I dont know why more people don't change their own brake pads. It's the easiest job in the world, and other than brake dust (of which there was almsot non surprisingly enough), it's nowhere near as messy on most cars as an oil change is. On a BMW they charge you a MINIMUM of $200 jsut to do the fronts, when you can do it yourself for $50, and get better pads in the bargain.
The basic process is pretty simple:
1. Loosen lug nuts (but dont try and remove them, especially on a BMW, which uses wheel studs not nuts)
2. Chock the wheels and raise the car. I use a bottle jack that I keep in my trunk organizer rather than a scissor or lift jack. It takes up a hell of a lot less space than a scissors jack (about the same as a 1 liter soda bottle), and is still very safe and effective.
3. Finish removing the lug nuts, and remove the tire, placing it behind the rear wheel (as an extra chock).
4. Spray with brake cleaner and wipe down if necessary (you may want to wear gloves for this bit)
5. Remove the caliper. For my 5 series you remove retaining clip, then pull off a pair of plastic caps on rubber boots, and you use a torx driver to remove the very not corroded or gummed up caliper studs; which takes all of 30 seconds. Some other cars are not so friendly. I did my brakes on an early Ford Escort GT lo these many years ago, and you had to damn near take the suspension apart to get the calipers out. If you have one, you should also disconnect the wear sensor.
Be careful not to let the caliper hand from the brake lines. Some vehicles have handy protrusions to hang from or shelves, but a bent coat hanger works jsut fine.
6. Pop the pads off, and the wear sensor if you have one (I do) and inspect for any abnormal wear.
You know what pissed me off.. the damn things were still well within spec; but they were cheap outoparts store special pads that chatterd and squealed all the time anyway. But the best bit? The reason the brake sensor kept going off, was that some genius had put the wear sensor in BACKWARDS (which takes some doing BTW, it is NOT designed to fit that way).
Also Inspect the rotors/discs (whatever you want to call them) for unusual wear. If you have ABS inspect the ABS sensor rings, or sensor notches or pads.
Mine were within spec, with no scoring; but they ARE somewhat dished, so I should probably order a new set. The thing is I want to wait until I have the new wheel and tire combo, that way I can put in the bigbrake kit. Even at an online discounter a new set of front rotors is going to run me $100 (plus shipping... hmmm, pelican has brembos plain rotors for $50 each. Not bad).
7. Compress the caliber with a c clamp or something similar; and fit the new pads. Remember to use antisqueal on the backing plates. I also recommend buying a pad with a syntetic bonded antisqueal backing plate (like the minitex).
8. Re-hang the caliper, and bolt it down; making sure you properly route any lines, and the wear sensor.
9. Replace the wheel, carefully threading the lug nuts, or wheel studs (as on my car), wrench tight, but don't try and torque down.
10. Lower the car, torque the nuts/studs down throughly, in a star or cross pattern. Then drive the car around for a few minutes, stop, and retighten your nuts, roll the car 1/4 wheel rotation, and tighten again, another half rotation, again, until you've retightened all nuts to the proper torque.
Repeat for both sides. At this point it is advisable to bleed the brakes, but we did a bubble test, and got nothing; plus the brake fluid is more than a bit toasted, so I didnt want to bleed it right now until I can do a full flush and clean out the system. We did the overpump, top-up pump-out mop-up routine, then I went around the block over heating the brakes as I went, and did it again. That's about as good as you are going to get without a full on flush and bleed.
Now on to the "fun" part...
I was driving from work to my mothers house tonight, and I started hearing a clopping sound, that was at about half wheel speed, but that seemed to get worse up to about 30mph, then as I sped up it would smooth out as I got faster, and get worse again as I slowed down.
Obviously this worried me, so I stopped and inspected the wheels, tires, lines etc.. but I couldn't see anything.
I picked my brother up, and we were heading to the movies, and it was getting worse. I pulled into the parking lot, and I had a thought, maybe one of the wheel studs had come loose inside the cover...
When I pulled the cover off the wheel studs, one of them was sticking half way out, and the rest were finger tight at best.
You see I did my passenger side brakes first, and my drivers side second. It was 108 out, and I was pretty damned tired out . I had followed step 9, and the first part of step 10, but I forgot to re-torque the nuts after driving around; and they had loosened up completely.
The clopping sound was the wheel flapping back and forth, working it's way off the hub. As I sped up to 30 it accelerated the flapping, but over thrity the gyroscopic effect was enough to keep it smooth... or at least it would be until I hit one good bump at 70 mph on the highway, wherupon my drivers side front wheel would have gone flying off, my front suspension would have dug in to the road, and most likely I would end up on the roof over the median...
CHECK THE NUTS AFTER YOU ARE DONE
Then drive 10 miles, and CHECK THEM AGAIN
Then check them 1 more time after 100 miles, and you should be fine.
They are now torqued down so much that I actually slightly bent a brand new autozone brand chromoly lug wrench (yes I am that strong). I am reasonably certain that I overtorqued them, but I know how strong those Dornan studs, are, never mind the wheels and rotors, I'm not worried about them being damanged, and most importantly, they are not going ANYWHERE.
And I'm STILL going to check them again after my drive in to work tomorrow.
UPDATE: Torque Wrench acquired ($25 GreatNeck screw handled ratcheting one from autozone. Yeah its junk, but it works til I can afford a matco), and torque checked. I wasn't as far overtorqued as I thought.
Anyway, I retensioned my extractor (maybe a bit TOO much, because it's a little sensitive on chambering at the moment), and smoothed out my trigger/disconnector/sear/hammer engagement (no grinding, just polishing). It turns out I had a little tiny burr on my disconnetor, and it was causing my hammer to ride the slide down to half cock about 1 in 50 slide drops.
So I wanted to test out my newly repaired 1911 some; and to continue having fun with my USP compact.
The great thing about the area we shoot, is that there is a continuing series of regular berms, one at 25 yards, one at 50 yards, another at 100, another at about 200, and then a hill side with some distinct markings for distance. It's nto quite a known distance range, but it works for giving you a rough estimation.
Anyway, after some basic function testing; I decided to mess around a little.
One of the computer towers we shot up two weeks ago had been moved out to 50 yards. There was another at 100 yards, and monitors were out at 150, and 200.
A mid sized computer tower is about the size of a human chest, and its readily apparent when you hit it. A 15" monitor is a bit smaller, and again it is readily apparent.
I discovered something interesting: After a couple of ranging shots, I can hit a human chest sized target with my 1911; every single time at 50 and 100 yards, about 3/4 of the time at 150, and about 1/2 of the time at 200 yards.
I also had no problem hitting targets 4" or so across 3/4 of the time or better at 50, and 100 yards either. I was even able to make a few hits at 300+ yards.
I decided to try it with my USP compact, and although it wasnt QUITE as good, I was still making the hits.
So then I got silly, and took out my 3" barreled Kahr K9, and it wasn't nearly so easy to make the hits. I needed more ranging shots; I was only hitting half the time at 50 yards, and I couldn't hit anything beyond about 100 yards with any consistency.
I know Elmer keith used to shoot his specials out to 500 yards and more, but I had never really tried to shoot any of MY auto pistols at long ranges (I HAD with my .454 super redhawk, but that's not exactly a "normal" gun").
I had also just finished repairing LVGunners Model 28 Highway Patrolman (5-3/4" .357 magnum, basic finish, ultralight profile barrell). I found that I was not scoring as well at range as with it as my 1911, but I think it was because the stock plow grips are not to my liking. I'm thinking with a nice set of hogues on there it'd be a different story.
Fun stuff
Oh and I am anxiously awaiting Novells new Workstation and Server entires with , Ximian, and SUSE rolled into one.
"I love the naughties, part deaux, strikes back, again"
It will feature nothing but comedians actors and actress we have never heard of,
who are all either minorities, or very very gay; commenting on television shows it
is ever so obvious they have never seen (until shown a screener clip by
the producers), and making bad, out of date cultural references.
Much as the current shows...
Which I must confess I love for some reason; watching "I love the..."
70s, 80s, and 90s, brought back large portions of my child - through -
young adulthood.
Actually I wrote a blog post about re-runs and another about gen-x that
were immediately brought to mind here...
What military aircraft are you? F-15 Eagle You are an F-15. Your record in combat is spotless; you've never been defeated. You possess good looks, but are not flashy about it. You prefer to let your reputation do the talking. You are fast, agile, and loud, but reaching the end of your stardom. |
Click Here to Take This Quiz Brought to you by YouThink.com quizzes and personality tests. |
Fighting Idiotarianism as only REAL MEN can
When We lest left our intrepid heroes, they were busy desecrating the Muslim unholy book, Al Qu'ran:
This week, we turn out intentions to a far more insidious (though certainly less offensive foe)...
Yes folks, I'm sure we've all harbored the desire at one time or another to take our frustration out on our computers... Unfortunately for many of us this would involve termination of employment, and possibly prison time (not to mention holding FOREVER for tech support).
Have no fear fair citizens, TEAM INFIDEL is here to save the day... or rather to allow you to take out your frustrations on these vile machines vicariously through us, the four fat bastards (and one skinny bastard).
The villains in question:
Remember folks, we are computing professionals; specially trained in information and systems security. Try this at home and you could get your ass killed. Of course if you are that stupid, then please do; we can always use a little more chlorine in the gene pool.
Our first sentence, death by firing squad. But let's make it interesting...
A lot of folks ask "Why bother with the .357 sig, it's jsut a .40 with a 9mm bullet in it".. yeah, and it's loaded to much higher pressures. It is essentially a low end .357 magnum in a smaller and more compact bottleneck cartridge for autopistols. Not it's not a miracle, buit it's DAMN good at penetration, but generally wont overpentrate in soft tissue, which is why more than 1/3 of all state police agencies in this country have switched to it, or are switching to it.
But the proof is in the shooting,
That includes my hot .45acp +p loads. Oh and those little dents in the back are from 9mm +p jhps.
More photgraphic evidence? This is a maxtor hard drive, with a good solid hit from winchester whitebox .40 hardball:
The .40 hardball round stopped dead and splattered out, not even punching through the first platter, and turning itself inside out in the process.
Not so the .357 sig