Confessions of a product test junkie
I have a deserved reputation for breaking things. I’m often one of the first folks to get sent prototypes and new products, and a lot of this stems from relationships I’ve had in this industry for almost 30 years. I was taught long ago never to burn bridges, and I’ve tried to live by that advice. I’m humbled that companies let me play with their equipment and report my findings. But a lot of times, I find flaws in products because I use them to their maximum potential.
This month’s article started with testing a digital binocular. It went with me everywhere for two weeks before it started having issues. The issues were compounded the more I used it, until it failed completely. The company over nighted me another one—only to have it also fail, but in different ways.
PLAN B?
After far too many hours of testing and photographs, I washed my hands of it and scrapped the project. Over two weeks down the drain. My editor is asking where my overdue article is.
So, I pulled out a backup plan: I would test a new red-dot sight that created a lot of buzz when introduced at SHOT this year. I was quite pleased to be one of the first folks to have it!
I fully expected it to be a bulletproof example of a new generation of sights that others would eventually emulate for a piece of that sales pie. I wanted to show my readers that by me torture-testing it, they could be sure the product would be nearly indestructible.
I thought I would proof-test it using my Freedom Arms model 83 in .454 Casull—a 6-inch, unported early model. Using 31 grains of H110 with a 300-grain Hornady XTP Magnum generates substantial recoil velocity in this middleweight revolver. This is not a gun and load for the inexperienced!
Esta historia es de la edición September 2017 de Gun World.
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Esta historia es de la edición September 2017 de Gun World.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
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The First Rule of a Gunfight: Get a Gun
It is a time-honored tradition within the firearms industry; a decades-old trend hobbling on, despite evidence contrary to its practices: A woman entering a gun store, walking onto a range or participating in an event inevitably hears some variation of the words, “That’s an awfully big gun for such a little lady!”
Breaking Products And Deadlines
Confessions of a product test junkie
Guns Open Doors Of Opportunity
A Shooting Competition In Russia Emphasizes The Importance Of Freethinking And How It Opens The Door For Women Shooters.
The Ruger 10 Mil
Just as everyone is down-chambering 1911s to 9mm, the sr1911 goes 10mm ... For when follow-up shots aren’t an option.
S&W's Superb 6.5
SMITH & WESSON’S M&P10 RIFLE GETS THE PERFORMANCE CENTER TREATMENT AND EMERGES, CHAMBERED IN 6.5 CREEDMOOR, READY TO GO THE DISTANCE.
The Renaissance Rifle
THE HENRY BIG BOY ALL-WEATHER OFFERS UP TRUE VERSATILITY LIKE NO OTHER RIFLE.
Ammo Of A Higher Caliber
CHOOSING THE BEST CALIBER AND BULLET TYPE FOR DEFENSIVE AMMO CAN BE A CONFUSING PROSPECT.
Arsenal RPK - 3R
The Soviet/Combloc Light Machine Gun Comes To America—as A Civilian-legal Semiauto.
Single-Shot Hunter
Uberti has updated the old winchester 1885 high wall design into a modern carbine with old west flair.
Best Bullet
The .44-40 WCF Is a Leading Candidate for the Best All-around Cartridge of the Old West Era.