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View Quote Is it more accurate if you shoot thru the box? Ed |
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View Quote I was trying to chronograph some 80 grain sierra's from prone once. I bounced one of them off the front sensor. It barely left a mark on the metal but ruined the thing. I have not seen one that was close to center punched as yours though. I did send mine back to Chrony for repair but they said it had too much damage. They sold me a new one at a greatly reduced price. |
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Quoted:
I was trying to chronograph some 80 grain sierra's from prone once. I bounced one of them off the front sensor. It barely left a mark on the metal but ruined the thing. I have not seen one that was close to center punched as yours though. I did send mine back to Chrony for repair but they said it had too much damage. They sold me a new one at a greatly reduced price. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
I was trying to chronograph some 80 grain sierra's from prone once. I bounced one of them off the front sensor. It barely left a mark on the metal but ruined the thing. I have not seen one that was close to center punched as yours though. I did send mine back to Chrony for repair but they said it had too much damage. They sold me a new one at a greatly reduced price. That's not the way I thought you should use to adjust your sights, but it appears to be effective for upgrading your equipment at a discount. |
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Off center forks, ahead of it's time.
Do not recall ever seeing that particular model. Very Nice. |
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View Quote I drove that exact M113 in Bucca. Those claymores are less lethal (rubber pellets instead of steel). There are eight total, two on the front, two on the back and two on each side. TC has the clackers. Also notice that each side has two ports. We had reminton 870's with threaded adapters on the barrels that screwed into those ports for close in stuff. There is also an HVAC in there to pull the cordite out when you're shooting the shotguns. Rev 1A also has (had) a plow on the front. |
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View Quote When I got out of the Army in 1969 I worked with a guy that drove a big one cylinder Norton. One day after work he got on it to start it and didn't cycle it to compression before he kicked it. It lauched him over the handle bars breaking his leg. When he broke his fall on landing it broke one of the bones in his forearm. So he had a broken arm and a broken leg in one smooth move. Got to be careful on bikes that do not have electric start. |
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No vanity post! Ed |
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I can almost hear and feel that running!
Remember CCM, Clews Competition Machinery, 1974 or so? They built a light weight open class MX bike using a BSA 441 Victor motor. Was incredibly light and well built. |
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View Quote in this picture, you can clearly see an Apollo 15 Astronaut making fake tracks in NASA's Universal Studio's set |
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