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Editorial Reviews. About the Author. J.R. Roberts (Robert J. Randisi) is an American author Five Card Death (The Gunsmith Book 68) by [Roberts, J.R.].
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Royal Decree 137/1993 Of 29 January, Which Approves The Regulation Of Weapons.

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UnSafe by Design Forensic Gunsmithing and Firearms Accident Investigations A tutorial on firearms design and function with an emphasis on safety, using past investigations of failures to better understand why some guns are safer than others, by design. Setting the Stage Accident Investigation Safety by Design Follow the Energy Glocks and Glockenclones Durable Goods to Consumer Goods The Override Triggers Override Trigger Design Issues Override Trigger Safety The Remington-Walker Trigger The Walker-Haskel Patent The Barber Rifle Assumed to be Safe Safeties and the Indian Creek Nylon The Jain Rifle Pumps, Autos and Trigger Systems Common Fire Controls Responsibilities and the X-Mark Pro Other Guns and Issues The Liability Tripod Defense and Defensive Guns It has been over half a century in the making.

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That's how long it has taken its author to develop his unusual and encyclopedic knowledge of this subject. Part of the extended gestation period of the compilation of these chapters has been the reticence of the shooting sports media to address the subject of dangerous defects in firearms design and manufacture.

To publicize those defects would have resulted in the quick ostracism of the firearms industry who jealously defend their market position. There would be no more perks and privileges awarded for favorable press. Additionally those critics would likely be labeled "anti-gun" by a public conditioned to a high level of trust.

Another factor has been the diligence with which the legal representatives of the industry have pursued "non-disclosure" rulings and agreements mandating that adverse trial results and discovery findings are kept secret. Sealed court records are the general rule. Settlements are reached on a regular basis predicated upon the preservation of "trade secrets," but which actually hide the presence of dangerous defects.

The shooting public deserves better treatment. Firearms manufacturers are rightfully protected against crippling governmental edicts and regulations concerning gun design and manufacture, but the public should have access to the facts that would enable an informed decision as whether or not to acquire and use any particular make and model, and to decide how it may within reason be safely used. It is this state of affairs that the author addresses in an unusually personal and informative format using the give and take of an instructional seminar, whose attendees and participants have a wide range of individual knowledge and viewpoints.

By so doing he turns what could easily be a dry exercise in technological analysis into a lively forum for examination of hitherto largely unavailable data. Browning with a down to earth explanation and application of his own extensive knowledge in the field. I share his passion and highly recommend "unSafe by Design? John T. I appreciate y'all holding back and letting me have a chance. Without editors this work would be still in bits and pieces. Bill Rogers in the piney woods of Alabama worked for weeks prying readable English from disjointed gun-speak loose ideas and arranging too much information into one bundle.

His job was much tougher than mine and I really don't know how he got it done. I'm in awe and really appreciate it. Andy White is an editor without the Southern heritage and I finally talked him into just lightly pecking around the loose edges so the Yankees can read it instead of attacking with axes and matches. Thank you. My sincere thanks to the late lawyers Rich Miller and Brandon Clark. Early on, they trained my passion for firearms and the truth into usable skills as an expert witness. My thanks also go out for the living attorneys and their able assistants that allowed me to share their passion for justice in offices and court rooms across the country.

I really appreciate my 'audience' of old acquaintances, former students, fellow ex-deputies and very good friends.


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They asked great questions. I thank you. To old friends like Jimmy Dollar, Page Spracher, Kenny Stagmeyer and Les Nicholson who have suffered with my verbal frustrations at trying to get the truth to the right people, thank y'all, too. Without your guidance, encouragement, and wise council I would have gotten myself in trouble even earlier. I gratefully acknowledge the defense attorneys and their part in our justice system and my growth as an expert.

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It is their job to defend their client. I guess somebody has to do it. Without their penetrating questions, many of the more important questions would never be asked. It is only when we must explain that we learn. That's why being a teacher is a great learning experience. I want to thank the 'back row' for being my teaching aid.

I would like to hear from you. Emails are preferred over bombs or bullets. The US Constitution deserves a mention too. Without it, I would have grown up a crook because guns are my passion. I can't help it. Actually it swung back and forth between herpetology, veterinary medicine, and something to do with guns and hunting. By the time I was in the ninth grade, I hated school and everything about it so bad, I had stricken the professions requiring further class room work off my list forever.

The author in with a fine Sako Riihimaki chambered in 6mm CheapShot, a wildcat cartridge developed by Jack and his business partner Brian Shanks. I took apart guns I'd traded for at gunshows in the back of the building and traded them for others once I understood how such a thing could work. Books, magazines, and patent documents centered on guns were my passion.

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High school was just hourly imprisonment and I resented it even more. In the summer of '64 I guided fisherman and went barefooted for three months and then joined the Army when my classmates started the senior year. I graduated from high school six months before they did while serving in Korea as a small arms specialist.

I was surrounded by hundreds of guns from. Benning in early There were Ms under my care and control and a lot of my duty was on the TrainFire ranges teaching others to shoot. By that time I was thankful I didn't strive to be assigned to the Marksmanship Training Unit over on main post. I knew some of those guys No challenge and little hope of it changing.

Duty was great for about six months and then my company commander was replaced by a lieutenant who really didn't like me. We had a 'history' together in Korea and he was not in a good mood. He sent me off to the infiltration course and grenade range, anywhere I was out of his sight. The Army had finally focused my attention, but then they left the ammo and explosives just lying around to focus the attention of others on me.

That's not good but it can sure be entertaining. I don't like repetition, but the Army is full of it. The Infiltration Course was the fake combat situation with trainees crawling under barbed wire, while me and three other NCOs shot locked- down Browning machine guns over their heads.

Simulators blew mud all over them and the red tracers streaking overhead made it all pretty realistic, but very boring to the guys sitting behind the guns and pushing buttons. Each burst of five was followed by a burst of three, then another five.

J R Roberts

Then the guy next in line shot his the same way. It was very pretty to see for about five minutes. We had six hours a night, six nights a week, rain or shine, hot or cold, and three thousand rounds a night for each gun. We switched barrels twice a week. I knew the guy in supply that delivered the barrels to the range and for a trade of mess hall coffee, he brought me a genuine BSA 30 USA '06, barrel made in England just after WW-I. Sandhills of Nebraska in with Rufus the Lab and 12 ga. Merkel ET.