PODCAST · education
Major Pandemic's Bunker Bar Podcast
by Major Pandemic - Spread the Pandemic
A blend of entertainment, survival, hunting outdoors and gun reviews. www.majorpandemic.com
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Technical EDC & CCW Bags for Off Body Carry
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comMajor Pandemic’s Bunker Bar: The Ultimate Guide to Modern EDC, Tactical, and Technical Carry BagsWelcome to Major Pandemic’s Bunker Bar — the underground hideaway where tactical gear, exceptional whiskey, and brutally honest equipment reviews collide. As described in the podcast, the concept behind the Bunker Bar is simple: “some cold world bunker deep beneath the ground” stocked with incredible liquor, outstanding gear, and conversations about products that actually matter.One of the latest deep dives from the Bunker Bar focused on a subject that has exploded in popularity over the last decade: EDC bags, sling packs, technical backpacks, and tactical carry systems. But this discussion was never just about one company or one bag. It was about understanding the differences between purpose-built EDC systems, adaptable technical packs, and rugged tactical platforms.The Evolution of Modern EDC BagsToday’s carry bags are no longer simple backpacks. Modern users demand:* Concealed organization* Laptop and tech protection* Modular storage* Tactical adaptability* Camera and drone compatibility* Comfortable all-day carry* Civilian-friendly stylingAccording to the transcript, most bags fall into three major categories:* General Purpose Bags* Dedicated EDC / CCW Bags* Highly Adaptable Technical Tactical BagsUnderstanding those distinctions is critical before buying gear.Mission First Tactical: Practical Everyday UtilityMission First Tactical (MFT) was highlighted as one of the best examples of a flexible, real-world everyday carry system. Their bags balance tactical utility without screaming “military.”The Acro series especially stands out because:* It carries laptops and travel gear well* Includes hook-and-loop compatibility* Works for business travel or range use* Avoids an overtly tactical appearanceAs the podcast notes, these bags are ideal for users who want practical functionality without sacrificing versatility.Tasmanian Tiger: Expedition-Level Tactical QualityOn the heavier tactical side, Tasmanian Tiger earned praise for exceptional ergonomics and military-grade construction. Their Vietnam-based manufacturing system and expedition heritage create bags with:* Superior weight distribution* Comfortable carry systems* MOLLE integration* Rugged construction* Highly configurable interiorsUnlike many old-school tactical bags, Tasmanian Tiger balances organization and modularity without becoming overly complicated.Viktos: Dedicated Concealed Carry PerformanceThe discussion then shifted into dedicated concealed carry systems, particularly the Viktos Counteract series. These bags are purpose-built around firearms and off-body carry.Key features include:* Dedicated concealed compartments* Rapid-access pull systems* Modular Velcro trays* Integrated magazine storage* Extremely discreet appearanceThe transcript repeatedly emphasizes that Viktos bags are among the fastest and most purpose-built off-body carry systems available today.Hazard 4: The King of AdaptabilityWhile Hazard 4 receives major attention, the conversation makes clear that the brand’s strength is not just “tactical cool factor.” It is adaptability.The iconic Plan B and Plan C sling systems excel because they can be configured for:* Camera equipment* Drones* Travel gear* Compact rifle transport* Technical loadouts* EDC setupsRather than locking users into predefined compartments, Hazard 4 emphasizes modular open-space architecture with customizable inserts and sling ergonomics.The transcript specifically highlights the comfort and stabilization of the single-sling carry system, especially under heavy loads.Why Technical Bags Matter More Than EverOne major theme throughout the Bunker Bar discussion is that modern bags are no longer niche gear. They are part of daily life.People now carry:* Laptops* Cameras* Medical kits* Drones* Firearms* Batteries* Chargers* Survival gear* Travel equipmentAnd they need systems capable of adapting quickly without looking overly tactical or attracting attention.That’s why the conversation repeatedly returns to concepts like:* Gray man styling* Technical adaptability* Configurable storage* Ergonomic carry systems* Mission flexibilityFinal Thoughts from the Bunker BarThe biggest takeaway from Major Pandemic’s Bunker Bar is simple: there is no perfect bag for everyone. The right solution depends entirely on your mission profile.Some users need lightweight general-purpose carry. Others need dedicated concealed-carry systems. Some need highly configurable technical loadout platforms.Brands like Mission First Tactical, Tasmanian Tiger, Viktos, Hazard 4, and KUIU all approach those needs differently—but all earned respect because they solve real-world problems with thoughtful engineering and high-quality construction.Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Thanks for reading Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com! This post is public so feel free to share it.
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A 2013 New in Box Review of a Vintage DPMS RFA2-16 "Still in the Box"
A Time Capsule Finally Living Its StoryThe DPMS RFA216 is a gun that belongs to a very specific chapter of American rifle history — the last years when fixed carry handles and A2 stocks felt current, when military nostalgia from Vietnam and the Gulf War still drove civilian purchasing decisions, and when the AR platform was still in the middle of its metamorphosis into the modular, flat-top, free-float world we know today.Sixteen years after it was packed in foam and forgotten, it got the range trip it was always meant to have. Sometimes the best stories start with dust on the lid.Major Pandemic’s Bunker Bar: A Dust-Covered Time Capsule and the Story of “New In Box” PerfectionDeep beneath the surface, where time feels suspended and the outside world fades away, Major Pandemic’s Bunker Bar delivers more than atmosphere—it tells stories. In this cinematic, post-apocalyptic setting, one object stands out among the dust-covered bottles and aged wood: a pristine DPMS Panther Arms rifle box, boldly marked “New In Box.” This isn’t just a prop—it’s a narrative centerpiece that perfectly captures the intersection of history, craftsmanship, and untouched legacy.The scene itself is rich with contrast. The bunker bar, layered in dust and dimly lit by a warm neon glow, evokes a sense of abandonment and survival. Shelves of liquor sit untouched, their labels faded beneath years of neglect. Yet, in the center of it all rests the DPMS box—remarkably preserved, almost defiant against the decay surrounding it. This visual tension reinforces the core idea: some things remain frozen in time, waiting to be rediscovered.As described in the transcript, this rifle represents a true “time capsule”—“15 winters past, still waiting on you… still brand new” . Unlike the many claims of “new in box” that often come with skepticism, this example stands as authentic proof. The packaging is intact, the contents untouched, and the condition nearly flawless—something even modern factory shipments rarely achieve.From a historical and enthusiast perspective, the DPMS RF A216 rifle inside the box reflects a fascinating transition period in firearm design. During the late 2000s to early 2010s, manufacturers like DPMS experimented with a wide range of configurations—mixing legacy features like fixed carry handles and A2 stocks with evolving preferences for modularity and accuracy. This particular rifle, with its heavy H-bar barrel and rifle-length gas system, represents one of those rare “in-between” builds—unusual, short-lived, and now highly collectible.To bring this preserved relic back to life, the rifle didn’t remain a static display piece for long. In true Major Pandemic fashion, the team introduced an AS Designs Super Safety, transforming the DPMS from a dormant time capsule into a fully realized, functional platform. As noted in the transcript, the installation was straightforward—retaining much of the original configuration while integrating the upgraded selector system—and the result was flawless performance . With that upgrade, the story takes its final turn: the rifle is no longer sealed in history. The DPMS is now free—free from the box, free from time, and finally able to fulfill the purpose it was built for.What makes this moment even more compelling is the mystery behind its preservation. As explored in the narrative, the most likely explanation is that the rifle was part of a law enforcement inventory purchase that was never fully claimed—left behind, untouched, and ultimately forgotten . This adds another layer of intrigue, transforming the object from a simple product into a relic of logistics, oversight, and time.From an SEO and storytelling standpoint, this concept blends multiple high-interest themes:* Vintage firearms and collector value* “New in box” authenticity and rarity* Post-apocalyptic and bunker bar aesthetics* Luxury-meets-survival design conceptsTogether, they create a unique brand narrative for Major Pandemic’s Bunker Bar—one that appeals to enthusiasts, collectors, and those drawn to immersive, story-driven environments.In the end, the dusty bunker, the glowing sign, and the untouched DPMS box all point to the same idea:time doesn’t always move forward—sometimes, it waits.Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Thanks for reading Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com! This post is public so feel free to share it. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.majorpandemic.com/subscribe
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The Jeff Cooper Scout Rifle Concept - The code is more what you'd call 'guideline' than actual rule
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comMajor Pandemic’s Bunker Bar Podcast: Scout Rifle Concept, Practical Shooting, and Real-World PerformanceMajor Pandemic’s Bunker Bar opens with a unique concept—an underground, fully stocked bar that represents calm, control, and preparedness. From there, the episode transitions into a deep dive on the scout rifle concept, breaking down what it really means and why it’s been widely misunderstood.Originally developed by Jeff Cooper, the scout rifle was never intended to be locked into strict specifications like a .308 caliber or a specific weight. Instead, it was designed as a lightweight, portable, general-purpose rifle capable of delivering practical accuracy in real-world conditions. The focus was on effectiveness in the field—not precision from a bench or overbuilt configurations.The episode explains how modern shooters often misinterpret the concept by over-defining it. In reality, Cooper’s vision emphasized flexibility—allowing for multiple calibers including .223/5.56, .243, 7mm-08, and others. The goal was always adequate power, useful accuracy, and ease of use, not chasing maximum performance on paper.Today, the scout rifle concept extends well beyond traditional bolt-action platforms. Modern AR-style rifles, compact carbines, and lightweight builds all align with the same philosophy when they prioritize mobility, versatility, and practical engagement ranges (0–600 yards). Advances in optics, including low power variable scopes, have further expanded what these rifles can do in real-world scenarios.A key takeaway from the discussion is the importance of practical shooting skills. Real capability comes from training in standing, kneeling, and prone positions—not just shooting from a bench. The podcast emphasizes that success in the field is driven more by the operator than the equipment, reinforcing the idea that skill, familiarity, and efficiency matter more than gear overload.The conversation also highlights a shift toward keeping rifles lightweight, simple, and purpose-driven. Instead of loading rifles with unnecessary accessories, the focus is on maintaining a clean, functional setup that enhances performance without adding complexity.Use what you have, keep it simple, and train for real conditions. The scout rifle isn’t about a specific build—it’s about a mindset centered on practicality, adaptability, and real-world effectiveness.Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Thanks for reading Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com! This post is public so feel free to share it.
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Zeroing your Rifle - The easy way...
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comIn this episode of Major Pandemic’s Bunker Bar, the host walks through a practical, ammo-saving method for zeroing a new AR-15 or similar rifle without wasting time, money, and patience. Instead of making the common mistake of starting at 100 yards or even farther, he recommends using a laser bore sighter when possible and then beginning at very close range to get on paper quickly. From there, the process moves to 10 yards, then 25 yards, and finally 50 yards to establish a reliable zero with much less frustration. The discussion explains optic and bore offset, what point of impact should look like at each distance, and why a 50-yard zero with a 200-yard crossover often gives a flatter and more practical trajectory for many rifles, especially AR platforms. He also covers the value of stable shooting support, reasonable ammo selection for zeroing, and the bad habits that cause shooters to burn through boxes of ammunition without ever getting properly dialed in. The episode wraps with a funny song about “Larry,” the guy who insists on doing it the hard way by setting the target way too far out and blasting away for a week without ever getting close.This episode of Major Pandemic’s Bunker Bar mixes solid rifle-zeroing advice with a dose of humor. The host explains how to zero an AR-15 the smart way by starting close, getting on paper fast, and then working methodically out to 25 and 50 yards instead of wasting ammo shooting at distant targets too soon. He makes the case for a practical 50/200 zero, explains sight offset and trajectory in simple terms, and shares a process that can save shooters real money and frustration. The episode closes with a humorous song about Larry, a stubborn shooter who tries to “walk it in” from way too far out and ends up shooting at ghosts all week.Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Thanks for reading Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com! This post is public so feel free to share it.
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IWI Zion-15 Possible the Best Value for a Military Duty Grade AR15
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comThe Sleeper “Military-Grade” AR That’s Made In-HouseIn this episode of Major Pandemic’s Bunker Bar on MajorPandemic.com, Major Pandemic breaks down why the IWI Zion 15 has quietly become one of the best values in the AR-15 world—especially for buyers who want real build quality, tight tolerances, and proven assembly standards without paying $1,500–$3,000 for a logo and hype.The episode opens with Major Pandemic’s long-standing respect for IWI and Israeli firearms doctrine—simple, rugged, no-nonsense, and brutally practical. But the Zion 15 is also treated as something different: it’s a major step for IWI because it’s a U.S.-designed IWI project, not a direct “imported Israeli development” brought over to American shelves. And while he speculates about long-term strategy (and how the AR platform has been part of Israel’s ecosystem since the 1960s/1970s), he’s clear about the key point for buyers today:The Zion 15 is manufactured and assembled in-house by IWI USAThis is the backbone of the entire argument. Major Pandemic emphasizes that IWI USA runs its own manufacturing facility and produces Zion 15 components under their own roof rather than simply buying boxes of outsourced parts and assembling “Franken-guns.” Why does that matter? Because when a company controls production internally, it can control tolerances, consistency, and QC far better than brands that rely heavily on mixed third-party parts. He highlights the facility’s ISO quality mindset as a meaningful signal that processes are documented, repeatable, and measured—exactly what you want in a hard-use rifle.IWI Zion 15 Models and Pricing: Simple Lineup, Same Core RifleA big part of the Zion’s appeal is that IWI kept the product line straightforward. Major Pandemic explains that the Zion family is essentially the same rifle across multiple barrel lengths, built around the same core components and configuration approach:* Barrel lengths commonly offered include 10.5, 11.5, 12.5, 16, and a DMR/Special Purpose style option (including a model configured with a premium trigger).* The rifles share the same design DNA: free-float handguards, consistent furniture choices, consistent control layout, and a “Recce/SPR/standard AR” intent depending on length.The standout “why this is a sleeper” point is pricing discipline. He calls out that many variants land around $999 MSRP, with specialty variants costing more—but still positioned aggressively compared to the feature set and build quality.Build Quality Focus: The Stuff That Actually MattersMajor Pandemic spends a lot of time on the details that separate a “looks cool” AR from a rifle built to survive real use. His inspection checklist is the kind of stuff serious buyers care about:Assembly and staking (the “don’t skip this” category)* Castle nut staking is present—and he notes it’s done well (even double-staked on his example).* Gas key staking is also addressed and described as properly executed.* He checks torque and alignment on critical parts (handguard, gas block alignment, barrel nut, muzzle device timing) and reports it’s tight and correctly done.* He notes the rifle includes an upper/lower tensioning feature (a nylon-tipped tension screw) to reduce receiver play.The overall conclusion: this is not a “rattle trap.” It feels like a rifle assembled by people who care about the little things.Materials and Specs: What You’re Actually GettingThe episode calls the Zion’s parts and overall spec level “high grade,” placing it in the same general conversation as respected duty-grade and premium-tier ARs—not because it’s flashy, but because it checks core boxes.Key highlights discussed:* 4150 CMV HB barrel steel (he frames “HB” as a higher consistency/hardness spec within the 4150 CMV family).* Nitrided barrel and key components (he also mentions noticing additional black-coated springs, implying attention to corrosion resistance/finish consistency).* A bolt that is HPT/MPI (high pressure tested / magnetic particle inspected), the type of spec buyers associate with serious-use rifles.* Standard mil-spec receiver set with practical details like a standard trigger guard and “winter glove” usability.He also describes the rifle’s overall component tier as “AA / super grade”—not boutique, but absolutely not bargain-bin.What the Zion 15 Is… and What It Isn’tMajor Pandemic is pretty blunt here: he does not frame the Zion as a “budget rifle.” His view is that it’s a high-quality rifle priced like a mid-grade gun, and that’s why it’s a sleeper.He also calls out what IWI intentionally does not include:* No “kick-ass trigger” upgrade in the standard configuration (because triggers are personal preference and people upgrade differently).* No fancy extended charging handle by default (same logic—many people choose based on optics setup and ergonomics).That restraint is portrayed as part of IWI’s no-nonsense approach: ship a solid base rifle with the important stuff done right, and let the user pick the personal touches.Real-World Setup Talk: Optics, Sling, Suppressor PlansToward the end, the episode shifts into how he’s setting the rifle up and why. He describes running a modern red dot + magnifier style optic package and highlights the value of a system that can automatically adjust reticle/intensity behavior when magnified—useful for fast shooting up close and practical holds at distance. He also mentions adding backup irons, sling mounting, and keeping the rifle relatively clean rather than bolting on “a bunch of crap.”He closes with excitement about pairing the Zion with a compact, low-back-pressure 5.56 suppressor—with the practical note that any DI AR can raise questions about gas management once suppressed (and that he’ll evaluate whether it needs tuning).Bottom Line (SEO Takeaway)If you’re searching “IWI Zion 15 review,” “IWI Zion 15 quality,” “best AR under $1,000,” “IWI USA manufactured AR,” or “Major Pandemic’s Bunker Bar IWI Zion 15,” :The IWI Zion 15 is a high-quality, duty-grade style AR-15 that’s manufactured and assembled in-house by IWI USA, built with the right specs, assembled correctly, and priced like a sleeper. Major Pandemic’s verdict is essentially: it delivers “everything you need, nothing you don’t”—and it does it at a price point that makes a lot of overhyped rifles look like bad deals.Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Thanks for reading Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com! This post is public so feel free to share it.
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The IDF Israeli Defense Forces Rifle Modification Menusar and Katsar Short Rifle Mods
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comMajor Pandemic’s Bunker Bar: IDF Menusar History, Field Mods, and Why Short AR Carbines Never Went AwayIn this Major Pandemic’s Bunker Bar episode, Major Pandemic dives deep into the gritty, real-world evolution of the IDF Menusar (often discussed alongside “Kutsar” style short carbines) and explains why Israel may have run the longest, most practical “short AR” experiment on the planet. If you’ve searched for IDF Menusar, Israeli M16 short carbine, or Menusar field modifications, this episode is essentially a blueprint: how the IDF took large numbers of legacy M16A1-style rifles and turned them into constantly evolving, close-quarters-ready carbines—often with ugly, improvised changes that prioritized function over perfection.The Big Idea: The IDF Proved Short Carbines in Real Combat UseMajor Pandemic’s core argument is that the IDF didn’t just “try” short-barrel AR concepts—they lived them. Long before modern trends like “micro carbines” and compact CQB setups went mainstream, the IDF had decades of operational reasons to shorten rifles: tight hallways, dense urban environments, vehicle work, and a constant demand for mobility. The result was a long-running, real-world proving ground for the Menusar-style concept: short, handy rifles built to work—no matter how they looked.IDF Menusar Origins: Turning Full-Length M16s into Practical CarbinesA major section of the episode focuses on how these rifles were created from what was already in inventory. Rather than replacing everything with expensive new platforms, the IDF often kept older rifles running and adapted them to modern needs. That “use what you have” approach is the soul of the Menusar story: the IDF didn’t chase catalog correctness—they chased battlefield utility.Reliability First: “Make It Run” Tuning and Harsh-Use PrioritiesAnother key theme is how reliability was often prioritized over refinement. The episode explains how older, heavily-used rifles can be tuned to keep functioning in dirty conditions and hard service—even if the end result feels more aggressive and less “soft shooting.” The point is consistent: IDF Menusar builds were not collector showpieces. They were working guns designed to run when conditions were imperfect.The Most Iconic Menusar Field Mods (and Why They Look the Way They Do)This is where the episode gets especially searchable for IDF Menusar modifications:* Barrel cutdowns: Full-length barrels were frequently shortened to create handier carbines.* Basic re-crowning and re-threading: Some work was clean, some was crude—whatever got the rifle back into service.* Handguard and furniture improvisation: Cutting and adapting parts was common, and yes—tape shows up a lot. The episode explains tape as a practical solution for securing modified handguards, stabilizing add-ons, and mounting early accessories quickly.* Improvised lighting and add-ons: Before modern modular rail systems were everywhere, “field-expedient” mounting was the norm.* Magazine coupling hacks: The episode highlights the classic low-budget approach—using simple spacers and tape to create a functional two-mag setup that still clears the rifle’s ejection path.If you’re researching why IDF carbines often look “patched together,” this episode answers it: those choices were a feature, not a flaw—fast fixes, low cost, and immediate utility.A1 vs A2 Carry Handles: Why the IDF Used Whatever WorkedMajor Pandemic also addresses a common question from retro AR builders: did the IDF use A1 or A2 carry handles? The answer is basically: both, depending on what was available. The episode frames it as logistics and practicality—not preference. Simpler systems stayed in service because they were easy to keep running and easy to train around, while other parts were swapped in as inventories shifted over time.Why the IDF Menusar Still Matters TodayThe episode closes by connecting the Menusar mindset to modern AR thinking. The big takeaway for anyone searching IDF Menusar vs modern CQB rifles is that compact ARs didn’t suddenly become “smart” in the 2000s—they were validated through decades of hard, real-world use. The IDF’s long timeline of short-carbine adaptation helped reinforce a truth modern shooters now take for granted: short, lightweight carbines are extremely practical when mobility matters.Bottom line: This Major Pandemic’s Bunker Bar episode is a must-listen (and a solid reference summary) for anyone interested in IDF Menusar history, Israeli M16 carbine modifications, and the larger story of how “ugly but effective” rifles helped shape the modern short AR carbine concept.Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Thanks for reading Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com! This post is public so feel free to share it.
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Evolution of the Slim Micro Compact - Nothing New under the sun since 1903
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comPretty impressive when you see a 1903 stacked on a FN Reflex XL and realize they were essentially the same size.Major Pandemic’s Bunker Bar Podcast Summary (MajorPandemic.com): Micro-Compact Pistols Aren’t New — The Colt 1903 Started It AllIn this episode of Major Pandemic’s Bunker Bar on MajorPandemic.com, Major Pandemic cuts through the hype around today’s “brand-new” micro-slim, micro-compact pistol trend with a simple thesis: we’ve been here before. Modern carry guns may have better capacity, optics cuts, and comps—but the core concealed-carry concept was already solved more than a century ago.The Real Origin Story: The 1903 Concealed Carry StandardThe episode starts by rewinding to the early 1900s—when open hip carry was increasingly frowned upon in many “civilized” cities, and people demanded firearms that disappeared under clothing. That environment produced creative concealment options (tiny revolvers, derringers, oddball multi-barrel guns), but one pistol stood apart: the Colt Colt 1903 Pocket Hammerless.The host argues it wasn’t just “small for its time”—it was purpose-built for concealed carry, not adapted to it. Slim profile, rounded “melted” edges to prevent snagging, internal hammer (the original “hammerless” carry concept), and real defensive usability in pocket-friendly calibers like .32 ACP (and later .380 ACP variants). In other words: the DNA of modern carry pistols was already in the room.The Evolution: From PPK to Pocket .380 to Slim 9mmFrom there, the episode walks a timeline of “pre-microcompact microcompacts” that kept refining the same idea:* Walther Walther PP Series and Walther PPK as iconic compact carry pistols that kept the slim concealment concept alive for decades.* Pocket .32/.380 standouts like Seecamp and North American Arms (Guardian-style pistols) that built reputations around reliability in tiny packages.* The polymer pocket revolution, led by Kel-Tec (P32/P3AT style era) and later popularized to the masses by Ruger with the LCP wave—where “micro” often meant .380 and compromise sights, but unbeatable carry convenience.* The jump to slim 9mm with Kahr Arms and the PM9 concept: thin, shootable, reliable—yet still stuck in a single-stack capacity ceiling that would eventually get crushed by the next era.The Modern Breakthrough: Double-Stack Micros and “Micro Thin Compacts”The host frames SIG Sauer’s P365 moment as the market inflection point: double-stack capacity in a truly micro footprint. Then the category explodes—better ergonomics, better recoil systems, better triggers—and it becomes normal to expect 10+ rounds in guns that used to hold 6–8.He highlights how today’s “micro thin compact” crossover guns—like the FN Herstal FN Reflex XL—deliver a full-size-ish shooting feel with serious capacity, in dimensions shockingly close to the original 1903 concept. The episode even compares size and weight, using that match-up to prove the point: we didn’t invent a new idea—we finally perfected the old one.Where It’s Going: Dots, Comps, and the “Just Because You Can…” QuestionThe host closes by calling out the wild direction the category is taking—red dots, compensators, porting, and ultra-aggressive “mini comp gun” setups. He separates “awesome range/training tools” from “defensive carry choices,” noting potential downsides of ported/comped guns in close-retention shooting. Still, the verdict is clear: modern micro-compacts are in a golden era—and the road that got us here started in 1903.Bottom line: This Major Pandemic’s Bunker Bar episode on MajorPandemic.com is a history-backed reality check: today’s micro-compact boom is less a revolution and more a return to a century-old concealment blueprint—now upgraded with modern capacity, ergonomics, and performance.Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Thanks for reading Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com! This post is public so feel free to share it.
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MajorPandemic.com talking about Major Pandemics
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comMajor Pandemic’s Bunker Bar Podcast Summary (MajorPandemic.com): Worst Pandemics in History and the Hygiene Lessons We Still IgnoreOn MajorPandemic.com, Major Pandemic’s Bunker Bar takes a hard-left turn into real-world history with a fast, blunt, and practical breakdown of the worst pandemics in human history—and the uncomfortable truth that ties many of them together: basic hygiene, sanitation, pest control, and isolation could have prevented (or drastically reduced) massive death tolls.This Major Pandemic episode opens with the signature Bunker Bar tone—dark humor, straight talk, and an “adult advisory” attitude—before launching into a timeline of major outbreaks that reshaped civilizations. It’s part history lesson, part preparedness mindset, and part public-health reality check—delivered the way Major Pandemic’s Bunker Bar does best: no fluff, no filter.The Black Death (1347–1353): Filth, Rats, and a Medieval Sanitation CollapseThe episode leads with the Black Death, one of the most catastrophic events in history. Major Pandemic frames it as a perfect storm of medieval conditions: poor sewage systems, waste in streets, rodent infestations, overcrowding, and minimal handwashing. The point is simple for modern listeners: sanitation, waste control, and isolation weren’t “nice to have”—they were life-or-death infrastructure.Cholera Pandemics: Contaminated Water KillsNext, MajorPandemic.com highlights cholera as one of the most preventable mass outbreaks ever recorded. When sewage contaminates drinking water, the results are catastrophic. Major Pandemic’s Bunker Bar reinforces the basic fixes that ended cholera in many regions: clean water systems, separated sewage, boiling water, and food hygiene.Typhus, Lice, and War: Dirty Clothing Spreads DiseaseThe episode then moves into war-driven outbreaks like typhus and trench disease—where lice, filthy bedding, and no laundering create ideal transmission conditions. The host’s takeaway: you can’t out-medicate bad hygiene. Clean clothes, delousing, bathing, and sanitation were often as impactful as medical interventions.Spanish Flu and COVID-19: Hygiene Helps, Airborne Still WinsFor respiratory pandemics like the 1918 Spanish Flu and COVID-19, Major Pandemic draws a realistic line: hygiene matters, but airborne spread plus global mobility makes these harder to stop. The Bunker Bar framing is direct—if you’re sick, don’t share it: isolate when possible, cover coughs, and mask when needed to protect others.Smallpox and the “Pox Family”: Why Vaccines MatterSmallpox gets its own spotlight as a historic killer—and as proof that some pathogens require more than hygiene. Major Pandemic’s Bunker Bar uses it as a reminder that vaccination can be the decisive tool when sanitation alone can’t stop transmission.The Watch List: Bird Flu, Ebola, Marburg, Lassa, and CCHFThe episode wraps with a high-level “watch list” of modern threats: avian influenza (H5N1) for mutation potential, and severe hemorrhagic fevers like Ebola and Marburg for lethality (even if spread is typically more limited). It also mentions Lassa fever and Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever as ongoing concerns tied to exposure pathways where hygiene, protective measures, and prevention fundamentals still matter.Why This Matters (MajorPandemic.com Takeaway)This isn’t just a history episode. It’s a preparedness lesson. Major Pandemic boils the entire pandemic timeline down to a painfully simple reality:Clean hands, clean water, clean clothes, controlled pests, smart isolation, and early medical attention stop a shocking amount of suffering.If you want the no-nonsense version of pandemic history—told with the attitude and edge that defines Major Pandemic’s Bunker Bar—this episode on MajorPandemic.com is built for you.Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Thanks for reading Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com! This post is public so feel free to share it.
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Canik MC9 Prime with M04 Optic - First Shots & I Like it... its transformative
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comCanik METE MC9 Prime with M04: A Do-It-All Micro-Compact That Bridges Concealed Carry, Competition, and DutyIn this Major Pandemic’s Bunker Bar episode, the host breaks down the Canik METE MC9 Prime—specifically the “full package” that includes the M04 Mechanik red dot—and makes a simple argument: this pistol is one of the most complete, feature-dense micro/compact 9mm options for the money, especially for shooters who want one gun that can cover multiple roles without immediately dumping cash into upgrades.A Premium “Everything Included” Kit (Not the Usual Cardboard Box)The host spends real time on the unboxing because it’s part of the value proposition. Instead of the typical “manual and a lock,” the MC9 Prime arrives in a rigid hard case with organized cutouts and a surprisingly deep accessory loadout—swappable backstraps, tools, a cleaning kit, a loader, holster components, and a presentation that feels premium compared to many higher-priced handguns. The takeaway: for new shooters, this eliminates a bunch of early “month two” purchases; for experienced shooters, it’s just a refreshingly complete setup.M04 Mechanik Optic: Feature-Rich Out of the BoxA big highlight is the included M04 Mechanik optic. In the episode, it’s described as offering user-selectable circle/dot or circle-dot, shake-awake / auto on-off, long advertised runtime, and solar backup—positioned as a legitimate included optic rather than a throwaway add-on.Why It “Transforms” Across RolesThe core of the episode is that the MC9 Prime seems to sit in an unusual middle lane—slim enough to carry, fast enough to shoot like a competition-leaning gun, and substantial enough to feel duty-capable depending on how you configure it.* Slim / concealed carry: The host notes it’s slightly thinner than a Glock-sized baseline and emphasizes that removing the external magwell is quick (one screw), which helps it carry flatter and cleaner.* Competition-ish speed: The integrated compensation system and “race-gun-like” features—like the flat-face trigger and aggressive control surfaces—support faster follow-up shots and a more controllable shooting rhythm.* Duty-ready confidence: He repeatedly comes back to reliability. His personal test includes feeding it cheap range ammo and even imperfect reloads; his claim is that it “eats anything,” which is exactly the type of trait people associate with hard-use pistols.Feature Stack That Drives the HypeThe host (and the show’s assistant voice) runs through the highlights that make it feel “bigger than a micro”:* Enhanced compensated barrel/slide with an integrated expansion chamber to reduce muzzle rise* Night sights front and rear* Flat-face trigger with a crisp break and fast reset* Aggressive slide serrations, upgraded slide stop, and improved handling details* Textured grip surfaces and improved undercut geometry for recoil control* 17+1 capacity, shipping with two 17-round magazinesPrice-to-Performance PunchHe frames the MC9 Prime as a value hammer: the compensated version alone is positioned as a strong deal, and the optic-included package is portrayed as competing with (or undercutting) the cost of buying a more basic pistol and upgrading into the same feature tier later.Bottom line: The Canik METE MC9 Prime with M04 is presented as a rare “multi-role” micro-compact—one that can shift between slim concealed carry, fast competition-style shooting, and duty-like reliability expectations with minimal changes, while delivering a premium kit experience and standout features at a price point that’s hard to ignore.Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Thanks for reading Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com! This post is public so feel free to share it.
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93
Ruger GP100 Snubby .357 Magnum 7-Shot Revolver
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comRuger GP100 2.5-Inch 7-Shot Snubnose: Major Pandemic’s Bunker Bar Podcast Summary (Trail Revolver Breakdown)In this episode of Major Pandemic’s Bunker Bar, the host goes full “wheel gun nerd” on one of the most unusual—and surprisingly practical—revolvers in the Ruger lineup: the Ruger GP100 2.5-inch 7-shot .357 Magnum snubnose (Model 1774). If you think “snubby” automatically means punishing recoil, mediocre sights, and compromise everywhere, this episode argues the opposite: this is essentially a full-size GP100 that just happens to wear a 2.5-inch barrel.What Makes This GP100 Snubnose DifferentMost snub-nosed revolvers are built on smaller frames and trimmed down in ways that sacrifice shootability. This one isn’t. The host emphasizes that the 2.5-inch GP100 is a big, beefy large-frame .357, and that weight (around 36 ounces) turns into a real advantage: less recoil, more stability, and better control with everything from .38 Special to hotter .357 loads. Yes, you still get the classic .357 “fireball” out of a short barrel—because physics—but the gun stays composed instead of dancing around like lightweight snubbies.The Headline Feature: 7 Rounds in a GP100 CylinderA standard GP100 is usually a six-shot. Here, Ruger “stuffed seven rounds” into the same general cylinder footprint, creating what the host jokingly calls a “high-capacity assault revolver.” The practical takeaway is solid: if you’re carrying snake shot for trail work, you’re not giving up as much defensive capacity as you would with a five-shot or a typical six-shot.Trail-Gun Utility: Snake Shot + Magnum CapabilityThe host is a big fan of CCI snake shot loads (and similar options) for real-world trail problems—snakes, pests, and nuisance critters—because they solve the “close-range problem” fast. He also argues the GP100 platform gives you the flexibility to run .38 Special for comfort, .357 Magnum for serious threats, and specialized loads when needed, all in the same revolver.Sights, Extraction, and Shootability—No Snubnose “Gotchas”One of the most interesting points is how little Ruger compromised:* Fully adjustable rear sight with a high-visibility front (and easy swap compatibility with other GP100 sight options).* Full-length extractor—a big deal on short-barrel revolvers where partial extractors can leave you fighting sticky cases. Here, extraction behaves like a full-size gun.* GP100 grip system with easy swaps and tons of aftermarket options, letting you tune comfort and recoil control.Trigger and Refinements vs the Earlier RunThe host compares this newer production to earlier versions (notably around the 2017-era run) and says Ruger cleaned up the rough edges—especially the double-action staging and overall smoothness. His read: it now feels closer to a “Ruger-Wesson” trigger—more controllable and stageable like many people love on Smith & Wesson, while still retaining the Ruger character.Availability Note: Buy It When You See ItA repeated theme is that this model has come and gone through catalog cycles and distributor availability. The host’s advice is simple: if you want this specific 2.5-inch 7-shot GP100, don’t assume it’ll always be easy to find.Bottom line: This episode sells the Ruger GP100 2.5-inch 7-shot as a rare combo—snub-nosed carryability with full-size revolver shootability, adjustable sights, strong extraction, and legit trail versatility. If you’re hunting for a rugged .357 that doesn’t beat you up and still delivers real capability, this one lands squarely in the “seriously consider it” category.Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Thanks for reading Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com! This post is public so feel free to share it.
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92
Common Sense Gun Lubrication - My Top 3 Recommendations based on Testing
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comFirearms Lubrication Reality Check(Hydrodynamic vs Boundary vs Dry-Film, Plus Heat + Water Behavior)FireClean had its backside handed to them from a public relations perspective after the wake of what I now refer to as LubeGate 2015. For many gun owners this was shocking news when Vuurwapenblog.com provided data indicating that a spectral analysis noted significant similarities between FireClean and canola oil — ohh no!!!What most people tend to leave off the headline is that Vuurwapenblog is the only editor which had conducted a long term one year “gumming” storage test of FireClean which the lube passed. He also went on to note that he still uses and supports the use of FireClean even after his report and published analysis. The kicker is that allegedly as of March 2016 FireClean is now suing this editor for defamation and slander — this is not the way to win hearts and make friends.What more of the republishers of the Vuurwapenblog’s analysis miss is that even if FireClean is predominantly canola oil, it’s still a legitimate gun lube, so I believe the lube has been unfairly treated by the media. After all, none of the gun lube we buy is much more than some type of basic wax, vegetable, or petroleum based lube. Not to intentionally pimp a fellow writer’s site even more, however he now has a ton of spectral analysis plus the totally moronic public relations FireClean has delivered in response to his original analysis — it’s worth a trip over there to read through his posts.Don’t take my word for it: vegetable based lubes are still awesome. A professional group of corrosion nerds called the National Association of Corrosion Engineers published a paper and study which stated:“Recently, the use of vegetable oils and their esters has been found to offer many similar properties to their petroleum derived counterparts.”— NACE, 2010The paper tested many perspectives of corrosion with a variety of vegetable based lubes and found they performed similar to standard petroleum lube. If FireClean is vegetable based, it would seem that it really does not matter at all. See the sleep-inducing NACE paper here (if you’re having trouble falling asleep, it’s basically NyQuil in PDF form).The $15 Bottle Myth (and Why You Don’t Need Tactical Unicorn Tears)Many firearms owners are conditioned to think that gun oil can only come in a $15 4oz bottle, but the reality is that pretty much any lube will work short term — any lube. Long term storage and operation in very harsh environments is a different lubrication requirement completely requiring a corrosion protectant additive and acidically neutral lube.The personal question I ask all readers is:“Do you operate in such a hardcore environment and drive your firearms so hard that a WD-40 or quart of Mobil 1 automotive oil will not satisfy any lubrication need you might have?”I do not — and WD-40 or Mobil 1 works fine for all my general purpose firearm cleaning, lubrication and storage needs, as does Marvel Mystery Oil, 3-in-1, Norvey Turbine Oil and a host of other general purpose lubes.People will say that “lube is lube” — however that is not the case. KY Jelly for instance is not a good gun lube, but then again Mobil 1 is not recommended for fornication. When it comes to firearms, an aggressive rust and corrosion inhibitor is a required additive to any oil you expect to prevent surface damage.Too thin and oil on firearms runs off, then dries off and ultimately leaves your firearm unprotected. Conversely thick grease is a pain in the butt to apply/remove and when cold can in some cases actually lock up the weapon. There is a happy medium of oil weight, viscosity, and corrosion resistance, but there are a ton of lubricants that meet all those criteria. Some work better than others for a specific need. It is important to note that corrosion inhibitors can be properly suspended and applied in either water or oil lubricant bases.If you are assembling handguns and want to assure there is no potential what-so-ever of a locked or gummed up slide from extended long term storage, you may want to use something like Anti-Seize like Glock does. Long term gun storage may require a heavy grease or heavy oil or wax based protectant. Water displacement is another lube trait as well. Some lubes are also pretty good solvents and provide a decent one shot clean, lubricate, and protect. This category is known generally as CLP lubricants. Within that general purpose lubrication category, a blind man in the lubrication aisle at Ace Hardware could not make a poor decision for gun lubrication.Lubrication Types (Reality, Not Marketing)There are two primary lubrication regimes relevant to firearms:Hydrodynamic lubricationLiquid oil film separates metal surfacesBoundary lubricationSolid additives (wax, ceramic, graphite, PTFE, copper) fill micro-pores and carry loadThere is also a third category that matters for firearms:Dry-film / bonded lubricantsMinimal liquid, surface-bonded protection (this is where Sentry Solutions lives)Hydrophobic vs Hydrophilic (Why Your Gun Rusts Even When You “Oiled It”)Here’s the part most gun-lube marketing conveniently ignores:* Hydrophobic lubricants repel water (good — water can’t hang out on the metal)* Hydrophilic lubricants absorb/hold/emulsify water (bad — moisture camps out and starts corrosion)Firearms strongly prefer hydrophobic behavior, especially if you sweat on guns, hunt in humidity, shoot corrosive ammo, or live anywhere that isn’t a desert.Real-World Abuse Testing (Because I’m Not Normal)Over the years, I have tested a number of typical and non-typical lubes just to see how they work. Note that I am not recommending all of these lubes, but a few I really like. I have a raw naked un-anodized ASA 5.45x39 AR build which fires exclusively corrosive ammo. I should see some corrosion, correct? Nothing I tested on this build delivered any signs of corrosion and I treated this rifle really badly waiting at least 1–2 weeks between each cleaning.One of the rather unforgiving platforms on lubricants are the insanely dirty semi-auto .22LR pistols — my preferred lubes are wax based because they clean up faster and last longer. Let’s look at a few lubes I have tested and supply some recommendations based on nothing more than my un-scientific opinion and experience.WORKABLE LUBE OPTIONSCooking Vegetable ShorteningWhen I tested this it thinned very quickly but was frankly a little messy to apply and drippy after the gun heated up — but held up really well. It is a great lube if you have nothing else, however the big shortcoming is that there are zero rust inhibitors. Use this and your gun will rust over time. Vegetable based lubes will also go rancid after expiration, so expect an off scent after about a year. Butter flavor rocks.* Lube Type: Hydrodynamic* Rust Inhibitors: No* Hydrophobic vs Hydrophilic: ❌ More hydrophilic than you want* Operating Temp: ~32°F–300°F* Special: Super freaking cheap and can even smell like cookies if you use the butter flavor.Canola Cooking SprayThis worked awesome, and was super easy to apply. I really liked this lube and it stayed put and lasted quite a while after a couple light coats. Clean up was also very easy which typically only required a soft rag wipe down. Again there are no rust inhibitors and there is an expiration date, so you are taking chances with rust and smell.* Lube Type: Hydrodynamic* Rust Inhibitors: No* Hydrophobic vs Hydrophilic: ❌ Hydrophilic tendencies* Operating Temp: ~20°F–400°F* Special: Cheap and easy spray can application.Virgin Olive Cooking OilThis is a good vegetable based lube which is good on toast as well, however it is not pH balanced which means the acidity will attack gun finishes over time. The oil will eventually go rancid. Interestingly olive oil does seem to have about the perfect consistency for a gun oil.* Lube Type: Hydrodynamic* Rust Inhibitors: Antioxidants (sort of)* Hydrophobic vs Hydrophilic: ❌ Not ideal around moisture* Operating Temp: ~32°F–375°F* Special: Good on toast, frying meat balls, and a great workable lube in an emergency.Renaissance WaxNot really a lube, however it is a great example of a specialized protectant designed to prevent rust and corrosion on metal even with significant hand contact and environmental exposure. Perfect for swords and those top end collector guns that live in a safe. Not a lubricant. Carnauba wax does a pretty good job too.* Lube Type: Not a lubricant* Rust Inhibitors: Yes* Hydrophobic vs Hydrophilic: ✅ Strongly hydrophobic* Operating Temp: 300°F+* Special: Won’t stain/discolor, acid neutral, water/alcohol resistant, museum preferred.VaselineYep, the same all purpose lubricant servicing personal needs all over the body — and also a very awesome grease alternative for everything from bearings to bike chains, and it even works well as a gun coating for long term storage. Pain in the butt to work with and gets everywhere… but you knew that already. I found it gets a little sluggish for BCGs and triggers when things turn cold.* Lube Type: Hydrodynamic* Rust Inhibitors: Water displacement / barrier effect* Hydrophobic vs Hydrophilic: ✅ Hydrophobic* Operating Temp: ~20°F–130°F* Special: Works on humans and guns. Not proud of it. Still true.Mineral OilGenerations have been using mineral oil. It is 100% food safe and used on wooden handle kitchen and outdoor knives, sewing machines, and watches/clocks. Rem Oil and Hoppes No 9 is reportedly mostly mineral oil with additional rust inhibiting additives. Mineral oil is an awesome all around lubricant, however I found it requires frequent reapplication for the natural rust inhibitors to work.* Lube Type: Hydrodynamic* Rust Inhibitors: Mild / natural* Hydrophobic vs Hydrophilic: ✅ Hydrophobic* Operating Temp: ~-10°F–250°F* Special: Available anywhere and it is cheap.Marvel Mystery Air Tool OilThis petroleum based lube has antioxidant and rust inhibitor additives. It will dissipate slowly over time down toward a thicker red grease, but it takes years. This was my go-to oil for years, however I now prefer other options. Reapply often. Great rust inhibitor and corrosion oil, but there are better options that don’t have long term gumming tendencies.* Lube Type: Hydrodynamic* Rust Inhibitors: Yes* Hydrophobic vs Hydrophilic: ✅ Hydrophobic* Operating Temp: ~-40°F–250°F* Special: Designed for extremely high cycle rates.MAJOR PANDEMIC RECOMMENDED LUBESWould I recommend cooking oils, preservation waxes, Vaseline, or raw mineral oil as lube when other more appropriate options are available? Heck no. Natural deterioration and lack of rust inhibitors are the major reasons to look elsewhere. Greases and petroleum jelly are just too heavy for general purpose firearm lubrication unless long term storage is the goal.I am not the guy attracted to snake oils or whatever lube is hot this month. My grandfather’s guns were cared for with the equivalent of motor oil or 3-in-1 oil and they all look great nearly almost a hundred years later. Here are a few lubes I like and use a lot.White Lightning Clean RideThis is a paraffin/wax Heptane alcohol based lubricant with Cerflon additive. That means it delivers both hydrodynamic lubrication and boundary lubrication. This is one of my favorite lubes for .22LR firearms and really dirty 5.45x39 ARs running corrosive ammo. Dries to a soft film which melts when heated but solidifies. It is also very clean and clear so you won’t have oil spots all over your clothes from concealed carry. Application requires full cleaning with brake cleaner before application. Parts can be hosed off without removing the lube.* Lube Type: Hydrodynamic + Boundary* Rust Inhibitors: Yes* Hydrophobic vs Hydrophilic: ✅ Hydrophobic* Operating Temp: ~-20°F–300°F* Special: High lubricity, debris capture, self cleaning (shedding)Norvey Turbine Finest Turbine Oil in Zoom SpoutThink of this paraffin/wax mineral based oil as Hoppes No 9 combined with wax. The result is an extremely long service life with zero gumming. Consistency of medium weight automotive oil but sort of dries to a soft film. It delivers a silky smooth feel unlike any other lube I have used. For bearings it is awesome, and it makes 1911s, charging handles, BCGs, and bolt actions slide like glass. Probably my #1 go-to lube, but it does not have a cleaner additive — clean with brake cleaner before application. This oil can handle anything a firearms will throw at it. After all, it’s designed for 50,000+ RPM and high heat. Zoom Spout is just the bottle — Norvey is the lube.* Lube Type: Hydrodynamic + Boundary* Rust Inhibitors: Yes* Hydrophobic vs Hydrophilic: ✅ Hydrophobic* Operating Temp: ~-10°F–300°F (flash point ~302°F)* Special: Non gumming, very long service life, clean running, doesn’t pick up dirt like petroleum oils.VersaChem or LockTite Anti-Seize(Highly Recommended)This is the lube I use on my core CCW pistol slides and is the same magic copper grease used by Glock. Most anti-seize greases are copper/graphite/petroleum formulas which deliver both hydrodynamic and boundary lubrication. A tiny amount is all that’s required and it will not migrate/run. Where you put it is where it stays. Apply with a tiny screwdriver or toothpick — messy application otherwise.* Lube Type: Hydrodynamic + Boundary* Rust Inhibitors: Yes* Hydrophobic vs Hydrophilic: ✅ Hydrophobic* Operating Temp: -65°F to 2000°F+* Special: High temp, non-migrating, long life.WD40(Highly Recommended as CLP alternative)There are WD40 fanatics both for and against this historic lube. Some hate it and some love it. When disassembled parts are saturated with WD-40 and allowed to dissipate, it works well. If WD-40 is just sprayed into dirty contained mechanism (think Ruger Mark III .22LR) without disassembly or without a full cleaning level saturation, WD-40 will gum up as a result of whatever it dissolved. Degrease first and likely you will be a fan again of WD-40. In many tests it has performed amazingly well as a corrosion inhibitor. Where it falls down is very long term storage where handling occurs and a thicker protection product is required. I use this as my all purpose cleaner and lube-in-one.* Lube Type: Hydrodynamic* Rust Inhibitors: Yes* Hydrophobic vs Hydrophilic: ✅ Hydrophobic (water displacement is its entire identity)* Operating Temp: ~-50°F–160°F* Special: Everywhere, cheap, easy, water dispersing, cleaner/lube/protect blend.Mobil 1 Synthetic Oil - 0-40 weight or 5-50 weight(Highly Recommended)In a recent interview with Andrew Barnes (President BPM - Barnes Precision Machine), he noted to me that he uses Mobil 1 synthetic oil on firearms personally and in production. Since BPM is one of the largest OEM manufacturers of AR parts, I tend to trust that they know a thing or two about lube. A lot of manufacturers use Mobil 1 or equivalent as their factory assembly oil. Car cylinders and AR15 BCGs have similarities. Each car cylinder cycles and fires around 108,000 times per minute at 60 MPH with direct exposure to combustion during each cycle. By comparison a Dillon Minigun is 3000 rounds per minute where the lube is not exposed to combustion. If Mobil 1 can guarantee a 5000 mile oil change life, it should handle firearm demands. My method is clean with WD-40 and then lube friction/corrosion points with Mobil 1. A $10 quart will last you a lifetime.* Lube Type: Hydrodynamic + Boundary* Rust Inhibitors: Yes* Hydrophobic vs Hydrophilic: ✅ Hydrophobic* Operating Temp: ~-40°F–450–500°F* Special: Wear protection, deposit control, long life, rust/corrosion, high temp.Frog LubeFrogLube is one of those products that smells great and triggers internet fights. When properly applied (yes, that includes heat-setting it and not slathering it like lotion), it works very well, repels moisture, and cleans up easily. When improperly applied, it can gum and make a gun feel like it’s cycling through maple syrup. That’s not chemistry — that’s user error.* Lube Type: Boundary (wax/film style)* Rust Inhibitors: Yes (protective film behavior)* Hydrophobic vs Hydrophilic: ✅ Hydrophobic when set* Operating Temp: ~-20°F–400°F (best when heat-set)* Special: Easy cleanup, polarizing reputation, smells like wintergreen and arguments.Sentry SolutionsSentry Solutions (Tuf-Glide / Tuf-Cloth) is not a traditional wet oil. It’s a dry-film / bonded lubricant, meaning it leaves a thin surface-bonded film that doesn’t stay tacky. This makes it excellent for carry guns, dusty environments, and people who hate lint and grime sticking to their lube like it’s flypaper.* Lube Type: Dry-film / Bonded (boundary behavior)* Rust Inhibitors: Yes* Hydrophobic vs Hydrophilic: ✅ Strongly hydrophobic* Operating Temp: ~-100°F–450°F* Special: Non-tacky film, great moisture exclusion, stays clean.FINAL THOUGHTSEveryone has their favorite firearm lube. It may be FireClean, RemOil, Frog Lube, or Birchwood Casey Defender… or a seemingly unlimited number of lube options now on the market. The reality though is that Mobil 1 Synthetic is $10 a quart and my recent purchase of Norvey Turbine Oil was $9.99 from Ace. I could live the rest of my gun-toting life with just these two lubes for my heritage heirloom guns all the way to my beater AR15s.Whatever your choice, just make sure to use something. In discussions with two different major firearms manufacturers both indicated it really does not matter what non-grease oil you use as long as it has rust inhibitors and you do use something. Both noted that no gun owner will outrun the abilities of any basic oil.Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Thanks for reading Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com! This post is public so feel free to share it.
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91
Don't Worry About Burning Out Your AR Barrel
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comStop Stressing About Barrel Wear — You’ll Spend More on Ammo Than the Barrel Will Ever CostIn this episode of Major Pandemic’s Bunker Bar, the host tackles one of the most over-discussed topics on gun forums: AR-15 barrel life—and whether you should be worried about “shooting out” your barrel. The short answer, delivered in true Bunker Bar fashion: don’t worry about it. In the grand scheme of owning, training with, and feeding an AR, a barrel is a wear item that’s cheap, replaceable, and rarely the first thing that should keep you up at night.A big part of the confusion is that “shot out” means different things to different shooters. If you’re a match shooter, your barrel might be “done” the moment your quarter-MOA rifle turns into a half-MOA rifle. But for most people—defensive shooters, practical shooters, hunters, and general-purpose AR owners—there’s a huge gap between “not as perfect as it used to be” and “unserviceable.” A barrel can lose some peak precision and still be completely reliable and more than accurate enough for realistic use. True end-of-life is the ugly scenario: erosion so severe bullets won’t stabilize, groups go completely sideways, accuracy collapses, and reliability becomes questionable. Most shooters will never reach that point unless they’re actively trying.The host breaks down what actually kills barrels, and he frames it as an 80/20 problem.Heat is the #1 barrel killer. If you run your rifle like a machine gun, it will wear like one. Occasional mag dumps aren’t the issue—what accelerates wear is repeated high-volume strings with little to no cooling. Constant “burndown” behavior and relentless heat saturation eat throats and rifling faster than anything else. But if your AR use is more realistic—training cadence, hunting pace, controlled strings, and cooling breaks—your barrel can last a very long time. For some shooters with slow-fire usage, it’s not crazy to think of barrel life in “multiple lifetimes,” simply because they’ll never hit the round count or heat profile required to burn one out.Ammo is the #2 factor. Cheap, high-volume bimetal/steel-case ammo is harder on barrels than brass. If maximizing barrel life matters to you, stick with brass-case ammo—especially if you invested in a nicer rifle or a higher-quality barrel. The host points out that extreme high-volume testing shows how quickly steel-case can chew through barrels in a worst-case scenario, while brass-case can keep going far longer even under heavy use.After that, the discussion hits the “supporting cast” of barrel life: barrel material and bore treatment (chrome-lined duty barrels tend to be the durability kings; nitrided barrels can be very good but QC matters; stainless match barrels may offer performance advantages but typically wear sooner). Then he calls out a sneaky barrel killer that a lot of people ignore: bad cleaning habits. Over-aggressive cleaning—especially with stiff metal rods and harsh brushing—can damage the bore and crown and wreck accuracy faster than normal shooting ever would. Modern cleaning methods and a lighter touch are the smarter long-game.Then comes the mic-drop economics: if you truly shoot enough to “burn out” a barrel, you’ve already spent thousands on ammo. At that point, stressing about the cost of a replacement barrel is like worrying about the price of tires after buying the car, the gas, and driving cross-country ten times.Bottom line: Stop stressing about barrel wear. Manage heat, choose ammo wisely, don’t wreck your barrel with aggressive cleaning, and shoot your rifle. If you ever reach the point where the barrel needs replacing, you’ll already be experienced—and financially invested—enough that swapping a barrel won’t even be the biggest line item in the story.Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Thanks for reading Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com! This post is public so feel free to share it.
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New for 2026 Eotech EXPS3 HD, All Aluminum HWS & New EFLX-CE (Closed Emitter) Reflex Sight
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comEOTECH Introduces the EFLX-CE Closed Emitter MiniReflex SightPlymouth, MI (January 2026) – EOTECH is committed to delivering high-performing, dependable pistol optics that shooters can trust with their life.This commitment continues with the introduction of the EFLX ClosedEmitter (EFLX-CE). Dedicated to meet the needs of our customer base,the EFLX-CE provides a fully enclosed housing to protect the LED emitterfrom damage or debris.The EFLX-CE offers a durable, heavy-duty 7075 aluminum housing thatprovides a square viewing window. Large, recessed, rubberized buttons are positioned on the top of thehousing making adjustments easy for both left and right-handed shooters. These buttons control eightdaytime brightness settings, including an ultra-bright level and night vision setting. And in case ofcatastrophic situations, a built-in rear iron sight is integrated into the housing to get you through it.The EFLX-CE’s improved electronics offer selectable reticle options that include either a 3MOA aimingdot, 42MOA circle, or the circle/dot combination. Slots on the windage and elevation screws have beenenlarged to accommodate a tool, coin, or even spent brass. These adjustments offer precise 1MOAclicks with the subtle audible sound and solid detent.The EFLX-CE’s customized electronics offer a programmablesleep mode function. Through simple button manipulation,users can choose between a 10-minute, 1-hour, or 12-hoursleep mode or disable this function entirely. While enabled,and with even the slightest movement, the EFLX-CE canpower up through its Shake-Awake technology. A single2032 battery provides approximately 25,000 hours of run timewith the single dot and when it’s time to change the battery,an easy access, side-load battery compartment makes theprocess quick and straightforward.The mounting configuration is compatible with both Leupold® Delta Point Pro™ or Shield® RMS-c™footprints. Two torx flathead fasteners and a tool are included for mounting the EFLX-CE to the slide.The hardened EOTECH EFLX-CE removes the fear of LED damage or obscurity due to dirt, water, orother debris. This lightweight, compact, and cost-effective optical solution was engineered with theprofessional pistol shooter in mind. Consisting of both foreign and domestic parts, the EFLX-CE is proudlyassembled in the USA.EOTECH EFLX-CE Mini Reflex Sight Technical Specifications● Magnification: 1X● Illumination Source: LED● Eye Relief: Unlimited● Reticle: 3MOA dot, 42MOA ring, or ring/dot combination● Dot Color: Red● Weight: 1.46oz (41.4g)● Size: (L x W x H) 1.6” x 1.2” x 1.1” (41.2 x 31 x 28.2mm)● Windage/Elevation Adjustment: 1 MOA● Battery Type: 1 × CR2032● Battery Life: Approx. 25,000 hours at brightness level 5 (dot only)● Daytime Settings: 8 (7 daytime / 1 Ultra-Bright)● Night Vision Settings: 1● Switch Type: Push Buttons● Mounting Interface: Delta Point Pro™ and Shield RMS-c™● Housing Material: 7075 Aluminum● Housing Color: Black● MSRP: $479For more information, please visit www.eotechinc.comEOTECH Launches New EXPS3 HD, All Aluminum HWSPlymouth, MI (January 2026) – When something is ultra-tough and can withstand even the harshest conditions,you must ask yourself “Why would I want to make thiseven tougher?” The answer is because you can. Forover 30 years, EOTECH has been manufacturingdurable, dependable Holographic Weapon Sights foruse in law enforcement, military, competition, huntingand recreational use. It has become the go-to 1X opticyou can count on. HWS optics were designed to includea ruggedized aluminum hood that wraps around thehousing of the sight to provide extreme strength anddurability. Until now.New for 2026, EOTECH introduces the EXPS3 HD, featuring an all-aluminum housing. This Heavy-Dutymodel allows EOTECH to eliminate the aluminum hood and provide users with an enhanced field-of-viewand better situational awareness.The EXPS3 HD includes a few new features never offered in an HWS. First, the rubberized buttons thatmanipulate reticle brightness and NV settings, has been replaced with an easy-to-use rotary dial. Thisdial offers 7 daylight and 4 night-vision brightness settings as well as an OFFposition. In addition, the dial offers an Auto-Brightness setting that automaticallyadjusts to surrounding light conditions, removing the need for manualadjustments. Lastly, the rotary dial allows EOTECH to incorporate Shake-Awaketechnology that puts the optic in sleep mode after a period of inactivity. Thisprogrammable sleep mode can be set to 10 minutes, 1-hour, 12-hours, ordisabled completely. This feature works in all daytime, NV, and auto-brightsettings and preserves battery life, while powering the optic on with only theslightest movement.The EXPS3 HD weighs the same as the legacy EXPS (11.2 oz) and is powered by a single, CR123lithium battery. Integrated into the housing is a locking, adjustable quick-detach base that allows forimmediate removal or attachment. The trusty 68MOA ring and 1MOA aiming dot providesuncompromising speed to target and accuracy. Both waterproof and fogproof, this battle-tested sightworks even if the sight window breaks or becomes partially obstructed.The HD model is ideal for close to medium distance engagements. With its rugged metal construction andits ability to withstand extreme levels of recoil, it can be used with virtually any firearm and caliber. TheHeavy Duty EXPS3 from EOTECH. The tough just got tougher.EOTECH EXPS3 HD SpecificationsL x W x H: 3.8” x 2.3” x 2.6” (96.5 x 58.4 x 65 mm)Weight: 11.2 oz (317.5 g)Water Resistant: 33ft (10m) depthMount: 1” Weaver or MIL-STD-1913 railZero Adjustments: 0.5 MOA per clickBrightness: 7 daylight settings4 NV settings (night vision compatible model)1 Auto-BrightnessPower Source: 1 x CR123 batteryBattery Life: 1,000 continuous hours at nominal setting 4 at room temperatureCountry of Origin: Made in the USAMSRP: $999 (EXPS3HD-0)For more information, please visit www.eotechinc.comMajor Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Thanks for reading Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com! This post is public so feel free to share it.
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Run CZ Scorpion mags on your Springfield Kuna and an FRT AR15 FCG
Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Thanks for reading Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com! This post is public so feel free to share it.Springfield Kuna Scorpion-Mag Lower Upgrade: Nexus Firearms Fixes the Biggest ProblemWelcome back to Major Pandemic’s Bunker Bar, the cold-world underground hideout where the wine list is deep, the liquor never ends, and the gear talk gets brutally practical. This episode is all about one of the most exciting upgrades to the Springfield Kuna platform: a billet lower receiver from Nexus Firearms that lets the Kuna run CZ Scorpion magazines and AR-15 fire control components.The Kuna’s “three big gripes” out of the gateThe Kuna showed up looking like a premium PCC: roller-delayed, high-quality billet upper, and a price point that made people pay attention. But three complaints surfaced immediately:* Proprietary magazinesThe Kuna mags are affordable and reliable—but they’ve been consistently hard to find. When owners can’t buy extra mags, the platform’s long-term appeal takes a hit fast.* Proprietary trigger systemThe factory trigger is described as good for a PCC, but the bigger issue is being locked into a proprietary trigger format instead of the massive, proven AR trigger ecosystem.* Polymer lower on an otherwise premium-looking gunEven if the polymer lower is durable and lightweight, a billet upper paired with a polymer lower creates a mismatch for buyers who want a truly “premium” feel.Nexus Firearms delivers what people wantedNexus didn’t just offer one solution—they offered two lower receiver options:* AR-style controls with a push-button mag release* Scorpion-style paddle mag release for those who prefer the classic Scorpion manual of armsThe big win: both versions take CZ Scorpion magazines, which instantly solves availability, capacity, and ecosystem headaches—especially for anyone already sitting on a pile of Scorpion mags.Why Scorpion mags are the practical upgradeSwitching to Scorpion mags isn’t just about preference—it’s about logistics. The episode highlights:* Better magazine availability* More capacity options (including 35-round patterns)* Similar pricing to Kuna mags, but without the “always out of stock” issueIt also recommends Magpul Scorpion mags as a dependable, consistent option versus some OEM variability.AR triggers change everythingBy moving to an AR-spec fire control group, the platform becomes dramatically more flexible. Instead of being locked into a proprietary Kuna trigger, you can now choose from the enormous universe of AR triggers—whether that’s a crisp duty trigger, a competition unit, or simply swapping setups over time without special proprietary parts.This is a major “future-proofing” move: triggers evolve, tastes change, and the AR ecosystem is the most supported trigger ecosystem in the country.Looks, feel, and performance: “This makes it look like a $2,500 gun”One of the strongest takeaways is how much the billet lower changes the Kuna’s presentation. With billet on billet, the gun reportedly looks and feels like it belongs in the same “premium PCC” visual tier as platforms like the MPX or higher-end European options.Reliability feedback is also clear: several hundred rounds—including low-grade range ammo—ran with zero malfunctions. The ergonomics were praised, and the overall system stayed “flawless” after the swap.Minor downside and a quick fixTwo small notes:* You lose the left-side ambi mag release found on the original setup.* The AR-style paddle mag release spring tension was considered too light on the early sample.The spring issue was solved quickly by adding additional spring tension, and the expectation is that production refinements will address it cleanly.The value argument: “This is worth the price of 10 mags”With the lower priced in the mid-$300s range (depending on mag release style), the episode frames the upgrade as a smarter investment than chasing hard-to-find proprietary mags. If you already own Scorpion mags—or want the security of widely available mags—this upgrade is positioned as the obvious path.Bottom lineIf you love the Springfield Kuna but hate proprietary limitations, this Nexus Firearms lower is the upgrade that turns the Kuna into what many shooters wanted from day one: Scorpion mag compatibility, AR trigger flexibility, and a truly premium billet look—without sacrificing reliability. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.majorpandemic.com/subscribe
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I call BS - No Difference between AR15 10.5, 11.5, 12.5 barrels
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comAR-15 Short Barrel “War” Is Mostly Noise: How to Make a 10.5 Shoot Like a 16 (With a Smarter Zero)Meta title: 10.5 vs 11.5 vs 12.5 AR-15 Barrels: The Truth + Best ZeroMeta description: Major Pandemic argues the 10.5 vs 11.5 vs 12.5 debate is overblown—and explains how a 200-yard zero can “true” a short barrel to match 16-inch BDC holds out to ~333 yards.BONUS TRACK - Everyone is Arguing InchesEverybody’s fighting over AR-15 barrel inches—10.5 vs 11.5 vs 12.5—like it’s holy ground. Major Pandemic’s take: for real-world use, it’s mostly bullshit. After decades of shooting short guns, he argues the performance gap inside that 10.5–12.5 window is so small it’s not worth the internet hysteria.Here’s the punchline: you can “true” a 10.5-inch setup so it behaves shockingly close to a 16-inch gun for practical distances—without custom reticles or taped dope charts—just by zeroing smarter.The truing conceptInstead of zeroing a short barrel at 100 and then complaining about drop at distance, Major Pandemic recommends a 200-yard zero on the 10.5. That shift “trues” the short barrel’s trajectory to track much closer to a typical 16-inch, 100-yard-zero expectation—close enough to keep using common BDC reticles (even ones designed around a 100-yard zero) with minimal mental math.What that looks like in plain EnglishWith a 200-yard zero on a 10.5:* You should be roughly 1.5” high at 50 yards* Around 2” high at 100* Zeroed at 200* About 8” low at 300* And it stays within about ±2 inches of the “expected” 16-inch trajectory out to roughly 333 yards—good enough for banging 4” plates at ~300, which is what these rigs are typically for.Why the inch-fight doesn’t matterPast the noise, the drop difference between 10.5 and 12.5 at 300 yards is roughly “an inch-ish” territory—realistically not a make-or-break factor. The bigger win is picking a barrel length that keeps the gun compact once suppressed and then zeroing it correctly.Don’t be sloppyFinal advice: confirm your zero with the ammo you actually plan to use, avoid steep up/down angles when zeroing, and keep notes on conditions if you want repeatable results. Truing is your friend—use a ballistic app that supports it and make the data match reality.Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Thanks for reading Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com! This post is public so feel free to share it.
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Magpump to Offer CZ Scorpion Mag loader
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comMagPump CZ Scorpion Magazine Loader (Target Release Late Q1 - Early Q2 2026)Name of Product: MagPump CZ Scorpion Magazine Loader* Price: (TBD)* Key Features:* Hopper-fed, loose-ammo loader with 50-round capacity* Machined aluminum and steel internal components for high efficiency and durability* Pump-action lever self-sorts 9mm ammunition in either direction* Loads…
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Easy DIY Alumahyde Painting & Camo - BRN 180 redue/revisit Part 2
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.com🎙️ DIY Gun Coating Guide with the BRN-180: Alumahyde vs. Cerakote – Reliability, Technique & ResultsIn this episode, the host dives deep into his DIY rebuild of the BRN-180 rifle, a short-stroke piston AR-180 variant by Brownells and Primary Weapons Systems. With over 7,000 rounds and remarkable reliability, the BRN-180 earned a full refresh featuring a Geissele SSP single-stage trigger for fast resets, ideal for steel target shooting out to 300 yards.The core of the episode explores DIY gun painting, focusing on Brownells Alumahyde spray epoxy as a durable alternative to professional Cerakote jobs. The host shares:* Step-by-step prep and application tips: disassembly, degreasing, surface drying, and proper hanging techniques.* Best Alumahyde colors (Parkerized Gray, Silver, Black, FDE) and layering with rattle cans for camo.* Application secrets: sponge techniques, using blowout nozzles, and oven-curing at 150°F for fast, hard finishes.* Pros & cons of DIY finishes and how Alumahyde compares to Cerakote and appliance epoxies in durability.This episode is packed with practical tips, from avoiding clogs to choosing the right colors and maximizing paint adhesion on anodized aluminum. The host wraps up with a poetic tribute to the BRN-180 in a touching audio segment titled “Bufferless Lover.”🎯 Perfect for AR builders, DIY gun enthusiasts, and anyone curious about firearm customization on a budget.Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Thanks for reading Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com! This post is public so feel free to share it.BRN-180 Rebuild: DIY Brownells Alumahyde Sponge Camo That Looks Like CerakoteMeta description: A BRN-180 short-stroke piston rebuild gets a Geissele SSP trigger and a rugged Brownells Alumahyde DIY sponge-camo finish—prep, cure tricks, and an urban-modern colorway.Welcome back to Major Pandemic’s Bunker Bar—managed by Becky Bunker—where every episode is part gear talk, part garage therapy, and part “support the mission” reminder.This week’s project is a Brownells/PWS short-stroke piston BRN-180 (AR-180 style) that’s been sewing-machine reliable for roughly 6,500–7,000 rounds and earned a refresh instead of retirement. One standout upgrade is a Geissele SSP single-stage trigger—fast reset and built for a “super fast” steel-banger setup out to 300 yards.The real focus, though, is the finish: a DIY camo job using Brownells Alumahyde, an epoxy-style spray that can deliver near–Cerakote toughness if you’re patient and do the process right. The biggest secret isn’t magic paint—it’s adhesion. On anodized aluminum especially, surface prep and timing matter. A quick tack-dry window between colors helps layers bond and reduces peeling later.The method starts with two rules: function-test the gun before you paint anything, and don’t spray an assembled rifle. Break it down to parts, degrease aggressively (brake cleaner or acetone), and hang everything so you’re not flipping parts and ruining fresh coats. A quick torch wave or heat-gun pass can help drive off surface moisture before paint goes on.From there, Alumahyde is simple but finicky. Shake constantly, expect occasional clogs, and keep spare nozzles on hand. Between coats, invert the can and spray until only air comes out—this clears the nozzle and helps the can stay usable.For colors, the core palette leans urban-modern: Parkerized Gray as the base, with black and silver as companions. The camo is applied with a sponge method—cut foam into shapes, dab a few blotches per color, and stop before you overwork it. The featured look is Parkerized Gray with big black blotches and quick silver accents, dotted and smudged for depth. It’s designed to pop once black accessories and the optic go back on—and it can save serious money versus sending parts out for professional Cerakote.To speed curing, the finish gets a gentle bake: about 150°F for 8–10 hours. It’s a practical balance—enough heat to harden the coating while staying in a safer zone for many polymer parts.For more BRN-180 updates, DIY finishing tricks, and bunker-bar build talk, follow along at MajorPandemic.com.
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Pandemic's Xmas Christmas Heavy Metal Songs - new AI remixes you have never heard before
Becky Bunker receives her new Christmas upgrade. Enjoy the remixed holiday tunes metal heads. Free to everyone - share if you care.Rock On!Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Thanks for reading Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com! This post is public so feel free to share it. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.majorpandemic.com/subscribe
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BRN-180 Gen 2 8K rounds later .223 Wylde 10.5 Pistol Build
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comMajor Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Thanks for reading Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com! This post is public so feel free to share it.BRN-180 Long-Term Review: The “Poor Man’s MCX” Gets a Fresh Lower and a New LifeMeta title: BRN-180 Long-Term Review (7k–9k Rounds) + Gen 1 vs Gen 2 vs Gen 3Meta description: A long-term BRN-180 review covering reliability past 6,500 rounds, why Gen 2 is the sweet spot, AR-180 history, and a new lower/brace/optic setup.Suggested URL slug: /brn-180-long-term-review-gen2-buildAfter thousands of rounds, the Brownells BRN-180 continues to prove why the AR-180 concept never really died—it just waited for the right modern execution. In this episode of Major Pandemic’s Bunker Bar, the BRN-180 is framed as a lightweight, insanely reliable short-stroke piston alternative to the typical direct-impingement AR-15, with the added advantage of running without a rear buffer tube thanks to its dual guide-rod system.The headline claim: extreme reliability with minimal cleaning. The rifle reportedly pushed past 6,500 rounds before its first real cleaning, and the round count has drifted into the 7,000–9,000 range while it keeps running. That’s a big part of why the BRN-180 often gets labeled the “poor man’s MCX”—similar benefits (piston, compact/folding-friendly design) without MCX pricing.Gen 1 vs Gen 2 vs Gen 3 (quick take):* Gen 1: solid concept, but accuracy and suppressor tuning limitations were pain points.* Gen 2: the refinement sweet spot—improved accuracy, adjustable gas, easier handguard serviceability.* Gen 3: adds a left-side, non-reciprocating charging handle—functional, but arguably less “true” to the AR-180 vibe.Current build direction: a dedicated bargain lower built out with a pic adapter and a Midwest Industries folding brace, plus controls/upgrades aimed at fast handling. Optic choice stays practical: a Burris AR-1X prism (etched reticle + AA power), with Primary Arms SLX Cyclops named as another strong option. A suppressor-forward setup rounds it out, with mounting tweaks considered to trim length and weight.Bottom line: the BRN-180 remains a smooth, flat-shooting piston platform that rewards anyone who values compact ergonomics, reliability, and simple “grab-and-go” operation—especially in Gen 2 form.
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Yawn - introducing the Glock Gen 6 (Glock Hated This Review)
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comOhhh ahhh, Gen 6.The Glock Gen 6 is here, and Major Pandemic’s first impression is blunt: it feels like Glock finally “caught up” rather than led. In a market packed with striker-fired pistols that ship with better ergonomics, cleaner triggers, and optics-ready systems that don’t require a pile of aftermarket parts, Gen 6 lands more like an incremental refresh than a headline-making leap.What Gen 6 improves (the good news):* Back to a single recoil spring. Glock appears to have moved away from the dual-spring setup and returned to a more traditional single recoil spring system—something longtime Glock fans often prefer for feel and simplicity.* A flat trigger shoe. Gen 6 adds a flatter trigger profile that should feel better on the finger, but the critique is that this “upgrade” resembles what shooters have been buying as inexpensive add-ons for years.* A more practical optics approach. The optics mounting system is described as a course correction—moving away from a past setup blamed for headaches and loosening optics. Gen 6 aims for more mainstream compatibility (think common footprints) and is designed to reduce the risk of mounting mistakes causing internal interference.* Grip and magwell updates. The grip is portrayed as more contoured and comfortable, and a flared magwell arrives from the factory—features that many competitors have included for a long time.Where it still misses:The big complaint isn’t that Gen 6 is “bad”—it’s that it’s not bold. The wish list is clear: a truly great out-of-the-box trigger, more style-forward slide work, broader optics adaptability, and factory steel sights as a serious option. In other words: deliver a modern, turnkey Glock that doesn’t require spending another grand to reach the performance level some $700 pistols already offer.Compatibility caveat:While magazine compatibility remains, the expectation is that many Gen 6 parts won’t play nicely with older generations, limiting the appeal for Glock owners with deep parts bins.Bottom line: Gen 6 will probably still sell like crazy. But for shooters hoping Glock would drop something genuinely new—something “Vegas in a plastic box”—this one sounds more like a polite shrug than a mic drop.Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Thanks for reading Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com! This post is public so feel free to share it.
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Hands on the Caracal CMP9 9mm PCC - Is this the global military MP5 killer?
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comCaracal CMP9: The Rugged MP5-Magazine PCC Built for Hard UseThe Caracal CMP9 is a modern 9mm pistol-caliber carbine (PCC) that’s drawing attention for a simple reason: it aims to deliver duty-grade durability while keeping logistics familiar for agencies (and shooters) already invested in MP5-pattern gear. In a market filled with proprietary magazines and complex operating systems, the CMP9 takes a more practical path—one designed around global law-enforcement and military needs, not just civilian trend cycles.What the CMP9 is designed to doAt its core, the CMP9 is a 9mm direct-blowback PCC intended to live in the same operational space that MP5 variants have owned for decades: close-range control, fast handling, and reliable performance in high-volume training or real-world duty environments. Rather than leaning into a complicated delayed system, the CMP9’s design emphasizes simplicity and ease of maintenance, which matters when a weapon is issued, shared, and expected to run with minimal downtime.Direct blowback also tends to be easier to service and support at scale—one of the reasons it remains popular in duty and training fleets worldwide.“All-metal” durability as a feature, not a vibeOne of the CMP9’s standout positioning points is its heavy emphasis on metal construction. Aside from the grip and a rear buffer component, the platform is described as largely all metal, aligning with buyers who prioritize long-term toughness and resistance to hard field use. That decision also speaks to organizations that want gear that can survive years of training cycles, rough storage conditions, and constant handling without the same concerns that can come with polymer-heavy builds.From a user perspective, this leans into a “grab it and run it” identity—less delicate, more utilitarian.MP5 magazines: the logistics winThe most strategic feature of the Caracal CMP9 may be its magazine choice: it feeds from HK MP5 magazines. For agencies already stocked with MP5 mags, pouches, and support equipment, that’s a major advantage. It can reduce transition costs, avoid re-training around new magazine patterns, and simplify supply chains. For civilian shooters, it’s equally appealing if you already own MP5 mags or run MP5-pattern firearms and want magazine compatibility across platforms.One tradeoff often associated with MP5 magazine systems is last-round bolt hold open, which isn’t always present depending on the specific design approach. Some users won’t care, especially those already accustomed to MP5-style reloads; others may prefer a modern hold-open system. Either way, the mag compatibility is a deliberate, budget-friendly choice.Modern rails and configuration flexibilityThe CMP9 is built for modern accessories. Expect rail space for optics and mounting options that support today’s standard lights, lasers, and mission-specific setups. It also uses a rear interface compatible with common stock/brace mounting standards, which helps users configure the platform for different roles—training, home defense, professional use, or range work.Price and why it mattersPositioned around the $1,700–$1,800 range in discussion, the CMP9 targets a zone where buyers want something more robust than entry-level PCCs, but without the total system cost that can come with higher-priced, fully proprietary platforms. Add MP5-mag compatibility and a rugged build, and the CMP9 becomes a compelling option for anyone wanting a duty-oriented PCC with proven logistics.Bottom line: If you’re looking for a modern 9mm PCC that prioritizes toughness, simplicity, and MP5 magazine compatibility, the Caracal CMP9 is one to watch.Thanks for reading Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com! This post is public so feel free to share it.Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
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Tasmanian Tiger Professional Military Bags & Packs - A legacy of premium quality
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comMajor Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Thanks for reading Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com! This post is public so feel free to share it.Tasmanian Tiger Bags and Packs. If you’ve spent years testing packs, slings, and tactical bags like…
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Ruger Custom Shop 10/22 Carbon Fiber - an actual match .22 from Ruger?
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comMajor Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Thanks for reading Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com! This post is public so feel free to share it.Ruger 10/22 Carbon Fiber Custom Shop: A “Ready-to-Go” Precision Rimfire That Could Replace Your Full Custom BuildIf you’re a serious Ruger 10/22 enthusiast, you already know the drill: the factory rifle is fun, but true precision usually means a long parts list—barrel, chassis, trigger, bolt work, receiver upgrades, and plenty of tuning. That’s why the new Ruger 10/22 Carbon Fiber from the Ruger Custom Shop is such a big deal. On paper, it looks like one of the first factory-offered 10/22 packages that could realistically compete with the common “custom build” formula—without forcing you to source everything yourself.Why this Custom Shop 10/22 is differentEarlier Ruger “competition” releases left many precision shooters cold, largely due to chamber choices that didn’t deliver match-grade performance. This new carbon fiber model is built around a proprietary enhanced semi-auto chamber that’s clearly aimed at accuracy-first shooting—the kind of upgrade 10/22 builders have chased for years in the aftermarket. The goal is simple: better groups at 50 yards with quality ammo, and the kind of consistency that makes rimfire precision addictive.Grey Birch LeChassis: a $500 head startA major highlight is the Grey Birch LeChassis folding stock, an ultra-light, skeletonized chassis with adjustable cheek height and length of pull. It’s also set up the way modern shooters want: M-LOK at 3/6/9 and ARCA on the bottom, making it easy to run a bipod, tripod, barricade stop, or match accessories. Add the Magpul grip and you’ve got a current, ergonomic platform right out of the box.Barrel and receiver upgrades that matterThe carbon fiber barrel shows strong “premium barrel” design cues and—importantly—is described as tensioned, which is a notable differentiator in this category. The receiver is also a serious upgrade: a hard-coat anodized CNC receiver made from heat-treated, stress-relieved aluminum, plus an extended top rail (the kind of feature typically found on high-end aftermarket receivers).Ruger also stacks in the little things builders pay for later: a nitrided recoil spring, a hardened match-grade bolt, and an extended charging handle. There’s even an included 30 MOA Picatinny rail, which is a welcome add for anyone planning to stretch rimfire distances.BX trigger: good, but not perfectThe included BX trigger (roughly 2.5–3 lb.) is a major step up from a standard factory trigger and is absolutely usable for most shooters. That said, dedicated accuracy chasers may still prefer a higher-end aftermarket unit for the best break and feel.Value—and a small quality-control noteWith an MSRP around $1,129 (and likely street pricing near the $1,000–$1,100 range), the value proposition is strong when you compare it to piecing together comparable parts. The only caution: early impressions included minor QC hiccups like loose V-block screws and the usual 10/22 pin behavior during disassembly—things worth checking when you first bring it home.Bottom lineIf this Ruger Custom Shop carbon fiber 10/22 delivers the accuracy its parts list promises, it could be one of the best “buy once, shoot now” precision 10/22 options Ruger has ever released—especially for shooters who want custom-build performance without the custom-build hassle.
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Century Arms AP5 - a MP5 at half the price?
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comMajor Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Thanks for reading Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com! This post is public so feel free to share it.Century Arms AP5 vs H&K SP5: How to Get the MP5 Experience Without Paying the Brand PremiumFor a lot of shooters, the H&K MP5 isn’t just a gun—it’s a full-on pop-culture icon. It’s the classic 1960s–1980s “ultimate PCC” that nearly every generation of gun owner has wanted to own at least once. The problem is the modern marketplace: if you want the official H&K SP5, you’re usually staring down a steep price tag and inconsistent availability.Why the H&K SP5 can feel hard to justifyThe SP5 is the semi-auto, civilian-labeled version of the MP5 experience—but it can commonly land anywhere from roughly $2,500 up to $4,000 depending on market timing and availability. The frustration isn’t only the number—it’s what you’re getting for it. In the transcript’s view, you’re paying premium money for a platform with dated ergonomics: no flared magwell, no last-round bolt hold open, a stiff safety, and you still need to budget for a brace setup.When you compare that spend to the broader PCC market, it becomes hard for many shooters to justify the “brand tax” unless you’re buying specifically for collector value.The alternative that keeps getting stronger: Century Arms AP5This is where the Century Arms AP5 enters the chat. Century imports AP5 models built by MKE in Turkey, a manufacturer with a long history producing MP5-pattern guns under licensing arrangements and established specs. The core argument in the episode is simple: in real-world handling, the AP5 can feel extremely close to the SP5—sometimes with differences that come down mainly to finish or minor updates that most users won’t notice in 9mm use.For buyers who want the MP5 vibe and function but don’t want to spend SP5 money, the AP5 becomes the practical path.A bigger lineup than H&K’s current optionsOne advantage highlighted is variety. Instead of being limited to a single widely-available H&K model at a given time, the AP5 lineup spans multiple classic-style configurations—standard length, shorter variants, and an AP5 SD-style setup that’s especially appealing if you want a suppressor-forward look where part of the can tucks under the handguard.That flexibility matters because “MP5” means different things to different people: some want classic full-size, some want compact, and some want the SD aesthetic.What you get in the boxThe episode also emphasizes the “ready-to-run” nature of certain AP5 packages. Depending on the model, you may get a solid starter bundle such as a case, magazines, sling, cleaning kit, and—on the SD-style version discussed—a brace and claw-mount Picatinny rail for optics. That reduces the immediate add-on spend and gets you shooting sooner.Yes, it’s old-school—and that’s part of the charmNo one is pretending the MP5 platform is modern in every way. The stamped receiver, the small magwell that rewards the classic “thumb method,” and a trigger that feels rough by today’s standards are all part of the retro reality. But the transcript’s take is that most of the annoyances are fixable with simple upgrades—like swapping to a modern lower, improving the trigger, and adding a red dot.Bottom lineIf you want the MP5 experience for range fun, collecting, or suppressor use—and you don’t want to spend premium SP5 money—the Century Arms AP5 is positioned as one of the best value paths to get there. It keeps the classic roller-delayed feel, offers more model variety, and leaves you with extra budget for ammo, optics, and upgrades.
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78
Glock V-Series - Are we Getting Locked out of Our Glocks?
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.com
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77
Holosun SCS MOS Glock Direct Mount Multi-reticle Reflex Sight
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comMajor Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Thanks for reading Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com! This post is public so feel free to share it.Holosun SCS MOS Review: The Direct-Mount Glock Optic That Finally Makes a Carry Red Dot Make SenseIf you’ve been skeptical about putting a red dot on a defensive handgun, you’re not alone. For years, pistol optics had a reputation for getting loose, going dead, collecting lint and grime, and forcing shooters to “retrain” because the dot and irons didn’t line up like a factory sight picture. The Holosun SCS MOS is one of the rare optics that directly attacks those problems—so much so that it can genuinely change the carry conversation for Glock owners.What the Holosun SCS MOS isThe Holosun SCS is a Glock MOS-specific reflex optic designed to mount directly to the MOS slide with a plug-and-play fit—no adapter plate required. That matters, because the MOS plate system has historically introduced extra screws and extra failure points. By eliminating the plate entirely, the SCS simplifies the setup and improves mechanical stability.It also sits low enough to co-witness with standard-height factory Glock iron sights, which is a huge win for speed and confidence. If you’ve put tens of thousands of rounds through Glocks, your brain already knows exactly where those irons live. With the SCS, the dot lives in that same visual space—meaning less hunting, less adjustment, and a faster transition.Titanium frame, slim profile, and “built for carry”One of the standout features is the grade 5 titanium housing. Titanium isn’t just a flex—if you’ve ever dented or damaged aluminum-bodied optics (especially on hard-used guns), the durability upgrade here is real. The SCS is also impressively compact and slim, integrating cleanly into the Glock slide and preserving the pistol’s balance.Multi-reticle and auto-brightnessThe SCS uses a green reticle with multiple modes: a 2 MOA dot, a 32 MOA circle, or a circle-dot combination. Green can be easier for many eyes to pick up quickly, especially in mixed lighting. An ambient light sensor handles auto-brightness, helping the reticle stay usable from indoor ranges to bright daylight without constantly fiddling with controls.Solar-assisted power and near “forever” runtimeBattery anxiety is one of the biggest knocks against carry optics. The SCS leans hard into solving that with solar-assisted charging and an internal power system designed for extremely long runtime. In practical use, the concept is simple: normal light exposure keeps it topped off, dramatically reducing the odds of a dead dot when you need it.The real-world tradeoffs vs closed emittersNo optic is perfect. The SCS is an open emitter, so heavy mud or debris can potentially clog the emitter area—something closed-emitter optics (like the Aimpoint ACRO-style options) handle better. If you expect extreme environmental abuse, that’s the one meaningful downside.Price and the bottom lineAt around $349 from common retailers, the Holosun SCS MOS offers a compelling “carry-ready” value. If you’ve avoided pistol dots due to mounting issues, co-witness problems, durability doubts, or dead-battery paranoia, the SCS MOS is one of the strongest arguments yet for finally running a red dot on a Glock MOS handgun.
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76
DIY vs Factory guns: How To on Highest Resell when selling guns
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comBig Points* Buy high quality used with factory parts and box if possible* If buying new - reserve for defensive legally defendable factory OEM firearms (legally I did not monkey with this)* Return the stock parts before selling* De-Bundle - Sell all the aftermarket parts & upgrades separately* Full custom parts builds and cerakote do not add value unless you find the perfect buyer.* Take lots of pics when selling online and clean the gun.Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Thanks for reading Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com! This post is public so feel free to share it.Welcome to Major Pandemic’s Bunker Bar: Build vs Buy, Resale Reality, and How to Sell Guns SmarterWelcome to Major Pandemic’s Bunker Bar—the cold-world bunker deep underground where the wine list is exceptional, the liquor shelves never end, and the conversations are all about firearms, gear, and hard-earned lessons. With Becky Bunker running the show as your AI-powered bunker bar manager, the message is simple: if you enjoy the content, becoming a paid subscriber helps keep the lights on (even down here beneath the dirt). Subscriptions unlock hundreds of articles, deeper reviews, full-length podcasts, and even exclusive tools like a generative AI-powered reloading calculator and database.Now, let’s get into the real question people ask constantly in the bunker bar:Should you build or buy if resale matters?If your primary concern is resale value, the answer is blunt: custom builds almost never return what you put into them. The only time a custom build sells for a premium is when you find the rare “perfect buyer”—someone who loves your exact choices, trusts your workmanship, and is willing to pay extra to avoid doing the work themselves. That’s not common. It’s like building a custom car and expecting the market to value your taste the way you do.There are exceptions. If you have a reputation for high-quality builds, or if the gun has true artistic value that a buyer appreciates, you might get paid. But most “I built this in my garage” rifles don’t sell like people think they will.The biggest resale killer: cheap parts and questionable assemblyBudget builds are where people get absolutely destroyed on resale. Low-end components scream risk to buyers—because they often come bundled with unknown assembly quality, questionable tools, and poor attention to detail. Even if it runs fine, the market assumes the worst. That’s why bargain-bin builds can struggle to recover even half of what went into them.If you want to tinker, a smarter approach is buying quality parts that retain value independently—premium triggers, bolts, and furniture that can be transferred to another build later.The smartest play for short-term ownership: buy used, buy factoryIf you’re the kind of person who cycles through firearms (and most people eventually do), then “buy used and buy factory” is the winning strategy. Used factory guns commonly sell for significantly less than new, and if you later sell, you may only take a small hit—often around the difference between what you paid and what the next buyer will accept.Buying new is where people take the big depreciation hit. Buying used reduces that pain and leaves more budget for ammo, optics, and training.When buying new can make senseThere are times new is worth it—especially when accuracy and unknown history are a concern, like precision rifles where you want a clean slate and warranty support. Most guns are lightly shot, but you don’t always know how a prior owner treated the bore, crown, or internals.For defensive rifles, some buyers also prefer factory configurations for simplicity, legal defensibility, and reliability confidence.How to sell smarter and keep more moneyIf you want maximum resale:* Return the gun to factory condition whenever possible.* Keep every original part, box, and accessory.* Don’t assume upgrades add value. Most “upgrades” look suspicious to buyers.* Avoid bundling unless you’re just trying to unload junk. Bundles help buyers feel good—but sellers usually give away value.* Use a lot of photos when selling online. More angles build trust and increase bidding confidence.Investment-grade firearms: a different mindsetFinally, the bunker bar makes a key distinction: most guns are not investments. But some firearms with true collectability and increasing rarity can climb steadily over years—sometimes dramatically. That world requires research, patience, and awareness of market shifts that can temporarily flood supply and soften prices.Bottom lineIf resale matters, buy factory and buy used most of the time. Build only when you’re building for yourself—not because you expect the market to pay you back. Keep your original parts, avoid questionable “upgrades,” and sell like a pro: honest descriptions, lots of photos, and a factory-correct setup.
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75
Volquartsen Black Mamba - The finest .22LR rimfire - period
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.com
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74
The Evolution of the Ruger Mark IV .22LR Pistol - Evolution of the legend
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.com
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73
The Glock 19 COA - The Ultimate End of Times Glock
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.com
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72
Evolution of the Browning Buck Mark from 1915 to present - .22LR Pistols
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.com
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71
We are Already in a Surveillance State
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comThe commentary here is we need to start pushing back at the government and federal level on public and private surveillance that combines into this panopticon level surveillance where every move we make it tracked… regardless of how benign that move or interaction may be.Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive ne…
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70
The Best Weapons Training You are Not Doing
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comClassic Dry Martini! Sure - you can have a nice dry martini after you have finished your dry fire training.Classic Dry Martini! It's a timeless cocktail that exudes sophistication and simplicity. Here's how you can make an International Bartenders Association (IBA) approved Dry Martini:Ingredients:* 60 ml (2 oz) Gin* 10 ml (1/3 oz) Dry Vermouth* Ice cubes* Lemo…
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69
Glock G44 .22LR 100K+ rounds later review
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.com
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68
Just for the Funk of It - we collect guns
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comYeah… yeah. Finger is on the trigger. What do you expect from AI? Ai is going to kill us all.Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Thanks for reading Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com! This post is public so feel free to share it.
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67
Factory Recalls - Its all on you!
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.com
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66
FN Reflex XL MRD Review
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.com
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65
Kriss Vector SDP Gen 3 9mm Review
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comVector Velocity CocktailIngredients:* 1.5 ounces Vodka (smooth and clean, like the Vector's design)* 0.5 ounce Blue Curaçao (for a touch of tactical flair)* 0.5 ounce Fresh Lime Juice (sharp and refreshing, just like your aim)* 0.5 ounce Simple Syrup (to balance the boldness)* Top with Club Soda (for a crisp finish)* Lime wheel or twist for garnishInstructions:* Fill…
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64
Interview with CEO Cody Funk - Nexus Firearms the origin story
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comhttps://nexusfirearms.com/#majorpandemicWelcome to Major Pandemic's Bunker Bar, where innovation meets firearms expertise. In this episode, we sit down with Cody Funk, the visionary owner and CEO of Nexus Firearms. Discover how Nexus Firearms revolutionized the CZ Scorpion platform with their groundbreaking bearing delay upper receiver. Cody's journey f…
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Nexus Roller Bearing Delayed CZ Scorpion Receiver Upgrade - Huge difference
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.com
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Mixed Nuts Update - Nexus, FN, Matador Arms, Kriss Gen3, MFT Pro, Rode Mic
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.com
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61
Browning A5 Shockwave - Straight out of Belgium
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comBrowning A5 12 Gauge Shockwave BuildI have a love for gun history and a deep passion for preserving and respecting the innovation of great gun designs. Along that thought process, a long time ago, I created something that had never been done before, I resurrected a Browning A5 that needed a lot of love and completely WMD NiBx Coated it. That A5 Resurrec…
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How to Build A Crazy Accurate AR15
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comSince it is important from a safety persepctiveGo, No-Go, and Field Gauges Explained1. Go Gauge* Purpose: Confirms the chamber is at or above the minimum safe headspace.* Use: With the bolt or action closed gently on a “Go” gauge, the bolt should close fully and without resistance.* Result: If the bolt won’t close, the chamber is too tight—possibly out of spe…
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Hip Pocket Survival Podcast - Quick ideas on what you really need for real world survival
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comMajor Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Thanks for reading Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com! This post is public so feel free to share it.
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58
Magazine Reloaders - Saving your Thumb one bullet at a time
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comCheck them out.https://www.mcfaden.com/https://www.maglula.com/https://magpump.com/Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Thanks for reading Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com! This post is public so feel free to share it.
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57
The Best Magazine Pouch Ever - HSGI Taco Magazines
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.com
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56
Post Range Day Springfield Kuna Review
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.com
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Why the Springfield Kuna is poised to replace legacy PCC H&K MP5s - It may be the best modern PCC yet.
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comMajor Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
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54
The Legendary Henry Rifle - Still Made in America or Not at All + The Henry Still Shootin' True song
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comMajor Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Thanks for reading Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com! This post is public so feel free to share it.
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53
The Scourge of the Starlings...Never More
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.majorpandemic.comMajor Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Thanks for reading Major Pandemic - MajorPandemic.com! This post is public so feel free to share it.
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