Are we shooting more than we used
to?
Monday, October 30, 2006 Filed in:
Revolvers, Personal
opinions, History
- This thread at GlockTalk seemed oddly familiar to me.
People routinely ask about the lifespan of a particular gun, while
at the same time suggesting that somehow the guns of yesteryear
would last longer under use than today's offerings. I'm not sure
that this is the case.
Let's jump back to, say, 1935 or so. Someone has just bought a new
.38 Special revolver (take your pick of quality makers) and a box
of ammunition - a box that might last them for a decade or
more!
What I've managed to decipher from the "old folks" I've talked with
is that they just didn't shoot guns all that much. There weren't a
lot of competitive shooting events back then, and even those that
existed demanded less ammunition in a year than a typical IDPA
match consumes in a weekend. A box of handgun ammo (50 rounds) per
year was considered a "lot" of shooting by many of these folks; at
that rate, our mythical revolver would be considered to have been
heavily used, having only seen a total of 3500 rounds!
Flash forward to 2006, and a certain maker says that their gun has
an "expected lifespan" of 6,000 rounds. Doesn't sound like much to
us, but it may be two or three (or possibly ten) times the number
of rounds that guns sold in 1935 would expect to see over their
lifetime.
Perspective, people. There is a lot to complain about in the
craftsmanship (or lack of same) coming out most of today's
manufacturers, but one generally can't fault the durability of the
guns. There are exceptions, of course, but in the aggregate
I suspect that your average GP-100 will last longer than the folks
of 1935 could even imagine.
-=[ Grant
]=-