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By American Rifleman Staff Over the last few years, I've had the opportunity to cover the National Association for Sporting Goods Wholesalers (NASGW) show for American Rifleman. During the most rec → Read More
By Philip Schreier, Senior Curator, NRA Museums Revenant: noun rev·e·nant \ˈre-və-ˌnäⁿ, -nənt\ one that returns after death or a long absence. (Merriam–Webster Dictionary Online) A → Read More
By American Rifleman Staff A lesser-known name in the crowded field of semi-automatic, AR-style rifle manufacturers, Lancer Systems of Quakertown, Pa., is no newcomer. In fact, the company began → Read More
By Mark Keefe, American Rifleman Among his other anti-gun, politically motivated executive orders, under “Shaping the Future of Gun Safe Technology” Barack Obama has imposed an imperial dictum → Read More
By American Rifleman The Bearcat was introduced by Ruger in 1958. It was discontinued in the 1970s when the company transitioned all of its single-actions to a transfer-bar-safety system. Nonethele → Read More
By Jeff Johnston, American Rifleman In Norway a person can walk into a gun store and buy a firearm silencer without filling out paperwork and leave with it minutes later. And why not? After all, sile → Read More
By Jeff Johnston, American Rifleman Buying a silencer is not difficult, it simply takes diligence and time. First, find out if a silencer is legal to own in your home state. At the time of this writi → Read More
By AmericanRifleman.org Shortly after Sturm, Ruger & Co.’s 1999 introduction of its .22 WMR-chambered Model 10/22 Magnum, Magnum Research, Inc., rolled out its U.S.-made Magnum Lite Rifle (M → Read More
By American Rifleman staff One of today’s best-known and most respected trainers in the art of gun fighting, retired Sergeant Major Kyle E. Lamb, spent more than 21 years with the U.S. Army—mo → Read More
By Mark Keefe, American Rifleman As Americans are shocked and horrified by the carnage of another extremist Islamic attack in Paris—this one far worse than the Charlie Hebdo and Kosher market mas → Read More
By Brian Sheetz, American Rifleman Benelli Armi SpA of Urbino, Italy, is a relative newcomer to the gun business, having emerged in 1967 from its parent motorcycle manufacturing concern with an ide → Read More
While AR-style rifles are now well-established—those who initially rejected Stoner’s black rifle have not only lost the battle, they’ve lost the war—there remains legitimate debate regarding → Read More
The .17 HMR semi-auto problems solved with this Savage tack driver. → Read More
By Mark Keefe, American Rifleman Among the most chilling images I recall in the aftermath of the 9/11 terrorist attacks were the tables full of guns. Not because I'm afraid of guns. Most of them pr → Read More
By American Rifleman About a quarter-century ago, we were awash in magnum semi-automatic pistols—AutoMag, Wildey, Grizzly, Desert Eagle, Coonan, etc. The semi-automatic pistol in general was ach → Read More
By Ann Y. Smith, American Rifleman Oreos. Add the ubiquitous cream-filled cookie to the list of American originals that will now be out-sourced to Mexico due to cheaper material and labor costs, at → Read More
By American Rifleman Entry-level shotguns are a mixed bag. Some qualify as tomato stakes, and others, like the TriStar Setter S/T, provide very good value for the money. TriStar Arms calls itself â → Read More
By John Zent, American Rifleman While the first two links in the chain of small-arms ballistics—interior and exterior ballistics—are firmly rooted in the math/science realm, not so for the th → Read More
By Marke Keefe, American Rifleman The “U.S. Carbine, Caliber .30, M1” was the most produced American infantry arm of World War II. And it's back. Again. As this is written, my cheek is gleefull → Read More