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Virtual Tour: Swiss Shooting Museum Bern (Ad-free)

Today we are taking a virtual tour of the Swiss Shooting Museum (Schweizer Schützenmuseum Bern) in Bern, Switzerland. The museum has been in this building since just before World War Two, and focusses on the history of the Swiss competitive shooting culture and community. At the time of posting,...

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Våpensmia NM-149S: Norway's Sniper Conversion of the Kar 98k (Ad-free)

After World War Two, there were a lot of K98k rifles left in Norway. Like, a whole lot of them. So many that even in the 1980s they were still a popular basis for hunting and competition rifles. The Norwegian military contracted with the firm Våpensmia to make a batch of their VS 84S hunting rif...

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Glock 18 & 18C Machine Pistols: How Do They Work? (Ad-free)

After the success of the Glock 17 in Austrian military trials, the company chose two specific markets to target for expansion. One was competition shooters, for whom the Glock 17L was released. The other was the international law enforcement and military market, for whom they decided to make a ma...

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Molotovs at the Range: Finnish Brutality 2025 Day 2

Varusteleka's Patrol Coverall that I was using today is available here:

https://www.varusteleka.com/en/product/sarma-tst-l5-thermal-patrol-coverall/76574

Finnish B...

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Ice Baths and Skis: Finnish Brutality 2025 Day 1

Varusteleka's Snow Camo Anorak that I was using today is available here:

https://www.varusteleka.com/en/product/sarma-tst-l7-camouflage-anorak/58285

Finnish Brutality 20...

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Estonian Snipers: Enfields in 7.62x54R and Arisakas in .303 British (Ad-free)

In the early 1930s, the Estonian military and Estonia Defense League had a rather eclectic mix of small arms. The Army had three divisions, and split different types of weapons between them to simplify logistics. Thus, there was one division equipped with rifles and machine guns in 7.62x54R, and ...

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A Beautiful Factory Semiauto SIG MKPO (Ad-free)

During the 1930s, SIG Neuhausen made a series of really beautiful submachine guns. They were the MK series, offered in either 500mm / 19.7 inch barrels for military use or 300mm / 11.8 inch for police use. The first pattern was the MK-O, which had a rate-reducing system built into the action (whi...

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Enjoying Black Powder Episode 8: Mauser 71/84 (Ad-free)

For the full episode with the hand loading instructional section, click here:

https://forgottenweapons.vhx.tv/videos/ep-8-71-84-app

Black powder military rifles of the 1860s-1880s are a reall...

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Finland's Next Service Rifle (Mostly): Sako ARG S 40 (Ad-free)

Finland and Sweden are both in the process of adopting AR-pattern rifles, and for the Finns this will be their first service rifle in 5.56mm NATO. It is a transition that has been anticipated for nearly 20 years, but was finally put into high gear by the Russian invasion of Ukraine and Finland's ...

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Q&A: Finland and Finnish Small Arms (From Berdan to New Sako AR) (Ad-free)

I figured that Finland would be a good subject for this month's Q&A, as I am visiting the country to shoot Finnish Brutality this month. In fact, this video was filmed during the trip (the match took place last weekend, and its video coverage will be coming soon!).

00:39 - Development o...

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Department of Energy 633 Clone at a PCSL 2-Gun Match (Ad-free)

The new Colt 633 Department of Energy clone from PSA/H&R was really quite a lot of fun to shoot, so I decided to take it to a PCSL match. This was basically a USPSA pistol match with two sets of targets, one for pistol and one for rifle (in theory PCSL goes out to much longer range, but that ...

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Aimpoint's Only Gun: The PC-80 Symmetrical Action (Ad-free)

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Latvia's Unique Charger-Loading Lee Enfield (CLLE) Cavalry Carbine (Ad-free)

During the Latvian War of Independence, the nationalist forces receiver a fair bit of support form the British, including some 20,000 P14 Enfield rifles. These were great for the Latvian infantry, but the Latvian cavalry wanted something shorter. So in the early 1920s, they ordered 2200-2350 (the...

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Small Arms History of the Falkland Islands Defense Force (Ad-Free)

Various militias existed on the Falkland Islands since its earliest settlement, but the Falkland Islands Defense Force of today traces its roots to the 1892 Falkland Islands Volunteer Corps. This force was equipped with Martini Henry rifles. With the outbreak of World War One, the Falklands were ...

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B&T GL-06 Launcher: Reloadable Less-Lethal for Police on a Budget (Ad-free)

The B&T GL06 (Grenade Launcher 2006) was developed in response to a French tender for a riot-control less-lethal weapon in 2006. B&T had actually already been working on a less-lethal projectile system, which they call SIR (Safe Impact Round). It is a rubber projectile with a hard plastic...

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Deckard's Pfläger-Katsumata Series D 5223 (Ad-free)

In the film Blade Runner, Deckard carries a pistol called a Pfläger-Katsumata Series D 5223 - a name created by the fan community to have the initials "PKD" after Phillip K. Dick, who wrote Blade runner's source material (Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep). What we are looking at today is an e...

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Red Dots: How Cheap is too Cheap? (featuring Mike Branson) (Ad-free)

I met up with Mike Branson of Gideon Optics at SHOT Show 2025. Today, we are talking about red dot price and quality. It's easy to get a good red dot if you are willing to spend enough, but how cheap can you go and still have a reliable product?

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February Q&A: Finland

With Finnish Brutality coming up just next week, it seems appropriate for this month's Q&A theme to be Finland and Finnish small arms. Independence, Winter War, Continuation War, Cold War, recent NATO membership, the whole gamut. What would you like to know?

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India's FAL: The 1A1 Inch/Metric Hybrid (Ad-free)

For political reasons, India decided to adopt the 7.62mm NATO cartridge when it needed to replace its No1 MkIII SMLE bolt action rifles with a modern self-loader. They chose the FN FAL as the rifle to adopt, but wanted a license to produce it domestically at the Ishapore rifle factory. FN insiste...

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Praga I-23: Prototype Belt-Fed Predecessor of the ZB26 (Ad-free)

Vaclav Holek's first machine gun design for the Czech military was the Praga I, built in 1922 and based heavily on the Vickers/Maxim system. However, it became clear that the military wanted something lighter and more portable, and so the next year he heavily updated the design to this, the Praga...

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Military History Visualized Joins History of Weapons & War (Ad-free)

Subscribe today: http://weaponsandwar.tv

Join us on the History of Weapons & War and enjoy knowing that you are supporting ten of the finest historical and educational channels outside the restrictions of YouTube!

We ...

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Primary Arms' HTX-1: A Completely US-Made Red Dot Sight (Ad-free)

Primary Arms just recently announced their HTX-1 red dot, and it sounds pretty cool. From a technical perspective, it has a lot of good points - a clever adapter plate mounting system, two different reticles, and a fully enclosed emitter. However I think the more interesting (and less appreciated...

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Ljungman Updates: the AG-42 vs AG-42B (Ad-free)

In 1953, the Swedish military launched a program to refurbish and refit all of the Ag m/42 rifles in inventory. Aside from replacing broken parts and worn barrels, the program also made a number of improvements to the rifles:

* Auxiliary front magazine catch added

* Large gripping lug...

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AG42 Ljungman: Sweden Adopts a Battle Rifle in WWII (Ad-free)

Sweden developed, adopted, and produced a new self-loading rifle during World War Two. The process began in 1938, with an attempt by the state rifle factory to convert Swedish Mauser bolt actions into semiautomatic; that did not go well. Trials for a ground-up semiauto followed shortly thereafter...

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Mean Arms' Bearing Delay System (Ad-free)

Mean Arms has developed probably the most refined and sophisticated 9mm AR delaying system on the market, what they call Bearing Delay. This began as an exploration into fitting HK-style roller delay into and AR, and ended up with a system using three spherical bearings to redirect chamber pressu...

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BSD's VSS Vintorez Reproduction: Beyond the Hype (Ad-free)

The reproduction VSS Vintorez announced and shown by BSD Fabrication & Works at SHOT Show 2025 has garnered a tremendous amount of excitement and attention. This is understandable, as the VSS is a very cool rifle, and there are a lot of people who would love to have one. However, I the covera...

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Enjoying Black Powder Episode 7: Beaumont 1871 (Ad-free)

For the full episode with the hand loading instructional section, click here:

https://forgottenweapons.vhx.tv/videos/episode-7-beaumont-app

Black powder military rifles of the 1860s-1...

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Q&A: British Small Arms of World War Two (Audio Only)

Today's Q&A is brought to you by the fine folks at Patreon, and by Penguin Brutality:

https://www.varusteleka.com/en/search?q=penguin

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Q&A: British Small Arms of World War Two (Ad-free)

Today's Q&A is brought to you by the fine folks at Patreon, and by Penguin Brutality:

https://www.varusteleka.com/en/search?q=penguin

2025-01-24 12:00:03 +0000 UTC View Post

TOZ-36 and TOZ-49: Soviet Gas-Seal Target Revolvers (Ad-free)

These two revolvers were developed for competitive sport shooting in the Soviet Union. They are usually described as variants of the Model 1895 Nagant, but they actually work on a different mechanism, despite both being gas-seal designs. The TOZ-36 was designed in 1962, and it was a single action...

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