Ok pulled one out today to screw around; which I have been meaning to do for a long time. Unfortunately the pictures came out horrid but I was able to use and old copy of Photoshop and make it slightly less horrid.
I would be too skeered to shoot a gun worth $50-75,000.
Ok pulled one out today to screw around; which I have been meaning to do for a long time. Unfortunately the pictures came out horrid but I was able to use and old copy of Photoshop and make it slightly less horrid.
How do you like it? Is the extreme worth the premium over the standard Witness?EAA Witness .45ACP
I adore that EAA. It's a great teaching gun. I've used it to allow students to see how recoil is different in different pistols and it's always a major eye-opener for them.How do you like it? Is the extreme worth the premium over the standard Witness?
That Norinco bullpup is very cool, btw...
What bugs me is that I can't find a replacement front sight post that's 0.190 to 0.25 inches higher than standard.
I would be too skeered to shoot a gun worth $50-75,000.
I am confused, you are running off Blue-lines, or creating them with CAD program??
They appear to have hand written text on them which led me to believe they were old hand drawings of which copies were made...
Look in the upper left of blue line.
I guess I did my job well. To answer your question, I generated them with Solidworks and then put them on the old style blue print back ground with Photoshop. There is a font in solidworks that looks like hand written text. In the background of some of the videos done by the military institute you can see a few of the original Stoner drawings. I used them as a guide to simulate a blue print. As for the other blue prints I modify style and font according to the era that the gun/drawing would have been done in. Of course anyone that has ever worked with real drawings know that blue prints have not been used since the 20's, it been mostly blue lines up until about 10 years ago.
My collection of pistols in .45acp.
Top pair: commercial Sistema Colts
second pair: Sistema Ejercito Argentino (Argentine Army) model and a Ballester-Molina
next pair: Colt and Remington Rand 1911a1
last pair: Colt M1917 and S&W M1937