In addition to the Johnny 7 there was also my personal favorite, the Johnny Eagle line of super realistic toy guns that fired plastic bullets from cartridges that were spring loaded. The commercial alone would cause total SJW meltdown today. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t5kMAA1AawA
Thanks for the link. I had the .45 ACP. I recall shooting it in Grandma's kitchen with my dad and cousins at family gatherings/spaghetti fests. Also had a Thompson (just a noisemaker from a different toy mfg.) as Dad was quite fond of that caliber.
There were some awesome toy guns back in the day. I had a plastic MG-42 that actually fed a circular belt of plastic. A buddy had 1919 toy that had a spent case attached on a little flipper arm so it looked like it was rapidly ejecting empty brass.
There was even a small 75mm Pack Howitzer that fired little springed bursting shells. Problem was that the damned shells always ended up losing "fragments" and couldn't be reassembled after a couple of shootings.
To show how arbitrary the laws are, to remove the pistol is legal. To put it back is a felony.
ReplyDeleteNope - installed in the chassis or not, both are pistols since that isn't a stock, its an "arm brace".
DeleteStill, the rules are really, really stupid.
First thing to do after buying one is to have it painted matte black from bow to stern.
ReplyDeleteThey start black (or FDE, ODG, etc) and some dumbass painted it to look like a toy.
DeleteI wonder what would happen if this were released today?
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hGhYbg3KVu0
In addition to the Johnny 7 there was also my personal favorite, the Johnny Eagle line of super realistic toy guns that fired plastic bullets from cartridges that were spring loaded. The commercial alone would cause total SJW meltdown today.
Deletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t5kMAA1AawA
Thanks for the link. I had the .45 ACP. I recall shooting it in Grandma's kitchen with my dad and cousins at family gatherings/spaghetti fests. Also had a Thompson (just a
Deletenoisemaker from a different toy mfg.) as Dad was quite fond of that caliber.
There were some awesome toy guns back in the day. I had a plastic MG-42 that actually fed a circular belt of plastic. A buddy had 1919 toy that had a spent case attached on a little flipper arm so it looked like it was rapidly ejecting empty brass.
DeleteThere was even a small 75mm Pack Howitzer that fired little springed bursting shells. Problem was that the damned shells always ended up losing "fragments" and couldn't be reassembled after a couple of shootings.
If you want one for your glock or springfield: https://mechtechsys.com/
ReplyDeleteRoni carbine and Glock 17 with Ceracote job.
ReplyDeleteBe fun.