testtest

Who Carries Old Guns?

Sorry to all, my oldest (new-to-me) firearm is a 1987 Tauraus .38-special. I don't carry it because it's a revolver, it's .38-special, and holds 5 rounds. Thus, I do not qualify for this thread. I am, however, collecting (and shooting) some WWI & WWII rifles, however....but none are likely to be carried. I'd love to own a Luger circa 1942...but my common sense (and recent motorcycle infatuation) prevails. I live vicariously on this site. I struggle to think of a Glock being a gun that qualifies as "old". Deepest apologies for that last blasphemous comment, Anni.....
 
One of my old guns, from my grandfather. I do not carry this treasure.
 

Attachments

  • 20180401_144831.jpg
    20180401_144831.jpg
    1.6 MB · Views: 48
By old gun I mean something that you picked up 10 - 15+ years ago and it is still your primary or only EDC. Have you modified it? Have you dragged it kicking and screaming into the 21st century so that you can keep your old-school auto or wheelgun but have added a light or red dot when it wasn't designed for it?
I have several "primarily" EDCs. I carry something different depending on what I'm wearing and where I'm going. I own all the new toys like the Hellcat, Shield Plus, Glocks, M&P 2.0, CZs, Sigs, you name it, but I perfer older tried and true firearms. I don't really carry any of the my newer higher capacity, flavor of the month, latest and greatest firearms.

To your second question, It's my personal opinion that it's sacrilege to put lights, lasers, or optics on classy old school metal frame pistols and revolvers. I relegate that stuff for my polymer crap.


8xnuRI6.jpg

It's still relevant and sold today, but my Ruger LCR 357. It gets carried often as a primarily in my pocket or as a BUG. Purchased it back in 2012, so it's going on 12+ years now. It's the first revolver I ever purchased, but now I own about a dozen.

3HgBDZg.jpg

Now Discontinued by Kahr, my MK40. It's over 24 years old. I will typically carry it OWB concealed with only a t-shirt on in the warmer months or when I need extra concealment. It's kinda sorta been replaced by my Springfield Hellcat, but still carry it.

V7y1ZYe.jpg

I've been carrying this the most lately. It's my Kahr K40 from early 2014, so it's over 10 years old. It's been discontinued too.
 
Last edited:
I still carry my Keltec PF-9 once in a while. Bought it in 2008. There are a lot of people who put the Keltecs down. Yes there have been problems with some of them but to this day the only trouble with feeding I have had was when I tried to run Remington Golden Sabers in it.

I have never had an extraction issue. With the Golden Sabers I would fir a couple shots and have two shells nose down in the magazine. Pop them back into place , fire two rounds and have 2 rounds nose down in the mag. I tried 7 different magazines that day and every one of them had the same results. Loaded different ammo in the same magazines and it ran fine. So that was the end of Golden Sabers for me.
 
Sorry to all, my oldest (new-to-me) firearm is a 1987 Tauraus .38-special. I don't carry it because it's a revolver, it's .38-special, and holds 5 rounds. Thus, I do not qualify for this thread. I am, however, collecting (and shooting) some WWI & WWII rifles, however....but none are likely to be carried. I'd love to own a Luger circa 1942...but my common sense (and recent motorcycle infatuation) prevails. I live vicariously on this site. I struggle to think of a Glock being a gun that qualifies as "old". Deepest apologies for that last blasphemous comment, Anni.....
IMG_3142.gif
 
I have a smith first gen model 59 in pristine condition that i bought new in 1975 or 1976. Its too nice to carry and only gets to the range every few months or so.
I have an early 1980's Gen 2 659 that's been fired maybe 3-4 mags full. It's just so danged pretty, and I know I'll never carry it regularly, I just hate shooting it any more. I mean I love shooting it ... I just hate to shoot it anymore!
 
I was gonna make him admit there was no spelling error before I explained it to him LOL. After I tell him he'll be as country as I am. So here goes:
Back in my growing up days we lived so far out in the country, to go hunting I had to go towards town. Neighbors were few and far between. Most families those days had only one car and dad usually took it to work. So, once a week usually, the moms would all get together (4-6) to go shopping in one families car (whichever one was available that weekend) and drive into town (about 13 miles) to do grocery shopping and/or whatever else needed shopped for. Understand there were no malls back then, and no 7/11's etc, so everything had to bought from town. Now, when all the moms got together to 'go to town', whichever mom didn't need to go that particular weekend or volunteered to stay home would play host and overseer for all the mom's kids that day. All the neighborhood kids whose moms had gone to town would gather at the stay home moms place for that day. She was the boss mom for the day for sure. She looked out for us, made us lunch, put band aides on our cuts and bruises, busted our azzes if we acted up (oh yeh, that was totally acceptable in those days), in other words watch out for the whole neighborhood's kids in her yard, or in her house if the weather got bad. But generally all the kids were to stay out in the yard so as to not make a mess in the boss mom's house.
Well, every kid in her yard that day were considered her YARD kid. Just an old country word to mean those kids the boss mim took care of for the day. Obviously they were not her kids, but for all intents and purposes they were her kids for that day. So after I grew up and my wife and I learned we couldn't have kids, everywhere we lived we took it upon our selves to be the neighborhood aunt/uncle for all the neighborhood kids who needed a little extra. She always kept brownies made for any of the kids who came over, or jello squares, helped the little girls sew and make clothes for their dolls, etc, and I kept air in the boy's bicycle tires, help keep their cars running later on while teaching them how to do it themselves, took most of them on their first hunting/fishing trips, taught most of them how to handle firearms, etc when they were young. Just a note here, but for the last 40 years before we sold out and moved here to the institution (retirement community) we lived in the same neighborhood/house. So we saw most of the neighborhood kids grow up from babies to young adults and start their own families. Many of them brought their first born, etc, by to meet us and we loved it. As they got older, the kids that still hung out around our place were treated as if they were our own and we offered them all the guidance and love we could.
They were all our YARD kids. But especially the one in question in this thread. HE used to hang around our house from the time before he was in 1st grade till today. He and his parents (great people and great friends) lived just directly across the street from us so it was easy for him to slip off from home and come over just to hang out. Many times when he was younger he would come over and when his mom would finally miss him she'd call my house and say: Joe, is XXXXX over there?" I'd tell her "yes we're doing XXXXX." She'd laugh and say "OK, when he gets to be a pest, send him home." I don't remember ever sending him home, not even once. He and I were very close over the years as he grew up. I taught him to hunt/fish, how to tune up his first car, helped guide him in buying his very first hunting rifle, put him through the state's hunter safety program when he was about 13 I think. I was a volunteer state certified instructor for about 16-18 years. He even asked me for advice on how to present his special prom date with a corsage. He would often come over on Sundays and have dinner (lunch for you yanks) with us, and afterwards he and I would often lay down on the living room floor to watch a game. We both would occasionally fall to sleep on the floor and my wife would just step over/around us just like he actually lived there rather than wake us up. He might be there the next morning, and he might not be, but he always found his way back. He even brought his dates by to introduce us to them, and finally his wife to be. We knew her almost as long as we knew him, loved her as well and offered her basically the same attention we'd offered him over all those years, and when they had their first little girl, we were the first to meet her right after the grandparents. We were fortunate enough we held that first little girl in our arms before she actually made it all the way to her home home from the hospital. They wanted it that way.
A few years before we sold out and moved, he and his family (they had a second daughter a few years after the first) moved out to Wyoming for work in the oil fields, then a little later to N Dakota to start his own business. He's done very, very well and now owns/operates a business involved with the Balken oil find worth several million dollars. He still comes by to visit whenever he's back here in town along with his family if they come with him. He's as close to a son as I'll ever have, in fact he's not only in my will to recieve all my guns/tools, trucks, and whatever else I have when the time comes, but he's already been given more than half my collection when we sold out and moved along with one of my safes. And he's as much a son as if he were blood, and yes, he's my YARD son.
Sorry to get so wrapped up in a simple explaination, but I just felt I needed to. Hope y'all don't mind.
 
I still have my Gen 3 G23 and its G27 little brother. I bought them for my second agency, after my 1st retirement. They were my introduction to .40 and to Glock.

Now? No optics. No carry.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top