Anyhoo, onto the reports...
There's really no bad to report for either gun. Both are *far* more accurate than I can shoot; both functioned flawlessly; both were more fun than a barrel of hyperactive Calebs. The hardest problem I faced was which gun to lead off with. I chose the Colt New Frontier as I at least shot the Browning back in April...
Colt New Frontier Single Action .22LR:
Federal bulk 40 gr. CP .22LR, 25 feet
My good friend Heath (he of teh awesome fu-stache) raves about his Colt New Frontier ("the most accurate single action .22LR out there"), and with good cause. Given that I haven't been to the range in quite a long time (not quite two months, but close...), keeping all but one shot out of six in the 10 ring is a testament to the accuracy of the Colt, not my shooting ability.
There were a couple of small faults I found with the Colt, and I'll readily admit that they are pretty nit-picky. First off, it took a couple of go-arounds before I realized I had to manually push in the safety bolt to eject the empty casings. With the safety bolt out, the ejector will only push the casings out about a quarter-inch, which makes for tedious and slow emptying of the cylinder. Once I figured it out, though, it was easily the smoothest single action unloading of any I've ever fired.
The other "fault" really isn't - the grip is just a little too small for my meathooks. I found that there wasn't quite enough of the grip to really hold onto, and I found the Colt shifting in my grip between shots. With the wild popularity of the Colt single action revolver, I'm guessing there's probably an aftermarket company or two that might make some grips for this gun. I'm thinking with the case-hardened frame, a nice set of elkhorn or staghorn grips would look kick-ass...
Anyone have a line on some nice grips for a New Frontier?
The good *FAR* outweighs the bad (think like 100:1 factor at a minimum). The sights are adjustable, clear, and shoot to point of aim. The gun makes that unmistakeable "C-O-L-T" four-click upon cocking that's music to the SA crowd's ears. It's scary-accurate - I haven't exactly been burning up the range time lately, and even I can hit the center with this gun!
All I need now is a nice embossed holster and a .22LR cartridge belt...
Browning Hi-Power single action semi-automatic 9mm:
Winchester White Box 115 gr. FMJ 9mm, 25 feet
This is the second time I've shot the Hi-Power, the first being at my new shooter outing in April shortly after acquiring it. At the time I wasn't terribly concerned with fine shooting ability, but with reliability, given that it was for a new shooter. Two dropped shots (both of which I called) notwithstanding, the Hi-Power certainly lived up to its reputation as an accurate single action semi-automatic.
That's seven shots in the center there...
Both of the magazines that Zach so kindly sent me worked flawlessly (although one very stubbornly clung to the gun and needed a stern lecture to get out); I put about a hundred rounds through it without a single failure; about the only thing of note was that the Browning got HOT by the end of the range session. Oh, and it was even responsible for the deaths of a couple evil orange clays on the 25 yard berm...
Two new guns, two range reports in one; it all adds up to a good day shooting.
That is all.
5 comments:
Jay,
Thx for the range report. On a related note, any guess as to when we'll see the Hi-Power v. 1911 showdown? Inquiring John Browns want to know.
- Brad
Heh. Thanks for the idea. Look for a post tomorrow on "Epic Match-ups"...
:)
Jay,
I'll take credit where you're willing to give it, but *YOU* originally posted the idea some weeks back. It might have been just after I joined you and (a)mustings for her first outing.
Here's an idea--> have a three-way . . .
Browning HP v. Colt Gold Cup v. the mfg'd in 1917 original model 1911. My $0.02.
- Brad
Grips: I put big rubber Pachmayr grips on my SingleSix (waits for howls of anger to die down). Makes an accurate revolver all the more so. Original grips easily replaced when I train small handed students. The Pachs keep my little finger from hanging free. Easy to swap between the two.
Grips for the New Frontier. Depends on how much you want to spend on them.
I have a friend who is a master woodworker who has some wood that you woodn't(heh,heh) believe. He can do grips for $100 and up, depending on the gun. I know somebody else who does (real) ivory; if you have to ask you don't want to know. And if you don't mind the wait, there is alway mammoth ivory.
emdfl
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