Jump to content
LegacyGT.com

Norm Peterson

Members
  • Posts

    155
  • Joined

About Norm Peterson

  • Birthday 11/10/1947

Personal Information

  • Location
    state of confusion
  • Car
    '19 WRX Ltd (hers)/'08 Mustang GT (mine)
  • Interests
    Open-tracking, learning about vehicle dynamics, tinkering with cars
  • Occupation
    man of leisure

Norm Peterson's Achievements

Collaborator

Collaborator (7/14)

  • First Post
  • Collaborator
  • Conversation Starter
  • Week One Done
  • One Month Later

Recent Badges

0

Reputation

  1. Well, the scope rings showed up this afternoon, so I spent quite a bit of time getting everything together and bore-sighted as good as can be done at about 5 yards inside the house. The scope has a green dot, and it's kind of cool to watch it move relative to the red boresight dot as elevation and windage knobs are adjusted. Getting the scope's vertical hair to be vertical relative to the gun (and stay there while tightening the rings) took more time. I did think to correct for scope height above the barrel (1.5") and a typical .22 LR bullet trajectory (should be just under an inch under the scope's dot/crosshairs at that distance, given that 50 yards is probably going to be my zero distance for .22 LR rifles). Norm
  2. Sure can. The Marlin is keeping a Henry lever gun and my son's bolt-action rifle company in the gun safe, along with an AR7 (which was not a complete impulse purchase - I had the plastic toy version of that one as a kid). And there's a couple of .22 pistols. So I've got a number of ways to burn through my stock of .22LR once I'm up to the trip to the range. I hear you on ammo prices - Cheaper than Dirt seems to be getting about 30¢/round for .22LR unless you get 5000-round boxes of Armscor 36 grain where it's still north of 20¢/round. Used to be what, about a nickel a round? Thinking back to when I bought thousand round boxes of .223/5.56 for $400 at Shooter's . . . or steelcase 7.62x39 for the AK at about $4/20 at Cabela's (still have a fair amount of each left). <sigh> Norm
  3. Looking like the Leupold scope I had planned to mount on the Mini-14 is going to end up on the Marlin 60 I picked up kind of on impulse a year or so ago. Quite a bit more scope than gun, but these 73 y/o eyes need the optics and I might as well work with what I already have on hand. Health issues involving an implanted port in my upper right chest argue against shooting centerfires at least for the foreseeable future but I'm pretty sure I can handle .22LR and possibly .17HMR. Just waiting now on some rings to show up. Norm
  4. Center differential issue? We had the center diff go bad on the 2010 LGT we had, but I don't remember what the symptoms were. Norm
  5. Dammit, Penguin, posting up a 50-yard pistol target and my range is closed But now I'm curious as to what you were shooting at the little outline at the top left. Norm
  6. While you're loading a couple of magazines, the gun gets to cool off a bit. You're probably not as apt to suddenly realize this when shooting pistol as opposed to, say, a semiautomatic centerfire rifle, but it's happening. Norm
  7. Afraid to even think how much a Pardini might cost. Bummer about the Benelli, I'd have expected better. Norm
  8. Appreciate the information. Even though the re-holstering and its implied carrying with it loaded parts that doesn't apply to me here. Not that I'd leave the range with any ammo left in the gun anyway. Seems you'd have to go out of your way to not properly engage this particular grip safety, though. Unnoticeable while shooting. Norm
  9. You might be interested in this variation. Around 45 ounces with a 6.88" barrel. Push the button on the rear and it almost falls apart for cleaning Norm
  10. It is a bit of a PITA, probably more so if you still have a day job (I had already retired, so it ended up being more nuisance-level than anything). I wasn't in any particular hurry, so once I got everything on my end done it wasn't even worth fussing over the wait. Norm
  11. What sorts of issues? I'm fairly new to all this, but I can shoot my Colt Gov't Model better than I can shoot either of my son's striker guns. As a side note, the light pipe in the front sight of my Colt fell out . . . but I think I like it better being able to use the front sight as an aperture anyway. Just going to take a little time to fully adjust to once my range opens up again. Like Dish, I'm not looking past doing a little target shooting. Lord knows, getting a CC here in NJ is all but impossible. Norm
  12. I kind of came at it from the other direction. Started with the FID and no pistol purchase permits because at the time I wasn't even sure I was going to get into shooting handguns enough to actually own any myself. My son had a Glock in .40 and a Springfield XD in 9mm that I'd get to shoot when he was in town, so it wasn't like I woke up one morning and said to myself "I gotta go get a handgun and hope that I'll like shooting it". Even though guns have been in and out of the fringes of my life for most of it, I was pretty late to actually owning any, being in my late sixties when I applied for my FID. I'd like to think it meant I brought a little wisdom to my firearms purchases rather than emotion or a "just fall in with the herd and get the same things everybody else buys" mentality. It clearly brought a preference for the older form factors, and I still don't have an AR (don't care all that much for direct impingement, anyway). First gun I bought was a Mini-14, strongly reminiscent of WWII's M1 Carbine (and in a caliber with widely-available and reasonably priced ammunition). Norm
  13. Before you buy anything in 9mm, shoot either a Colt 1911 Government Model or Springfield's Range Officer in 9mm. On the matter of gun safes, think about whether you're likely to ever buy a long gun. You should be able to shoot a .22 rifle at indoor ranges. Norm
  14. For the use(s) that Dish currently envisions, I think for 9mm I'd actively look at something not intended for concealed carry. Something 1911-based with a 5" barrel would have the weight and bulk to mitigate recoil a bit, and in my rather limited experience a 1911 trigger is nicer than the triggers on striker-fired pistols. The trick here in NJ is to get more than one pistol purchase permit with your application, with a good idea of what you really want to spend your money on already in mind. NJ's gun laws do discourage impulse buying (probably the whole reason for them being what they are), which isn't necessarily a bad thing. Only if you're getting close to your last purchase permit expiring might you feel any pressure to just go out and buy something. Norm
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Terms of Use