DukeIronHand
Senior Member
A common theme here with any, what’s considered to be, a sub-standard or ill-advised repair or clean-up attempt is to call that owner “Bubba.” I get it and it’s easy to laugh.
Some of my gun pals got together today and were discussing - what else? Guns.
I’m not that old but I remember back in the pre-internet days when gun information, pictures, history, advice, schematics, and parts was not at your finger tips. Literally seconds away now.
If, heaven forbid, I was trying to fix up, say a K98 I picked up for $15 at a garage sale back in the “old days”, where in the world did I go for the above information? The local library on a dim chance they had a Mauser book? Ha! Parts? Guess I better hope the one LGS in a 50 mile radius was fully stocked with a plethora of Mauser parts and a distant relative of Paul Mauser behind the counter to give advice. Maybe I can wait for the once-a-year gun show at the local VFW Hall and get lucky on parts? The right parts? Hope so. All these fancy tools and chemicals? Use what?
In this day and age there really is no excuse for a bad job if you care enough but to some a old rifle is just an old rifle. But back in the pre-electronic days? I remember and would have a tough time laughing at some old codger in his kitchen trying to get an old gun to work. Or get the dang gum rust off it back in the “old days.”
Just food for thought after 3 cups of coffee. Bubba is not cool but a product of his times perhaps.
Some of my gun pals got together today and were discussing - what else? Guns.
I’m not that old but I remember back in the pre-internet days when gun information, pictures, history, advice, schematics, and parts was not at your finger tips. Literally seconds away now.
If, heaven forbid, I was trying to fix up, say a K98 I picked up for $15 at a garage sale back in the “old days”, where in the world did I go for the above information? The local library on a dim chance they had a Mauser book? Ha! Parts? Guess I better hope the one LGS in a 50 mile radius was fully stocked with a plethora of Mauser parts and a distant relative of Paul Mauser behind the counter to give advice. Maybe I can wait for the once-a-year gun show at the local VFW Hall and get lucky on parts? The right parts? Hope so. All these fancy tools and chemicals? Use what?
In this day and age there really is no excuse for a bad job if you care enough but to some a old rifle is just an old rifle. But back in the pre-electronic days? I remember and would have a tough time laughing at some old codger in his kitchen trying to get an old gun to work. Or get the dang gum rust off it back in the “old days.”
Just food for thought after 3 cups of coffee. Bubba is not cool but a product of his times perhaps.