±Recent Visitors

Recent Visitors to Com-Central!

±User Info-big


Welcome Anonymous

Nickname
Password

Membership:
Latest: HighestAce
New Today: 0
New Yesterday: 0
Overall: 6648

People Online:
Members: 0
Visitors: 410
Total: 410
Who Is Where:
 Visitors:
01: Community Forums
02: Community Forums
03: Home
04: Treasury
05: News Archive
06: Home
07: Community Forums
08: Member Screenshots
09: Community Forums
10: Community Forums
11: Downloads
12: Community Forums
13: Supporters
14: Member Screenshots
15: Photo Gallery
16: Downloads
17: Community Forums
18: Community Forums
19: News Archive
20: Community Forums
21: Community Forums
22: Photo Gallery
23: Member Screenshots
24: Community Forums
25: Community Forums
26: Home
27: News Archive
28: Community Forums
29: Community Forums
30: Community Forums
31: Community Forums
32: Home
33: Home
34: Community Forums
35: Photo Gallery
36: Your Account
37: Community Forums
38: Member Screenshots
39: Community Forums
40: Community Forums
41: LinkToUs
42: Member Screenshots
43: Home
44: Community Forums
45: Community Forums
46: Home
47: Home
48: Home
49: Downloads
50: Community Forums
51: Community Forums
52: Community Forums
53: Community Forums
54: Home
55: Home
56: Home
57: Your Account
58: Community Forums
59: Photo Gallery
60: News Archive
61: Home
62: Community Forums
63: Community Forums
64: Community Forums
65: Statistics
66: Community Forums
67: Downloads
68: Home
69: Community Forums
70: Home
71: Photo Gallery
72: Downloads
73: Community Forums
74: Home
75: Community Forums
76: Community Forums
77: Member Screenshots
78: Home
79: Community Forums
80: Community Forums
81: Community Forums
82: Member Screenshots
83: Photo Gallery
84: Your Account
85: Home
86: Community Forums
87: News
88: Member Screenshots
89: Community Forums
90: Home
91: Member Screenshots
92: Home
93: Community Forums
94: Home
95: Photo Gallery
96: LinkToUs
97: Home
98: Member Screenshots
99: Community Forums
100: Community Forums
101: Contact
102: Your Account
103: Member Screenshots
104: Member Screenshots
105: Community Forums
106: Home
107: Community Forums
108: Community Forums
109: Member Screenshots
110: Community Forums
111: Downloads
112: Member Screenshots
113: News Archive
114: Community Forums
115: Home
116: Member Screenshots
117: Photo Gallery
118: Your Account
119: Community Forums
120: Home
121: Home
122: Photo Gallery
123: Community Forums
124: Community Forums
125: Community Forums
126: Member Screenshots
127: Community Forums
128: Community Forums
129: Community Forums
130: Community Forums
131: Community Forums
132: Home
133: Member Screenshots
134: News Archive
135: Community Forums
136: Community Forums
137: Home
138: Community Forums
139: Home
140: Community Forums
141: Community Forums
142: Home
143: Home
144: Community Forums
145: Community Forums
146: Community Forums
147: Community Forums
148: Community Forums
149: Photo Gallery
150: Home
151: Community Forums
152: Community Forums
153: Community Forums
154: Community Forums
155: Community Forums
156: Community Forums
157: Community Forums
158: Community Forums
159: Community Forums
160: Community Forums
161: Home
162: Home
163: Home
164: Community Forums
165: Community Forums
166: Community Forums
167: Community Forums
168: Downloads
169: Community Forums
170: Member Screenshots
171: Community Forums
172: Community Forums
173: Member Screenshots
174: Community Forums
175: Your Account
176: Community Forums
177: Community Forums
178: Home
179: Contact
180: Home
181: Community Forums
182: Home
183: Community Forums
184: Home
185: Community Forums
186: Home
187: Community Forums
188: Community Forums
189: Community Forums
190: Community Forums
191: Community Forums
192: Community Forums
193: Photo Gallery
194: Your Account
195: Community Forums
196: Downloads
197: Member Screenshots
198: Community Forums
199: Home
200: News Archive
201: Community Forums
202: Community Forums
203: Home
204: Community Forums
205: Community Forums
206: Community Forums
207: Member Screenshots
208: Community Forums
209: Home
210: Member Screenshots
211: News Archive
212: Photo Gallery
213: Community Forums
214: Home
215: Community Forums
216: Community Forums
217: Home
218: Downloads
219: Community Forums
220: Community Forums
221: Member Screenshots
222: News Archive
223: Member Screenshots
224: Member Screenshots
225: Your Account
226: News Archive
227: Downloads
228: News Archive
229: Member Screenshots
230: Home
231: Photo Gallery
232: News Archive
233: Community Forums
234: Home
235: Community Forums
236: Community Forums
237: Community Forums
238: Community Forums
239: Community Forums
240: News Archive
241: Community Forums
242: News Archive
243: Your Account
244: Community Forums
245: Community Forums
246: Home
247: Community Forums
248: Community Forums
249: Home
250: Community Forums
251: Community Forums
252: Community Forums
253: Your Account
254: Community Forums
255: Community Forums
256: Community Forums
257: Home
258: Community Forums
259: Community Forums
260: Community Forums
261: Community Forums
262: News Archive
263: Community Forums
264: Photo Gallery
265: Community Forums
266: Home
267: Community Forums
268: Home
269: Community Forums
270: Home
271: Home
272: Your Account
273: Community Forums
274: Home
275: Community Forums
276: Community Forums
277: Home
278: Home
279: Community Forums
280: Community Forums
281: Community Forums
282: Community Forums
283: Community Forums
284: Downloads
285: Your Account
286: Member Screenshots
287: Member Screenshots
288: Community Forums
289: Home
290: Home
291: Home
292: Home
293: Member Screenshots
294: Member Screenshots
295: Member Screenshots
296: Home
297: Community Forums
298: Community Forums
299: Community Forums
300: Member Screenshots
301: Member Screenshots
302: News Archive
303: Your Account
304: Photo Gallery
305: Community Forums
306: Home
307: Photo Gallery
308: Home
309: Community Forums
310: Photo Gallery
311: Community Forums
312: Community Forums
313: Community Forums
314: Member Screenshots
315: Community Forums
316: Photo Gallery
317: Downloads
318: Community Forums
319: Home
320: Home
321: Home
322: Home
323: Home
324: Community Forums
325: Community Forums
326: Your Account
327: Community Forums
328: Community Forums
329: Member Screenshots
330: Community Forums
331: Member Screenshots
332: Community Forums
333: Community Forums
334: Member Screenshots
335: Community Forums
336: Community Forums
337: Home
338: Community Forums
339: Your Account
340: Home
341: Photo Gallery
342: News Archive
343: Community Forums
344: Downloads
345: Home
346: Community Forums
347: Community Forums
348: Community Forums
349: Your Account
350: Community Forums
351: Community Forums
352: Photo Gallery
353: Community Forums
354: Community Forums
355: Community Forums
356: Community Forums
357: Community Forums
358: Community Forums
359: Home
360: Community Forums
361: Your Account
362: Home
363: Photo Gallery
364: Home
365: Community Forums
366: Member Screenshots
367: News Archive
368: Member Screenshots
369: Community Forums
370: Home
371: Community Forums
372: News Archive
373: News
374: Member Screenshots
375: Community Forums
376: Downloads
377: Your Account
378: Community Forums
379: Community Forums
380: Home
381: Community Forums
382: Community Forums
383: Member Screenshots
384: Community Forums
385: News Archive
386: Downloads
387: Home
388: Community Forums
389: Home
390: News
391: Community Forums
392: Photo Gallery
393: Home
394: Member Screenshots
395: Member Screenshots
396: Your Account
397: Member Screenshots
398: Your Account
399: Community Forums
400: Community Forums
401: Community Forums
402: News Archive
403: Photo Gallery
404: Home
405: News Archive
406: Member Screenshots
407: Home
408: Community Forums
409: Community Forums
410: Community Forums

Staff Online:

No staff members are online!
too funny
A forum for firearms, edged weapons (personal or military) and weapon systems apart from AFV's and artillery, ranging from handguns to battleships.
Post new topic    Reply to topic    Printer Friendly Page     Forum Index ›  Guns and Other Weapons Systems Apart From Artillery

View previous topic :: View next topic  
Author Message
piney
Power User

Offline Offline
Joined: Jan 24, 2006
Posts: 2330
Location: Republic of Southern New Jersey
PostPosted: Fri Jun 14, 2013 7:50 pm
Post subject: too funny

not my work but I'm sure al the pistol shooters will get it
Wish I could claim authorship, but I found/stole this....

After some years now of reading internet bulletin boards, I think I’ve got the pros and cons of possible bad times choices figured out. Correct me if I’m wrong, but the following is my analysis based upon the wisdom of numerous gun board gurus (you know them, they’re always the first ones to tell you a particular model gun is “junk” and enlighten you as to why they have made the only logical purchases)…


Glock:
Butt-ugly plastic shooting appliance with the ergonomics of a caulking gun. Five-pound trigger with no external safety makes it ill suited for its target market (cops who shoot a hundred rounds a year for qualification). Favored by gangbangers because the product name is short and rhymes with other short, rap-friendly words.


Beretta 92F/M9:
Clunky and overweight rip-off of a clunky and overweight German design from the 1930s. Shear-happy locking block, ergonomics that are only suited for linebackers, barely adequate sights that are partially non-replaceable, and low capacity for its size. Favored by Eighties action movie fanatics and John Woo freaks.


1911:
Overweight and overly complex piece of late 19th century technology. Low capacity, useless sights in stock form, and a field-stripping procedure that requires three hands. Favored by people who are at the cutting edge of handgun technology and combat shooting…of the 1960s.


H&K P7:
Wildly overpriced, heavy for its size, low capacity in most iterations, and blessed with a finish that rusts if you give the gun a moist glance. Gas tube has a tendency to roast the trigger finger after a box or two of ammo at the range. Favored by gun snobs who think that paying twice as much for half the rounds means four times the fighting skill.


SIG Sauer:
Top-heavy bricks with the rust resistance of an untreated iron nail at the bottom of a bucket of saltwater. Ergonomically sound, if you have size XXL mitts. Some minor parts made in Germany, so the manufacturer can charge 75% Teutonic Gnome Magic premium. Favored by Jack Bauer fans and wannabe Sky Marshals/Secret Service agents.


S&W Revolvers:
Archaic hand weapons from a bygone era, the missing link between flintlocks and autoloaders. Low capacity, and reloading requires a lunch break. Heavy for their capacity, unless you’re talking about airweight snubbies, which hurt as much on the giving end as they do on the receiving end. Rare stoppages, but few malfunctions that don’t require gunsmith services, which are hard to come by in a gunfight. Favored by crusty old farts who just now got around to trusting newfangled smokeless powder, and Dirty Harry fans with unrealistic ideas about the power of Magnum rounds vs. engine blocks.


Browning HP:
Fragile frame designed around a popgun round. Near-useless safety in stock form that’s only suitable for the thumbs of elementary schoolers. Strangest and most circuitous way to trip a sear ever put into a handgun. Favored by wannabe SAS commandos, wannabe mercenaries, and Anglophiles who think that hammer-down, chamber-empty carry is the most appropriate way to carry a defensive sidearm.


And now, YOUR CALIBER SUCKS TOO!!!


9mm Luger:
European popgun round that’s only popular because the ammo is cheap for a centerfire cartridge. Cheap ammo is a good thing for 9mm aficionados, because anything bigger and more dangerous than a cranky raccoon will likely require multiple well-placed hits. Wildly popular all over the world, mostly in countries where people don’t carry guns, and cops don’t have to actually shoot people with theirs.


.45ACP:
Chunky low-pressure cartridge that hogs magazine space and requires a low-capacity design (if the gun needs to fit human hands) or a grip with the circumference of a two-liter soda bottle (if the gun needs to hold more than seven rounds). Disturbingly prone to bullet setback, expensive to reload, fits only into big and clunky guns, and a recoil that has an inversely proportionate relationship with muzzle energy.


.40S&W:
Neutered compromise version of a compromise cartridge. Even more setback-happy than the .45ACP, and setbacks are much more dangerous because of higher pressure and smaller case volume. Manages to sacrifice both the capacity of the 9mm and the bullet diameter of the .45. Twice the recoil of the 9mm for 10% more muzzle energy.


.357SIG:
Highly overpriced boutique round that does the .40S&W one worse: it manages to share the capacity penalty of the .40 while retaining the small bullet diameter of the 9mm. Noisy, sharp recoil, and 100% cost penalty for ballistics that can be matched by a good 9mm +P+ load. Penetrates like the dickens, which means that the Air Marshals just had to adopt it…only to load their guns with frangible bullets to make sure they don’t penetrate like the dickens.


.38 Special:
Legacy design with a case length that’s 75% longer than necessary for the mediocre ballistics of the round due to its blackpowder heritage. On the plus side, the case length makes it easy to handle when reloading the gun. This is a good thing because anyone using their .38 in self-defense against a 250-pound attacker hopped up on crack will need to empty the gun multiple times.


.32ACP:
Inadequate for anything more thick-skinned than Northeastern squirrels or inbred Austrian archdukes. Semi-rimmed cartridge that is rimlock-happy in modern lightweight autoloaders. Doesn’t go fast enough to expand a hollowpoint bullet, and it wouldn’t matter even if it did, because the bullet would only expand from tiny to small-ish.


.44 Magnum:
Overpowered round that generates manageable recoil and muzzle blast…if you’re a 300-pound linebacker with wrists like steel girders. Often loaded to “Lite” levels that turn it into a noisy .44 Special while retaining the ego-preserving Magnum headstamp. Considered the “most powerful handgun cartridge in the world” by people whose gun knowledge is either stuck in 1960, or who get their expertise in ballistics from Dirty Harry movies.


.50 Desert Eagle:
The Magnum of the new century. Realizing Hollywood couldn’t escape their Magnum fetishes, they had a handgun that fits the same stopping power quota of .44 Magnum and all of its filthy drawbacks. Popular amongst steroid filled movie actors who needs big guns to compensate for the steroid struck testicles. Comes in a baby variant for junior.


10mm Auto:
Super-high pressure cartridge that beats up gun and shooter alike. Very brisk recoil in anything other than all-steel S&W boat anchors, with a shot recovery that’s measured in geological epochs for most handgun platforms. Often underloaded to wimpy levels (see “.40 S&W”), which then gives it 9mm ballistics while requiring .45ACP magazine real estate.


.380ACP/9mm Kurz:
Designed by people who thought the 9mm Luger was a bit too brisk and snappy, which is pretty much all that needs to be said here. Great round if you expect to only ever be attacked by people less than seven inches thick from front to back.


.357 Magnum:
Lots of recoil, muzzle blast, and noise to drive a 9mm bullet to reckless speeds in an attempt to make up for its low mass and diameter. Explosive fragmentation and insufficient penetration with light bullets; excessive penetration and insufficient expansion with heavy ones. Still makes only 9mm holes in the target.


5.7×28mm:
Ingenious way to make a centerfire .22 Magnum and then charge quadruple price for the same ballistics. Awesome chambering for a police weapon…if you’re the park ranger in charge of the chipmunk exhibit at the zoo, and you want to make sure you can take one down if it turns rabid on you.


.25ACP:
Direct violation of the maxim “Never do an enemy a minor injury”. Designed by folks who wanted to retain the bullet diameter of the .22 rimfire round, but take a bit of the excessive lethality out of it. Favored by people who don’t feel comfortable carrying anything more dangerous than the neighbor kid’s rusty Red Ryder pellet gun."




_________________
The only good skwerril is a dead un
Back to top
View user's profile Send e-mail
JG300-Ascout
Power User

Offline Offline
Joined: Jan 05, 2005
Posts: 6257
Location: Cyberspace
PostPosted: Fri Jun 14, 2013 9:06 pm
Post subject: Re: too funny

[quote="piney"]not my work but I'm sure al the pistol shooters will get it
Wish I could claim authorship, but I found/stole this....



10mm Auto:
Super-high pressure cartridge that beats up gun and shooter alike. Very brisk recoil in anything other than all-steel S&W boat anchors, with a shot recovery that’s measured in geological epochs for most handgun platforms. Often underloaded to wimpy levels (see “.40 S&W”), which then gives it 9mm ballistics while requiring .45ACP magazine real estate. Caliber of choice for owners of the collectors edition boxed set of "Miami Vice" on Blu-Ray.



...and completely overlooked, the .41 Mag, a round designed to find the sweet spot between .357 and .44 Mag for police, but so completely overcooked in original factory loadings that the intended customer base would have been better served with the .44 Special that was readily available and totally ignored.

_________________
"All facts go to clearly prove that Shades is a thrice-cursed traitor & mentally deranged person steeped in inveterate enmity toward mankind"
Back to top
View user's profile Photo Gallery
Display posts from previous:   
Post new topic    Reply to topic    Printer Friendly Page    Forum Index ›  Guns and Other Weapons Systems Apart From Artillery
Page 1 of 1
All times are GMT - 6 Hours



Jump to:  


You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum
You cannot attach files in this forum
You cannot download files in this forum