Shot Show 2022 – That’s a wrap!

If you can imagine there are miles and miles of goodies to oogle. From tactical cool, to practical. Its almost overwhelming. Here are a few highlights from the last days of Shot.


PSA – Welcomes their 5.7 Rock Pistol Platform…Because why not?

At SHOT 2022 today, PSA had two of the 5.7s available for handling. They will be offering the 5.7 Rock both with and without an optics cut. Both models will come from the factory with a 23-round magazine, and are expected to release within the next 60 days.

$549 Optics Ready — $499 standard


10MM – Be prepared for anything, possibly a bear…

Made infamous by the FBI’s adoption of the caliber following the Miami-Dade shootout in 1986, 10mm has been contentious since the beginning. Many deemed it too powerful for the average shooter to realistically control, but others were impressed by its ballistic performance and were quick to adopt it as their primary handgun caliber.

10mm may have never fully caught on, but it never really died out either. Helping to keep it from falling by the wayside, Smith & Wesson released a 10mm M&P 2.0. As one of the most popular pistol platforms in the country, the M&P.

The 10mm M&P 2.0 is available in a few different configurations. It can come either with or without a manual safety and with either a 4-inch or 4.6-inch-long barrel, making a total of 4 models to choose from. All 10mm M&P models are also optics-ready and come standard with suppressor height sights. The trigger has also been redesigned into a flat-face style with the intention of providing a more consistent pull for more accurate shooting. Like all M&P pistols, the ergonomic grip inserts are interchangeable as well. With a magazine capacity of 15 rounds, the 10mm M&P can pack quite a bit of firepower in a pretty compact package.

Price tag on these bad boys start at $589


For those who love a little bling…

Sig P365XL with Gold Slide

The Ultimate Gold Package!


Faxon – Rolling Out A New Round

The 8.6 Blackout is a .338 caliber cartridge created with the same general concept as the .300 Blackout except for the bigger AR-10 pattern guns. It has case head dimensions and overall length identical to .308 Winchester which in conjunction with the overall shape of the cartridge allows loading unmodified AR-10 magazines to their full capacity.

Faxon made the barrels for these 8.6 Blackout firearms. Now, these are not regular barrels and making them is probably quite challenging because in order to properly stabilize long and heavy 300-grain subsonic .338 caliber projectiles, the barrels have a 1:3″ twist rate! Yes, that’s one full rotation of the rifling in every three inches. The bores of these barrels look more like being internally threaded than rifled.

The barrels for both platforms will be available in 8″, 12″ and 16″ length options. For more information on this joint project and to be notified about the availability of Faxon barrels, click HERE to proceed to Faxon’s page dedicated to this collaboration with Q and their 8.6 Blackout products.

Other Faxon products that do not disappoint…from their premium line rifles to shorty short barrels!


Upping Our Game – Silencer Shop Kiosk Coming Soon to the Range!

We hate paperwork…like really hate it. So lets eliminate it as much as possible! We will be streamlining our process for NFA items. This benefit s you by reducing turn around time and reduces paperwork friction on our end. WIN-WIN!


We definitely picked up some swag for you folks too!

SHOT SHOW 2022 DAY 1

Queen City is at Shot Show this year with a small crew. Wanted to share our adventure!

We got some time to play with the new Smith & Wesson CSX 9mm. Being a left handed shooter everything is ambidextrous! Slide release, safety, and mag release too. Super light weight it’s slightly bigger than the old P938. Very nice trigger and according to Smith these are shipping now. Price point is looking to be around $549.


Aero Precision

Aero is getting into the 700 chassis game in a big way!


KelTec – Armor Piercing in all its glory…

Had to play with the KelTec P50 and check out their 50 round of armor piercing handheld craziness. Additional models will include a longer barrel and a brace. Congrats KelTec on 30 years of challenging the gun industry!


Dark Storm Industries – 308 Crammed into an AR-15 Platform

Dark Storm Industries coming out with the DS-25 a 308 AR platform that matches the size and weight of a standard AR-15 platform. MSRP looks to be $1400 which isn’t terrible for an AR-10 build equivalent. Best part this whole build is possible with their upper, lower and BCG and the rest follows a mil-spec AR build!!!


SCCY – Love em or Hate em

Some hands on time with the new SCCY DVG striker fire gun and the improved CXP using Glock sights for easy upgrade. Not saying we are in love but a good evolution of the gun long over due!

Look familiar…every major brand is move toward ultra compact 9MM. Sig paved the way and everyone is following suit, even Sccy…

More to come!

5 First-Timer’s Firearms Fears (& How to Overcome Them)

Hey, let’s face it, the first time any of us stepped on the range we were intimidated. As with anything new and potentially dangerous we naturally had a few concerns. Some of us may have had a bad experience already with a firearm, and those concerns turned into downright fears. Others still had been indoctrinated by false claims of both the media and the big screen. I still remember my first day on the range, and now that I’m an instructor, I always put myself back in those shoes when I train a new shooter. After doing so professionally for close to 10 years, I have identified the top five fears that new shooters have, and some advice to help them deal with it.

1. Shooting yourself

It shouldn’t surprise anybody to see this at the top of the list, as everyone wants to go home after any fun activity. The truth is that the shooting sports are statistically some of the safest activities in the world, especially when compared to contact sports. Explaining this to a new shooter often helps ease their minds and allows them to focus on the first lesson, safety. I have my routine of the three rules of firearms safety down to about 7 minutes. This lecture and demonstration is meant to be brutally simple with the hope to get a “that’s it?” response from our students. Keeping these rules simple helps to build the confidence that they, too, will be safe and successful with a firearm.

2. Recoil

Most students come to us worried about “kickback.” When that phrase comes up I like to help them with their terminology and explain that the proper term is recoil. (“Kickback” is what the county had to pay the union to build the range.) But, yes, as confirmed by Sir Isaac Newton, for every action there is an equal but opposite reaction. Lead going downrange means steel moving uprange. Sure firearms kick a little bit, so we like to minimize that by using heavier guns, smaller cartridges or a combination of both. Nothing is softer to shoot than a full-sized rifle or pistol in a rimfire caliber. Again the goal here is to generate a “that’s it?” response. When it’s time for a centerfire I have the students load just one round into the gun the first few times they fire it. We do this because should they drop the gun after it fires, they will be dropping an unloaded gun. Of course, this is a highly unlikely scenario, but letting them know that they are working with a one-round “safety net” eliminates that fear and helps the student concentrate on the other aspects of firearms safety, as well as marksmanship.

3. Noise

Oleg Volk says “A gun without a suppressor is like a car without a muffler.” I couldn’t agree more with this statement and thus use a suppressor anytime I can when teaching a new student. Of course, this is a problem in many states and other means must be examined. Quiet comes in a lot of different forms, such as the use of subsonic ammo. This offering is available for a number of cartridges, with .22 Rimfire being the quietest. Other ways to bring the noise down is to use longer-barreled firearms and utilize outdoor ranges as often as possible. An outdoor range, especially if that particular range is void of a pavilion, is a substantially quieter environment to discharge firearms. Of course, doubling up on the hearing protection (earplugs and earmuffs) will also cut down on the guns’ report.

4. Action bite

“I have a friend that needed stitches after pulling the trigger the first time.” Yes, many of us have heard about “That Guy” before we picked up our first guns. The truth is that guns are not designed to hurt the user whatsoever. Before I let a student pick up a gun I ALWAYS demo a proper grip, as well as an improper grip. When showing a student how to grip a revolver I take a minute to show them the soot around the cylinder gap and explain that high pressure burning gas is emitted through there. Next, I fire a full cylinder with a proper grip and show them that with a little knowledge they have nothing to worry about. As for semi-autos I simply fire and talk about how the slide moves. During this demonstration, I remind the students that my support hand thumb NEVER wraps around the backstrap, as this action will gouge a chunk out of it. 

5. “Everyone’s gonna look at me”

Yep, many times a student is self-conscious of their early performance. While I’m no Dr. Phil, I often do have to play the role of tactical psychologist and help new shooters learn to deal with the looks experienced shooters are giving them.

For starters, they’re not…No I mean it, really…nobody cares that you’re new, and nobody is paying attention to your shooting. Anybody worth their salt on the range is too busy paying attention to their own target.

Gun owners are some of the most understanding and accepting people I have ever met and newbies are an everyday occurrence. When I am working with someone with this concern, I ask them to point out some easy to recognize characteristics of the other people on the range. When they fail to answer I point out that the same way they aren’t obsessing over the other shooters, the other shooters aren’t obsessing over them. Now if it’s a group class I always like to start off by asking for a show of hands of “how many people have been to the range fewer than five times.” In nearly every introductory course it is somewhere around 92 percent of our clientele that has a hand in the air. Knowing that they are among shooters of the same skill level helps them feel less out of place, and again helps them concentrate on safety and marksmanship.

Overall, firing your first shots should be a memory that lasts a lifetime—but for the right reasons. If you are ready to send your first rounds downrange, seek out a qualified NRA instructor for a private lesson or—even better—enroll in an NRA basic level course. These courses are all geared towards new shooters and the folks teaching them have extensive training in not only firearms instruction, but how to address the fears that we know some of you might have.

RSR 10/25/2021

New Sanctions Against Russia – What does it mean for gun owners?

We have had an overwhelming request for information on this. So, lets dive in.

First, why are these new sanctions even taking place? Well, we must rewind to a year ago… according to the State Department’s fact sheet, the sanctions issued on Friday include “… a continuation of measures imposed on March 2, 2021, as well as in 2018 and 2019 in response to the poisoning of Sergey Skripal and his daughter, along with the waivers associated with these sanctions.”

Retaliation for espionage and chemical weapons; this is what it boils down to.

“Persuant to the Chemical and Biological Weapons Control and Warfare Elimination Act of 1991 (the CBW Act), the United States will impose a second round of sanctions on the Russian Federation over its use of a “Novichok” nerve agent in the August 2020 poisoning of Russian opposition figure Aleksey Navalny.”

What are the exact sanctions of the CBW Act and what do they mean for us?

The Act mandates that the U.S. government will terminate arms sales with a country found to have violated the act, including the “termination licenses for the export to that country of any item on the United States Munitions List.”

Typically once a ban has taken place it will not be lifted. Meaning, even though we saw some light at the end of the tunnel on ammunition, it is about to get exponentially worse. According to the the US International Trade Commission released through the National Shooting Sports Foundation report, in May 2021 alone, that 462.3 million units of cartridges, not including shotgun shells, were imported from overseas into the country. Some reports hold that as much as 40 percent of overseas ammo supply could be coming from Russian manufacturers or exporters located in Russia. This sudden loss of potentially hundreds of millions of units of ammunition from an already voracious ammo market could see consumer prices skyrocket as demand aggressively outpaces supply.

Say adios to those affordable deals on “cheap and reliable Russian-made ammo such as BarnaulTulaRed Army Standard, and Wolf, goodbye. Meanwhile, those with guns chambered in 7.62×39, 7.62x54R7.62×25 Tokarev9×18 Makarov, and 5.45×45 could be in a pinch to find cheap ammo, with the exception of surplus fodder from non-sanctioned countries such as the former Yugoslavia.

Wait… Did you say Guns too? YEP!

Though the ammunition is the greatest hit to American gun owners. Lets talk gun imports… Looking to purchase your favorite gun imported by Century Arms such as that Canik you have been eyeing…or FIME Group. I would start planning now. Though we do not have all the details, manufactures, or products that will be affected it might be a good idea to be prepared… It is coming in one form or another.

When will this take place?

The importation of firearms and ammunition from Russia will be effectively banned starting September 7, 2021. According to the documents provided by the State Department, “These latest sanctions on Russia pursuant to the CBW Act will take effect upon the publication of a Federal Register notice expected on September 7, 2021, and they will remain in place for a minimum of 12 months. The sanctions can only be lifted after a 12-month period if the Executive Branch determines and certifies to Congress that Russia has met several conditions described in the CBW Act, 22 U.S.C. 5605(c).  As soon as we know more we will issue an update.


Source Links

https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/22/2751

https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/22/5605

https://www.state.gov/fact-sheet-united-states-imposes-additional-costs-on-russia-for-the-poisoning-of-aleksey-navalny/

https://tass.com/world/1328535

https://www.thefirearmblog.com/blog/2021/08/20/russian-ammo-ban/

https://www.ammoland.com/2021/08/breaking-biden-administration-bans-importation-of-russian-guns-and-ammo/#axzz75JRQXGdW

https://www.firearmsnews.com/editorial/russian-ammo-banned-import/424571

Ohio Launches Public Stolen Gun Database

Ohio has launched a stolen gun portal that allows shops and private parties to search a serial number through the Law Enforcement Automated Data System. This is a fantastic tool to ensure no one is buying a stolen gun and will help return stolen guns to their rightful owners! More info as well as the link to the database can be found at the link below!

https://www.journal-news.com/news/ohio-launches-stolen-gun-database-website/GQSYJ2D5KFGMVBKHRPXUP6TVXU/?fbclid=IwAR3Ov7ckYVInXcxVwSEPNz_ZB8MFHTvNlw7ZHeNhqyriUlWafSY_OdZXvoE

Ohio Governor Passes Knife Reform Law

Mike Dewine passed a law changing a lot of the knife designations for Ohio.
Of note:

SB 140 reforms Ohio knife law by making two separate substantive changes:
1. The ban on manufacture and sale of “switchblade,” “spring blade” and “gravity” knives is repealed;
2. It clears up the vague and confusing Ohio law regarding carry of ANY knife by defining a knife, razor or cutting instrument as a “deadly weapon” or “weapon” ONLY if it is used as a weapon. This would allow carrying any knife concealed under state law.

SB 140 takes effect April 10th.

For more info on SB 140 follow the link below.
https://www.thetacticalwire.com/releases/1511bd9c-d956-4700-b44b-7ab41acf5a2b?fbclid=IwAR3KBJMSDrMsU_2PtOmWaGdJsc5LNX3I_kIrun95neltFemcYPptzI9jItE

What Stand Your Ground Means

What does removing the “duty to retreat” change?

Removing the duty to retreat takes the concept of castle doctrine and applies it to every location outside your home or car where you have a legal right to be.

Here’s the way the new law will read beginning April 6.

2901.09

(B) For purposes of any section of the Revised Code that sets forth a criminal offense, a person has no duty to retreat before using force in self-defense, defense of another, or defense of that person’s residence, if that person is in a place in which the person lawfully has a right to be.

(C) A trier of fact shall not consider the possibility of retreat as a factor in determining whether or not a person who used force in self-defense, defense of another, or defense of that person’s residence reasonably believed that the force was necessary to prevent injury, loss, or risk to life or safety.

In addition to this language dealing with criminal actions, there is also nearly identical language for civil actions.

Bottom line, if you can legally be in a place, you have no duty to retreat before using lethal force in self-defense. However, this does not change the standard for when use of lethal force is legally justified.

Essentially the law has now changed to no longer require you attempt to retreat before defending yourself. This does not mean, though, that you can deploy your firearm in more situations. You should still only deploy your firearm if you have a reasonable fear that you will be seriously harmed or killed if you do not defend yourself.

For more clarity and information follow the link below!
https://www.buckeyefirearms.org/no-duty-retreat-ohio-%E2%80%93-what-does-it-mean-you?fbclid=IwAR2pQvBDfPx0eBguUea8HIIumb7pglnLTgfnsJNFq4KZ8siyENu8W1rvjH0

Ohio Governor Signs Stand Your Ground Bill

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine signed a “Stand Your Ground” bill into law on Monday, backing off his threat to veto the measure after Ohio lawmakers declined to pass his recommended gun control proposals.

The Republican-backed bill, SB175, removes the “duty to retreat” requirement before a gun owner can use lethal force in self-defense. Legislators attached the controversial measure to a bill that grants civil immunity for deaths or injuries from handguns, before passing it during the lame-duck session.

“I have always believed that it is vital that law-abiding citizens have the right to legally protect themselves when confronted with a life-threatening situation,” DeWine said in a statement. 

For more info follow the link below!

https://www.npr.org/2021/01/04/953405793/ohio-governor-signs-stand-your-ground-law-after-suggesting-hed-veto-it

Governor signs HB 614: Ohio CHLs Extended to June 30, 2021

Great news for a lot of people! With the current wait times to get an appointment to renew, a lot of people were very worried about their license expiring before they could renew and a lot of people applying for a new license were facing incredible wait times just to apply.

Here are the two key points from the article:
If your license is scheduled to expire between March 9, 2020 and June 30, 2021, the expiration date is extended by 90 days or until June 30, 2021, whichever is later.
Until June 30, 2021, you can apply for a license or renew a license at ANY sheriff office in Ohio. You are not limited to your home county or an adjacent county.

https://www.buckeyefirearms.org/governor-signs-hb-614-ohio-chls-extended-june-30-2021?fbclid=IwAR1hZMjQkPYITohW-mu2dDzhnr_K9FCS0E_vBoVOPSy4WaHQyATqDjvJTkQ