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Easter Weekend Shooting Practice - Fish Lake, MN
Tony, Ben and Tami
I personally burned off 100 rounds of .45ACP, 100 rounds of .44 Mag, 100 rounds of 7.62mm NATO, and 2 cigars. 
April 10, 2004
Ben setting up our 20 bowling pins. Ben bought his first holster! I'll be on him to save up for a good leather Galco or Kramer holster soon enough.
Sweet, a fresh holster right from the farm... Ben and Tami gearing up, loading magazines...
  Tami firing the Beretta NEOS .22 LR pistol.
Tami is an incredible "natural" at shooting. Quite a great shot, in fact. Ben firing the Beretta Cougar 9mm pistol.
 

See the humorous alternate photo with labels...

Ben firing his Ruger 10/22 stainless. It produces a muzzle sound signature similar in decibels to a fart inside a Victorian hoop dress. Pretty quiet. Tony firing his FAL battle rifle. This is one bad-ass rifle, to say the least. I call it my "sniper-support" weapon. See errata...
The FAL is a 7.62mm NATO-caliber rifle. That's .308 Winchester to some folks.
...by the way, 7.62mm NATO chambers are not the same as .308 Winchester. Close, but not the same. Never fire the former in the latter. But you can fire the latter in the former. Got that? Good. See large photo
My FAL sports optics of a Springfield Armory Government Model 10X scope with a mil-dot illuminated target tracking green reticle on a 30mm main tube. Hands free, unlimited rangefinding capability with 7.62mm (.308) 168 gr. match ammo. It rocks, man.
It also has GG&G Sniper Grade Aluminum Scope Rings ($100 just for the rings, man...) It also has a Falcon Industries ERGO PSG-1 Tactical grip. Great grip, by the way...
Shooting at my 2"-thick steel gong...the muzzle brake is actually effective, although a 12.5-lb. rifle doesn't need much muzzle-braking... Tami firing the Beretta Cougar 9mm pistol.
Tony violating a golden rule of sporting more than 3 brand logos at one time... Tony sighting in Ben's new Tikka T3 rifle. Awesome rifle! Smooth as silk, 4-lb. crisp trigger, right from the factory!
Ben's Tikka T3 will have a nice Leupold VX-2 scope on it in time for deer season this fall. Putting a Tasco on it is just temporary, so Ben could fire the weapon. Mounting a Tasco on it is kind of like putting training wheels on a Corvette. The Tikka is chambered in the classic .30-06. It fired 0.4" 3-shot groups that were touching each other at 50 yards. Can't wait to run this rifle out to 300 yards when it gets a nice scope put on it.
Ben did get the first 3 shots out of the rifle, then I helped sight it in. Ben and I bore-sighted the T3 on Friday night from my living room in a portable bench-vice. We used a 3' x 6' projection of interior light on a garage from a neighbor's house a block away. 
...if you were walking your dog down Mulberry Street in Duluth late last Friday night, it might have looked creepy to see what we were doing. ...two guys with a high-powered rifle aimed out a tiny opening in the curtains on a quiet street. With red LED lights lighting the scope mount...
Tony in the dirt with the FAL rifle. You can see the FAL is also customized with a DSA Arms SA58 Extreme Duty Scope Mount.
The FAL is what I call a "big man's rifle," even though it looks small in my hands. Most people heft this rifle and say, "Damn, it is big, dude." It is big. And heavy.
Ben firing the FAL. Note the brass deflection marks on the rear of the receiver ejection port. It throws spent brass pretty violently, which is always good.
Click here for a close-up photo of the brass marks on the ejection port. An experiment with filters on the digital image.
See the page that describes the FAL battle rifle. Ben had issues with his Zircon TriScanner Pro stud sensor. It needed to die.
The Zircon TriScanner Pro stud sensor was put out its misery for the crime of detecting phantom studs and generally just stinking up the place. It probably works just as good now as when it was intact.
 

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