David Conwill
Call Me a Cab
- Messages
- 2,854
- Location
- Bennington, VT 05201
57plymouth said:Because some people believe erroneously that there is more quality in a weapon built by hand than one built on a CNC machine and higher quality control standards. All those "great hand built guns" of the past required trigger work, bolt polishing, barrel break in, etc. which is no longer required. A brand new 1950 Winchester 70 may or may not hit with accuracy. A brand new 2010 Winchester 70 (made 10 miles from where I'm sitting) will be MOA accurate every time right out of the box.
That, and the appearance of a "black gun" makes people think they are not vintage, even if it is a true vintage AK-47 or a war hero M-16.
See, for me it is the association with a more-romantic era that I enjoy. A .40 Glock is probably a better gun than a .455 Webley, but Glocks make me think of drug busts, SWAT teams, and counterterrorism operations. Whereas the Webley makes me think of pith helmeted adventurers in the Congo, or daring open-cockpit pilots over France.
Likewise, I’d take a 2010 Springfield Armory M1 Garand over a 1955 Stoner AR-10, as the Garand says “WWII”, but the AR-10 says “next stop ‘Nam”.
I don’t begrudge anyone their interest in Cold War or Modern firearms, but they’re not quite my cup of tea.
I suppose there’s some argument to be made that the “black gun” is one of the things that hastened the end of the Golden Era, as the numerous guerilla wars of the ‘50s and ‘60s helped shatter the optimism and idealism Americans had coming out of WWII.
-Dave