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Tim Pool Gets His First Gun! | Louder with Crowder
Comments
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Most reliable and easy to use is a .38 caliber revolver.Bob_C said:Seriously thinking about buying one never owner but have shot a little, what should I get?
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CZ 75 is my favorite basic 9mm pistol
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One of the best. You can carry it cocked and locked with no dingleberry hammer dropper thingy.LoneStarDawg said:CZ 75 is my favorite basic 9mm pistol
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Not popular but Berretta 40, IMO.
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Or better, Benelli shotgun.
How fast and what do you want to disperse...
This is it on a big scale. -
This is by far the best intro video for you...Bob_C said:Seriously thinking about buying one never owner but have shot a little, what should I get?
https://youtu.be/JiE1pUXEAHM
Guns are a lot like fishing, everyone is going to have an overly strong opinion on what is best. Boomer types will swear by old, tried and true, but possibly inferior technology. Zoomer types will swear by the cool new technology and and calibers.
I wrote a post outlining gun ranges for newbies on the wam, if people want it here I can repost it.
Personally:
Pump Shotguns and revolvers, while easy to understand are poor in practice for newbies, they have limited capacity and require manipulation before firing, terrible choice for a newbie actually in a self/home defense situation.
Get a common modern caliber; 9mm, 12 gauge, 5.56, .223
You aren’t experienced enough to ccw, if you are getting a pistol get a full size frame.
An AR style firearm is by far not only the most intuitive to use they are the easiest to be accurate with and are cheap to buy and practice with.
Canik is by far the best cheap entry level handgun for the money.
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A lot of .............
Benelli.
IMO -
And be done with it
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There is nothing "new" in firearms. Just rehashes of old stuff that can be done better with modern manufacturing. Haven't tried a Canik. The problem with new imports and companies is support down the road. I'd recommend name brands that have established support infrastructure and will be around a while.Houhusky said:
This is by far the best intro video for you...Bob_C said:Seriously thinking about buying one never owner but have shot a little, what should I get?
https://youtu.be/JiE1pUXEAHM
Guns are a lot like fishing, everyone is going to have an overly strong opinion on what is best. Boomer types will swear by old, tried and true, but possibly inferior technology. Zoomer types will swear by the cool new technology and and calibers.
I wrote a post outlining gun ranges for newbies on the wam, if people want it here I can repost it.
Personally:
Pump Shotguns and revolvers, while easy to understand are poor in practice for newbies, they have limited capacity and require manipulation before firing, terrible choice for a newbie actually in a self/home defense situation.
Get a common modern caliber; 9mm, 12 gauge, 5.56, .223
You aren’t experienced enough to ccw, if you are getting a pistol get a full size frame.
An AR style firearm is by far not only the most intuitive to use they are the easiest to be accurate with and are cheap to buy and practice with.
Canik is by far the best cheap entry level handgun for the money.
I'm a boomer. They have not and may never make anything better than a 1911. It doesn't even have an equal. -
That's how it is at my E WA place. Loaded guns everywhere, and nobody ever gets shot. Amazing what competent, careful people can achieve even after downing a twacker of Rainier or Keystone Light.HoustonHusky said:
Funny thing is as Conservative as I am I don’t have a single gun...and not too worried to get one anytime soon. Almost every one of my neighbors is armed enough to support a small militia and there are a lot of houses between me and the neighborhood’s access roads.LoneStarDawg said:Luckily there are neither in Texas suburbs





