Tuesday, May 29, 2018

Gun Pron

It was a nice, restful week-end, one spent prepping for a storm that we thankfully didn't get. But there was range time, and the successful test of two Thompson drums that hadn't worked well before. But after a fair bit of gentile filing and tweaking and internal lubrication, I managed to get both drums running flawlessly with this old gun. It was definitely stress-relieving and the entire range went quiet the first time that I ran an entire 50-round drum without a hiccup or pause. Definitely adds weight to an already-heave gun and you can actually feel that weight shift as the drum cycles. Thr drums were not practical for combat due to the cost, fragility, noise of ammo rattling in them and weight, but how could I own a Thompson that takes drums and not have one?

I didn't get and shooting footage as my old camera phone finally bit the dust last week, but I did get a new phone that appears to take much better shots, so here's something that you gun afficianadoes can salivate over.
And if you want to see to see more like it, the World War Two museum is less than two miles from Lair South here, so get off your butts and come visit the Crescent City! Let me know you're coming and we can make a museum visit happen.

13 comments:

  1. Perhaps not exactly elegant, but she shore is purty.

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    1. It's seriously elegant. Nice walnut, satin blue, each piece machined...Overbuilt because back then they didn't know any other way. Shoots nice too. The weight keeps the recoil way down.

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  2. Hey Murphy;

    Very nice Thompson, I am planning a trip to NO soon and I will hit you up when the details are finalized.

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  3. Beautiful gun!

    Firing one full-auto is a bucket list item....

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  4. Nice work! That’s a good looking Thompson.

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    1. It took a lot of work. It was a non-functional basket case when I bought it, and the dealer who "guarantees" the guns he sells only made it worse with his unsuccessful ham-fisted attempts as making it run.

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  5. Dad was a machine gunner in WWII. He, ahem, "acquired" a military version. He said that a full box of machine gun ammo in the left hand while holding the foregrip was just the right amount of weight to balance the climb.

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  6. The Thompson is definitely the best looking sub-gun ever made. Lots of fun to shoot, and very controllable if you don't go crazy with it, as in, remember to take your finger off the trigger every so often. And walnut and steel - what can I say other than ditto to OldNFO's comment. The only other full auto that I've shot from that era - the BAR - was also a lot of fun. Too bad their misuse by a few miscreants brought us the NFA!

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  7. Nice gun you have there. Brendan and I shot a Thompson at a range, I think that was in PA, a couple or few years back. Had a small stack mag but was fun nonetheless. Very distinct noise from the rate of fire.

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