Dominion Arms Outlaw Owners ONLY poll-Apr. 4 Tally results: YES 88.5% NO 11.5%

OWNERS ONLY: Are you happy with your Dominion Arms Outlaw?


  • Total voters
    230
I've been meaning to do that with a violin or guitar case for years. I think I'd need a sitar case for my buffalo gun though.:D

I seriously thought about getting one of these badboys for a while. Mainly due to the fact that it's something the Yanks can't own. The quality issue, and being made in PRC is what turned me away. If somebody built one showing some semblance of good quality I'd be on that like stink on a monkey.
 
It doesn't look to have opened up, instead I would suggest what you are seeing is a manufacturing line. For those not fond of these guns they will grumble about the line, but that looks normal, unless it was much tighter before you started firing?


wbySBSOrion.jpg

You can see in this pic a nice ring of engraving, which is what higher end makers do to obscure that ring, but from just looking at your pic it seems OK, sloppy, but OK. Perhaps one of the grumpy old men would care to comment :D

Sorry to post this in here but I figure an owner of one of these would be able to chime in. I plan to buy one of these soon, and if do could I carefully tack weld that seem a little bit at a time with a tig welder and then just re-blue or paint the barrels after? Or would doing this end up causing too much distortion or run the risk of melting the solder out? Might be a good precaution to take, if I have the means to.
 
rattles

No sheite, extraction is poor non existant, closing the gun is hard to do if its not lined up properly, the shims holding the forend are getting thicker every time I fire it, I am up to two match books now but it proudly has its own place for when yogi decides to come through the door, the way I look at it if it aint over in two rounds I have a poormans club or I grab the big bore thats sitting beside the outlaw. Pround owner of a outlaw yes but its like a ford or a jeep you always have to muck around with it to make it work sure as heck would not take it to a gun fight:bangHead:
 
the outlaw is what it is. A relatively cheap, fun gun, minute of man at 20y.
mine needed a little minor adjustment to make it 100% but it's been great. fun stuff!
 
Don't know how to post pics yet.

But yes,I'm happy with the little canon. Ya, get what you pay for. The only problem I've had so far is blowing the trigger guard out of it female end and losing the piece into the cheap stock. Remedy was a thicker wood screw (to replace the bolt), toothpicks and some wood glue. Seems to work fine for now,If it happens again, I'll go with pl premium.

Jesse
 
the outlaw is what it is. A relatively cheap, fun gun, minute of man at 20y.
mine needed a little minor adjustment to make it 100% but it's been great. fun stuff!

:D
I've fired slugs & shot shells galore out of mine & nothing came loose, fell off, blew up, melted, whatever.

Maybe I lucked out & got an exceptionally good one.

Junker guns are usually quite variable in quality even within the same lot.
 
:D
I've fired slugs & shot shells galore out of mine & nothing came loose, fell off, blew up, melted, whatever.

Maybe I lucked out & got an exceptionally good one.

Junker guns are usually quite variable in quality even within the same lot.

I guess I got lucky as well, In the past year I put hundreds of rounds throw my outlaw and had No problems:shotgun::shotgun:
 
Your top lever looks to be to the left. Are parts readily available for these guns? What kind of wood is that? Is it available in camo or synthetic?
 
Your top lever looks to be to the left.
It will probably straighten out when the gun is closed. And if it doesn't,who cares?
Are parts readily available for these guns?
No. They're disposable. Don't expect to see a parts booth at the Grand American.
What kind of wood is that? Is it available in camo or synthetic?
It's not the same wood that's on your Perazzi. Tapco stocks are not available. You can buy Krylon camo paint at Canadian Tire and make it camo yourself.
 
It will probably straighten out when the gun is closed. And if it doesn't,who cares?
It probably will move in when closed but if it doesn't the owner should care. A top lever over to the left when the gun is closed is a sign that the locking bolts are worn and/or the gun is off the face. In a used gun it's a sign of wear and possibly poor maintenance. In a new gun it's a sign of shoddy workmanship.
 
It probably will move in when closed but if it doesn't the owner should care. A top lever over to the left when the gun is closed is a sign that the locking bolts are worn and/or the gun is off the face. In a used gun it's a sign of wear and possibly poor maintenance. In a new gun it's a sign of shoddy workmanship.

True. The comments of an experenced,knowledgeable shotgunner are appreciated.
However my post was strictly humor as was (I believe) the post I quoted. We're talking about an inexpensive novelty shotgun.
 
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