Shooting a 80% gun is a good way to turn it into a 75% gun. Assuming a wartime Colt M1911A1 is all original parts and in 80% condition I would no longer shoot it these days, unless you don't care about additional wear and the chance of breaking parts. As a collector, I've seen a lot of guns with post war replacement parts and even cracked slides from recent use.
I don't have any issue with what people do with their own property, and I know some people cannot resist the urge to shoot every gun. You may feel the wear is minimal or not overly noticeable but it does occur. Go ahead and shoot until the oil in the slide is smoking, but don't pretend like it doesn't degrade the condition of the gun a little each time you do it.
This is one of several reasons why the pool of high condition original collector guns gets smaller and smaller overtime.
I collect original guns for the historic times, people, and battles they were once at and now represent. I never bought any collector guns to punch targets with. If I want to shoot, I take something non-collectible to the range that performs exactly the same. I know my argument is a loosing battle here, but some of us simply choose to appreciate these items in a different way and for different reasons that don't require a trip to the range.
Regards,
-Steve
I shoot all of mine. Bore condition is my primary concern.
Having a gun and not shooting it is like having a car and not driving it, or a toy and not opening it.
I don't even have a prejudice against a Ross, Enfield, or Mauser sporter, they probably shoot better anyway. My only prejudice is Mosins. I've never even touched one, and never will.
Contrary to one of the above posts, I do have an idea of what it's like to fire a really nice milsurps. I have a nice Luger that came back to Canada after WW2 with a Canadian soldier who was a POW in a German camp. Never mind the story, as it will just bring out the "don't buy the story, buy the gun" posts. I knew the man personally, and his brother who inherited it, and the brother's son, who I bought it from. It is a real beauty, and came with a belt and holster, taken from the same German officer.
The lesson learned with this one was a cheap one. I have another nice Luger, but a mismatch. I was blazing away at the old gun club one night and half the toggle flew back past my head. No injury and I was able to find a nice part to replace it. The really nice one was safe at home.
I will continue to stick up for the people who don't care to fire their collectables. I also fired a really, really nice matching German 98 that belonged to a dear friend who passed on. The barrel was a bit grungy from not cleaning it after firing corrosive ammo. When I bought it, I tried my best to bring the bore to a shine. No luck. I took it out one day and cranked a few rounds of that Yugo surplus with the silver colored bullets. Took it home and cleaned it up. Looks good now and gets a swipe of good old Fluid Film every now and again. I doubt it will ever get fired again while I own it. It is a treasure that goes beyond "collecting".
Ok....we need to have a talk![]()
I dont like Mosin either and I had a few. I just got tired of mosin this and mosin, every 3rd thread about a mosin, Every second about SKS anything you can get for under 150$ like new isn't a collectible. I mean most of my mosins I bought for under 100$. Just a cheap milsurp.
I dont like Mosin either and I had a few. I just got tired of mosin this and mosin, every 3rd thread about a mosin, Every second about SKS anything you can get for under 150$ like new isn't a collectible. I mean most of my mosins I bought for under 100$. Just a cheap milsurp.
Just a cheap milsurp.
I'm certainly hoping that you are not referring to me, sir. As I think that mine is a really fine milsurp, as are a few of mine. So you assuming that mine are not fine...well you know what they say about assuming...
These fine weapons were made to be fired ( mind you I've never even seen a slide get smoke off of it...not even going through a run and gun with a Steyr - Hahn)...to negate them to safe queen status is rather sad. Mine was made in 1941, still sports the original wood grips...perhaps the sweaty palm of a soldier fielded this in battle? Would he say " No, it should be left in a dark safe...only to see the light of day if another collector visits. What I fought for; the sunny afternoons, crisp fall colors and the frozen days...they are gone? This fine piece of equipment should be hoarded away like a miser's nickels? Take it out and let it see the light of day...use it!"
I rather like the feel of it in my hand, as do my sons. Who knows what it has seen, Barbarossa or Normandy, perhaps Market Garden? The DNA of the original user that is soaked in the grips needs to see the light of day, not be neutered and locked away. It ignites the imagination, carries a certain intangible weight.
A weapon is made to be fired, to do any less is not respectful. If you cannot or will not fire a weapon.... it is an expensive paperweight. Tools were meant to be used.
IMO of course
Stay safe
I dont like Mosin either and I had a few. I just got tired of mosin this and mosin, every 3rd thread about a mosin, Every second about SKS anything you can get for under 150$ like new isn't a collectible. I mean most of my mosins I bought for under 100$. Just a cheap milsurp.