Letter Re: .40 S&W by Bruce F.

HJL,

A while ago I bought a Glock 22 4th Gen .40 caliber hand gun. In my opinion, this was one of the best buys I ever made. In all the firing I have done with this gun, I have had only one malfunction and that was a stovepipe piece of .22LR brass. (There’s more on that brass later.) The Glock 22 does have a considerable recoil in .40 caliber but not so much to make it uncomfortable for a grown man. I’m 73 years old now; maybe I’ll change my mind as I get older. The Gen 4 was supposed to have reduced the recoil, but since I have never fired a Gen 3 I cannot attest to that.

Now for the good part about the Glock 22. This gun, while designed to fire .40S&W ammunition, can be modified easily to fire 9mm Luger and .22LR ammunition. To fire 9mm, all that is needed is to change the barrel to 9mm. Wolf sells this conversion barrel. Everything else on the Glock 22 remains the same, EVEN the magazine! To fire .22LR ammunition the conversion is a little more involved, but it’s no harder. Tactical Solutions sells the kit. This includes the entire upper slide, including the barrel. The magazine must be changed as well. Two barrels are separately offered– one plain and one with a threaded extension that will accept a suppressor.

The Glock 22 and the Glock 19 use the same lower assembly, but the uppers are different. The Glock 22 upper is more robust to account for the increased pressure from the .40S&W round. CAUTION: the conversion can go only from the .40S&W to the 9mm Luger and not the other way around. The Glock 19 CANNOT be converted to fire the .40S&W. Another CAUTION is to make sure the conversion that you get is specifically for the generation Glock you have. The conversions for the Gen 3 and Gen 4 are different!

All of this allows you to shoot your Glock 22 in many calibers/mm. Basically, you get three guns in one. You get the BIG GUN feel even when shooting .22LR, and ammunition is less expensive for the smaller rounds. I have no affiliation with Glock, Wolf, or Tactical Solutions. – Mac C.



News From The American Redoubt:

Democrat Boise Mayor Bieter has publicly announced he is looking forward to the impact these immigrants will have on Idaho. Elections are coming up in a few days, and Judy Peavy Derr is the only candidate opposing this economical, cultural, health, and criminal assault on our community. As usual, the Idaho Statesman newspaper has chosen not to oppose or discuss anything politically controversial. It will require unity of all of Idaho’s reform organizations to rally and halt the alien invasion that is promoted by democrats and Idaho’s rinos and being unleashed on our state. Idaho & America’s Destruction Now At A Whole New Level !

o o o

Sent in by RBS: Oregon Girl Tests Positive for Bubonic Plague

o o o

SurvivalBlog reader D.S. sent in this link about a local Adams county rancher that was shot and killed by Sheriff’s deputies. This story has some very odd issues in it, and the story needs more detail. We’ll be watching this one.

o o o

It seems the news out of the Redoubt this week is mostly bad with another death on the hands of authorities: Lawsuit Says Man Died After Begging Jailers For Three Weeks For Medical Aid



Economics and Investing:

Most retailers finally make it into the black during this season, but according to this link sent in by RBS, that may not be happening: Morgan Stanley predicts a bleak holiday season for most retailers

o o o

In a surprise finding, it turns out that the US has overtaken the Caymans and Singapore as a haven for the assets of the super-rich. Sent in by GJM

o o o

Items from Mr. Econocobas:

National Debt Likely Doubles During Obama Presidency – While this is awful, we must not forget that Obama is not alone in this; nearly all his modern predecessors stretching back to Nixon ALL doubled the national debt, with two exceptions Clinton did not, and Reagan actually increased the debt not just 100% but actually 150%.

Historical Debt Outstanding – For those interested you can see the cut thorough all the political spin and see the hard numbers reported every year for the debt outstanding for the U.S. going back to 1790.

Items from Professor Preponomics:

Ghost Cities Finally Died: Worst Outlook Ever for China’s Steel Industry (Zero Hedge) Hint: China can no longer afford to allow any insolvency that could lead to a bankruptcy cascade. This will add ever more to deflationary capacity.

World Bank Threatens Free Markets in Peru: Absence of Regulation Equals Underdevelopment (Mises Daily) Hint: It must be time for the World Bank to intervene!

World Stocks On Course for Best Month in Four Years (Reuters) Hint: It’s all about the central banks.

Chevron Posts Fourth Straight Quarterly Profit Decline: Plans to Lay-Off 6,000 to 7,000 (Bloomberg)

Glencore Copper Mine Shut-Down to Hurt Fragile Zambian Economy (Bloomberg) Hint: If commodity pricing does not improve, mine closures may only delay temporarily the market consequences some investors have not yet experienced in the markets of the industrialized world.



Odds ‘n Sods:

SurvivalBlog reader RC21 sent this link to a Reuters investigative report that looks at radio stations in the U.S. held by companies connected to the Chinese government. Examples of the Chinese point of view, what we used to call propaganda, is being broadcast in America.

o o o

From across the pond, SurvivalBlog reader A.P. sent in this link. It seems that anyone who’s ever been on a camping holiday can now be labelled a “Survivalist”. Gorseinon man with ‘apocalyptic’ vision of world ending jailed for possessing illegal weapons

o o o

Sent in by P.S.: Faced with a local ISP that couldn’t provide modern broadband, Orcas Island residents designed their ownnetwork and built it themselves. The nonprofit Doe Bay Internet Users Association (DBIUA), founded by Sutton, Brems, and a few friends, now provide Internet service to a portion of the island. It’s a wireless network with radios installed on trees and houses in the Doe Bay portion of Orcas Island. Those radios get signals from radios on top of a water tower, which in turn receive a signal from a microwave tower across the water in Mount Vernon, Washington.

o o o

The rule of law shows major cracks when the Feds can send a man to jail for overfishing at the same time 6000 drug convicts are freed. Sent in by reader B.B.

o o o

RBS sent in this link to an article about one of the most dangerous volcanoes in North America roaring to life.



Hugh’s Quote of the Day:

“Whenever a theory appears to you as the only possible one, take this as a sign that you have neither understood the theory nor the problem which it was intended to solve.” – Karl Popper



Notes for Monday – November 02, 2015

On November 2, 1917, British Foreign Secretary Arthur James Balfour submitted a declaration of intent to establish a Jewish homeland known as the Balfour Declaration. While Arab hostilities and the outbreak of World War II delayed the desired outcome, the Nation of Israel was eventually re-established in 1948.

o o o

A reminder to those sending in articles for the writing contest. All contest articles sent in to SurvivalBlog must be the author’s original work and must not be published or submitted to publish anywhere else. If your article is submitted to other blogs, it is automatically disqualified from publication and the contest. – HJL



Pat Cascio’s Product Review: Walther CCP

I still remember the very first Walther handgun I ever owned. I owned it for less than a week. Bear with me; I had just purchased a brand new Walther PPK/s .380 in stainless steel. I still have the receipt showing I paid $125 for it back in 1973. I was working as a private investigator (PI) at the time and living back in Chicago, IL, where you had to register your handguns within 30 days of bringing them into the city. There were no gun shops in the city proper, so you had to purchase handguns at neighboring suburban gun shops. To the best of my knowledge, there still are no gun shops inside the city limits of Chicago.

I only had the handgun a few days, when on my way home after working late one evening on a stake out I was stopped by the Chicago PD for no reason at all other than it was about 1:00AM in the morning. As they patted me down, again with no legal reason to do so, they found my PPK/s in a shoulder holster. I explained that I was a PI and coming home from a stake out. I thought there’d be no problem, I’d just show them my badge and ID and I’d be on my way, right? Wrong! I had left my badge and ID back at the office. I was hauled into the local police district and charged with unlawful use of a weapon and carrying an unregistered handgun. Of course, the “unlawful use of a weapon” sounded like maybe I pistol-whipped someone; it was just the fact that I was carrying concealed, period! No matter what I said, they wouldn’t even let me make a phone call so my boss could run to the office and bring my badge and ID to the police station to clear matters up! I was released the next morning.

100_6244

When I went to court, I showed the judge my badge, ID, and a letter from my boss stating that I was working that evening. The case was dismissed with all charges dropped. However, the judge told me in order to get my Walther PPK/s back, I had to get proof of registration before it would be released to me. Okay. That’s no big deal. I ran down to city hall and filled out the registration form. A little more than a month later, I received my registration in the mail and went down to the Chicago Police property room to get my PPK/s back. There I was informed that they only hold firearms for 30 days, and then they are destroyed.

100_6245

Okay, does anyone believe that ridiculous story? I know. I didn’t back then, but it wasn’t worth hiring a lawyer to fight it. I believe with all my heart that to this day some Chicago cop is still walking around with my PPK/s. Enough said!

I recently purchased a Walther CCP (Concealed Carry Pistol) from my local gun shop, or maybe I traded into it. Whatever! The CCP feels incredible in the hand. It’s one of the best-feeling handguns I’ve held in a lot of years, and the wife loved the way it felt, too. The CCP is a 9mm handgun that operates on a gas-delayed blowback action instead of the Browning design or a straight blow back action. The gun is very soft-shooting to be sure. Walther calls this their “Softcoil” technology. I guess they had to come up with some name for it, and I’ll conceded that the recoil feels softer than many other compact 9mm handguns I’ve fired. You can read all about this Softcoil technology on the Walther website, if you are interested.

100_6246

My sample had a polymer black frame and satin finished stainless steel slide and adjustable sights of the three dot variety for a fast sight picture. There is also a Picatinny rail, if you want to attach a laser or light to the frame of the gun. Cocking serrations are front and rear on the side of the slide. The trigger pull was outstanding at 5.5 lbs. It’s hard to explain but easy to feel if you check one out at your local gun shop. The thumb safety is just big enough but not too big for proper use without shifting your grip on the gun; it’s nice! The gripping surface on the frame was really well done and felt great!

The CCP also comes with two 8-rd magazines, and spares can be found for around $36, which is a bit spendy, but you should have more than one spare mag, if you ask me. Barrel length is 3.54 inches, and the gun weighs 22-oz empty. Plus, the gun comes with a limited lifetime warranty! There is also a full-time ambidextrous magazine release, which is another really nice touch.

Okay. Enough of the boring stats. We need to take a close look at the CCP and see how it performed for me. I carried the gun for two weeks in a Blackhawk Products generic-type belt slide holster, and the gun rode nice and tight against my body. Of course, I also carried a spare mag on my off-side.

100_6247

I had an outstanding assortment of various 9mm from Black Hills Ammunition and Buffalo Bore Ammunition to run through the CCP, and I fired more than 400-rds through the CCP during my testing. From Black Hills, I had their 115-gr FMJ, 115-gr JHP +P, 124-gr JHP +P and their 115-gr Barnes TAC-XP all copper hollow point +P ammo. From Buffalo Bore, I had their 147-gr Hard Cast Outdoorsman load +P, 147-gr FMJ-FN Subsonic load, 115-gr Barnes TAC-XP all copper hollow point +P+ and their 1240-gr FMJ-FN +P+ load.

100_6248

One thing worth noting is that some handguns that operate under a delayed piston-blow back recoil operation sometimes get very hot from the escaping gases under the barrel and inside the frame. So, I ran three mags through the gun as fast as could pull the trigger. While the gun felt a little warm, it wasn’t hot to the touch, and if you find yourself in a position with a handgun and you’ve fired three mags as fast as you can pull the trigger, then you might want to think about carrying an AR-15 with you instead of a handgun. Remember, the CCP was designed for personal self-defense, not offensive use.

I had no malfunctions, until I tried some of the Buffalo Bore +P+ 9mm loads. Then the CCP turned into a total jam-a-matic. The empty brass would not extract from the chamber of the gun, and I had to drop the mag and pull on the extractor with my handy-dandy Leatherman multi-tool in order to relieve the tension on the empty case and then pry the case out, once I locked the slide open. This happened again and again but only with +P+ loads. As I have mentioned before, no gun maker warranties their guns for +P+ ammo. None! Still, I try to test a variety of ammo through firearms for my articles, to find any weak points and to see which loads perform the best. It didn’t matter which +P+ loads I used from Buffalo Bore, it locked the gun up solid. It is not the fault of the ammo; it’s the delayed piston operation, which was keeping the empty brass in the chamber a fraction of a second too long and tying the gun up. It’s not something you want to happen to you during a gunfight!

100_6249

I performed my accuracy testing from only 15 yards instead of 25 yards, and all loads (even the P+P loads) were in the 3 1/2 inch range, which is not bad at all. There was one stand out and that was the Black Hills 115-gr JHP +P load. So long as I did my part, I was getting groups just a hair under 3 inches, but I think the gun could do even better. By this time, I was frustrated with the +P+ loads tying the gun up on me and was losing patience in my shooting skills. Hot off the heels of the Black Hills load was the Buffalo Bore 147-gr FMJ-FN subsonic load!

100_6250

Now, for the fun part– cleaning the gun. Um, I found out in a minute that it takes at least three hands, though four would be better, along with a specially-provided tool to disassemble the CCP. In short order, I discarded the tool and used a small screw driver. I won’t go into how totally frustrating it was to tear down the CCP just for basic cleaning. You can read about it on the Internet; it’s all over the place. Putting the gun back together was a little easier, but three hands still worked better than two hands. I had my lovely wife assisting me with a third and sometimes a fourth hand. Still, it shouldn’t have been that difficult to break the CCP down for a basic cleaning and a light lube job. I tore the gun down a dozen times; while it did get a little easier, it was still a monumental task, if you ask me, and it shouldn’t be!

100_6254

All-in-all, I really liked the CCP. It was more than accurate, felt great in the hand, and handled everything I fed through it, other than +P+ loads. (Steer clear of them, please!) As always, test your gun with the ammo you want to carry in it.

My final thoughts on the CCP? Well, it’s a great little gun. It feels good and shoots good. However, with the difficult procedure required to tear the gun down for basic cleaning and having to use a tool, I wouldn’t care to have this gun for the “end times”. It’s just too complicated for my liking. For everyday carry, yep, it’s a nice little gun but not one I’d want to bet my life on in the long term, when constant maintenance is required to keep the gun up and running. Plus, the tool that Walther provides in a cheap piece of plastic; a small, flat-tipped screw driver worked better. The CCP is going for $425 in my neck of the woods, and it’s a good buy, but I traded mine off after testing it for this article. I don’t want anything that is going to be complicated to maintain during a SHTF scenario. For everyday use, the CCP is fine, but it isn’t on the top of my list for long-term, hard core use. It gets one and a half thumbs up and not two thumbs up from me.

– Senior Product Review Editor, Pat Cascio



Recipe of the Week: Hambone Delight, by K.D.

Ingredients:

  • 1 ham bone (crack the bone if you want the marrow by placing bone in a heavy paper bag, giving it a whack with a hammer, and removing the bone, throwing away any shards)
  • 1 lb small, dried red or pink beans, soaked at least overnight and up to 24 hours, rinsed, and drained
  • 1 cup or more of chopped fresh or frozen spinach
  • 1 chopped onion
  • 1-3 cloves garlic, minced
  • pepper, to taste
  • one bay leaf
  • cumin, to taste
  • 6 cups hot cooked rice
  • chopped green onion, as optional side

Directions:

  1. Place ham bone in the bottom of a large pot, and dump the beans on top.
  2. Add the bay leaf, cumin, pepper, and 6 cups water.
  3. Heat to a boil, then turn down to simmer.
  4. Sauté the onion until it’s translucent, add the minced garlic cloves for a minute, and then dump both in the pot.
  5. Simmer all day, stiring occasionally and scraping the loose meat off the bone. (I like to start this in the morning and let it simmer ALL day.)
  6. An hour before dinner, remove ham bone and mash some of the beans against the side of the pot to thicken the remaining liquid, or put two ladles in the blender and then add back to the pot.
  7. To serve, place one scoop of cooked rice on every plate and serve the hambone delight over rice with chopped green onion on the side.

Note: Is it good? Very! Feel free to add anything else that tickles your fancy, like sausage, carrots, or whatever else.

o o o

Do you have a favorite recipe that would be of interest to SurvivalBlog readers? Please send it via e-mail. Thanks!



Letter Re: .40 S&W

HJL,

I concur with Bruce F. regarding the 0.40 cal. buying opportunity presented by the fickle gun crowd. It’s almost comical to read the gun gurus slamming the same caliber they were praising some years ago. I just wanted to point out one more, plus regarding the used Glocks in .40 that were mentioned, you can simply drop a .357 Sig barrel in them, and suddenly the G23 is a G32, or the G22 becomes a G31! Even the mags are interchangeable, as the base diameter of the .40 S&W and the .357 Sig are the same. Furthermore, drop in a 9mm conversion barrel, get a 9mm mag, and now you have a functional approximation of a G19 or G17. (I’ve read that the extractor is a bit different due to the difference in case size, but it certainly works in a pinch.) So, if you can pick up a good used Glock in .40 S&W with a couple of hundred bucks more, you can have a pistol that fires three different calibers! That’s not bad! – SH in TX



Economics and Investing:

American Tax Refugees. Why so many Yanks are renouncing their U.S. citizenship. Sent in by G.G.

o o o

The Chinese Juggernaut is stumbling lately as seen by this article sent in by G.P.

o o o

Items from Professor Preponomics:

Regulators to Shutter Health Republic Insurance of New York (Wall Street Journal)

Social Security Strategy Loopholes used to Maximize Benefits Closed in Budget Deal (Market Watch)

New No Money Down Mortgages: Wealth Building Home Loans (Financial Advisor Magazine)

Risk to Loss of Banking Revenue Rises with Digital Transactions (Gallup)

FBI Alerts: Common Fraud Schemes (FBI)

Number of Dollar Stores Expected to Exceed 30,000 in 2016 (My Budget 360)

The Mises Week in Review: Fed Reaffirms Easy Money & More (Mises Institute)

The Greek Crisis Continues: Greek Banks Need $14B Euros to Cover Unpaid Loans (Reuters)



Odds ‘n Sods:

SurvivalBlog reader D.S. sent in this link showing some disturbing links between the pharmaceutical industry and known issues that get swept under the rug: The Pharmaceutical Empire is Evil

o o o

Reader T.P. sent in the link to this video showing the death of the Liberal Arts in our modern universities. A UCLA degree in English Literature mandates courses in alternative lifestyles but has no required class on Shakespeare– one of the greatest English authors?

o o o

The cable television series The Man in the High Castle will be available November 20, 2015 on Amazon.com. (Free for Amazon Prime members.) For now, just the first two episodes are available, but on November 20th, the full season will become available. Based on a novel by Phillip K. Dick, it shows an alternate timeline, where Germany and Japan won World War II and invaded the United States.

o o o

Is having a loving family an unfair advantage? Sent in by SurvivalBlog reader T.P.

o o o

As if you needed another one: One more reason to homeschool your children – Va. schools implementing gender identity policy changes without informing parents – D.S.





Notes for Sunday – November 01, 2015

November 1st, 1923, was the birthday of science fiction writer Gordon R. Dickson (born 1923, died January 31, 2001). Many of his novels and short stories, such as Wolf and Iron, have survivalist themes. November 1st is also the birthday of economist Martin A. Armstrong. For many years he was a prisoner of conscience, in part because he refused to turn over his proprietary trading algorithms to Federal prosecutors. After seven years in prison without a trial, the longest Federal incarceration for contempt in American history, Armstrong was finally put on trial in a proceeding that was branded as a sham. He was convicted on securities fraud charges based upon some marginal testimony and given a five year sentence. He was released from prison in September of 2011. Notably, Armstrong continued to write his economics newsletter while in prison, producing most of the issues on a prison library typewriter.



Two Letters Re: The OTHER Electrical Grid Failure Problem

HJL,

I just retired from 24 years of bouncing around the nuclear plants in the U.S. and abroad. For work planning, fire stop penetrations, and OSHA worker safety, every nuclear plant in the world has at least 20 electricians on-site 7/24. During a refueling outage, add 100 to that number. – K.G.

o o o

Hello Hugh,

I read the comments about electricians at nuclear plants and the inability to have more than one or two there in an emergency situation. While I am not disputing that possibility, the entire situation should be told. Electricians are support staff at any nuclear station. I have been an electrician at a dual unit nuclear station for over eight years after years of being a contractor. We work for the Operations Department, which is there 24/7/365, and they are required per NRC Tech Specs to maintain minimum staffing at all times. So there are roughly 22-24 of these highly-trained operators always on site. Most of these operators were Navy Nuclear in charge of nuclear-powered submarines and some were surface as well.

About the fours hours mark, that is not entirely accurate. It is a variable timeframe, depending on many factors. First, assuming that Pool Cooling and Residual Heat Removal systems were lost, there are backups to both. The Spent Fuel Pool is always Protected Equipment, even in normal times, and due to Fukushima we have added millions of dollars in upgrades that were mandated by the NRC to backup the backups of the backups. The Spent Fuel Pool is exactly that; it stores the spent fuel rods, and these are under almost 30′ of water. The concern would be loss of cooling to the Spent Fuel Pool; at about six hours, the water would begin to boil and eventually boil off entirely. With the upgrades, those situations would be greatly mitigated, although not entirely removed, so there is always a concern, and it is taken at a most serious level.

I agree that the possibility of an EMP is not openly discussed, if at all. So I can’t answer if that is even being considered or taken seriously. I would suggest to people to contact their representatives and demand it be given the attention it deserves. I can say that my state is undergoing a Grid Modernization program that most liberty-loving people are in dispute with. Taxes and fees for electricity are going up, and the companies are beginning to install Smart Meter Technology on homes. A simple Google of Smart Meters can explain why many believe they are not only an invasion of privacy but also a fire hazard. You can currently opt out of installation for a fee of about $23 a month, but since the power company rather than the homeowner owns the meter at some point the change out is mandatory.

I hope I could add to the discussion. Thank you. -Senior Maintenance Electrician at a Nuclear Station



Economics and Investing:

Just in case you’re curious about what a Republic that hasn’t been bought by Central Bankers looks and smells like…Iceland! Iceland! Iceland! Sent in by GJM

o o o

Sent in by SurvivalBlog reader RBS: “Tax Expenditures” Are Not “Free Stuff”

o o o

Items from Professor Preponomics:

Citizens Against Government Waste Goes Trick-or-Treating: Reveals a Fiscal House of Horrors (CAGW)

Economists Sounding the Alarm about the Risk of a New U.S. Recession (Washington Post)

Today’s War Against Deflation to Make Us Poorer (Mises Institute)

Rand Paul’s Vow: He’ll Do Everything Within My Power to Stop the Disasterous Budget Deal (Breitbart)

General Mills Announces Lay-Offs: Company Struggles to Adjust to Changing Consumer Preferences (Market Watch)

Cummins to Cut 2,000 Jobs: Weak Demand for Engines, No Market Improvement Anticipated in the Near Term (ABC News)

10 Brands 24/7 Wall Street Expects to Disappear in 2016 (24/7 Wall Street)

How We Paid Off $20K in Debt in 5 Years with $22K in Annual Income (Living on a Dime) Commentary: There is no excuse not to get out of debt!