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Talk:Street Kings: Difference between revisions
Crazycrankle (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
Crazycrankle (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
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==Charter Arms Off Duty== | ==Charter Arms Off Duty== | ||
There's no mention of which side the bullet hits, also the scapula (This is just how I read it, not sure if it's what he meant though) is essentially the shoulder. So what the coroner (Not the ballistics expert) said, is indeed correct. | There's no mention of which side the bullet hits, also the scapula (This is just how I read it, not sure if it's what he meant though) is essentially the shoulder. So what the coroner (Not the ballistics expert) said, is indeed correct. --[[User:Crazycrankle|Crazycrankle]] 10:10, 23 November 2009 (UTC) | ||
[[Image:Street-Kings-Washington-Scapula.jpg|thumb|none|400px|Screen cap of the GSW.]] | [[Image:Street-Kings-Washington-Scapula.jpg|thumb|none|400px|Screen cap of the GSW.]] | ||
[[Image:Posterior.jpg|thumb|none|350px|Probable area of GSW, and scapula]] | [[Image:Posterior.jpg|thumb|none|350px|Probable area of GSW, and scapula]] |
Revision as of 10:10, 23 November 2009
I see you changed Ludlow's 1911 from a S&W to a RRA. It is neither. The cocking serrations on Ludlow's pistol are 90 degrees, while the serrations on all RRA pistols are angled at 11 degrees. The frontstrap on Ludlow's pistol is a standard cut, while the RRA cuts their's very high and at a 90 degree angle. Ludlow's 1911 has a pinned front sight; RRA uses a dovetail, and RRA uses a standard length serrated slidestop; not a flat extended stop. Also note the magazine funnel, ambidextrous safety, stainless (not blued) barrel - none of which are on the RRA.
I looked for the make of this pistol extensively, and came to the conclusion that it is a franken pistol built from a standard blued Colt; probably a series 70. There are lots of competition add ons in stainless steel, and in black; none of which would come standard on a blued gun that lacks a high cut frontstrap.
- Yeah, I knew it was likely wrong, I'd been looking through my Standard Catalog of firearms and none of the RRA pistols fit the bill. I think it is likely just a custom Series 70 or Series 80. Thanks for the info.
Hello everyone. New account but I've been looking at these pages every time I watch a new movie. Looking at this page, I noticed that you have Ludlow's 1911 is listed in the 1911 page as a sw1911. I noticed on the big picture that says similar to pistol in film that it says series 80 and Cylinder & Slide on the right side. I've ordered a couple of parts from Cylinder & Slide and I know they mostly use Springfield 1911s. Makes me wonder whether this is a C&S custom pistol, and whether it is a series 80 colt, or a sw1911. -Jan
- It's definitely not a SW1911. The cocking serrations on the S&W are slanted, whereas the serrations on this gun are vertical. -Gunman69 21:06, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
- The snubby that Ludlow uses in the convenience store is actually a Charter Arms Off Duty.
- Good Call, I fixed it. -GM45
Demille's shotgun
In the Benelli M3 section theres a pic of Demille pointing what is labeled as a Benelli M3. I think the shape of the pump and groove in the yop of the reciever is more indicative of a remington 870. Also the lack of a charging handle for semi-auto action rules out the M3.
Mossberg 590
- I'm starting to think this is a 500 with a heat-shield. I looks like it has a standard mag tube, a 590 has an extended. Am I wrong? -Gunmaster45
- Not Necessarily, MPM has two pictures that show the differences between a 590 and a 500, While I cannot see this picture clearly, It definitely looks more like a 590.
- By standard, I mean only the six shot tube. Since the barrel is clearly extending past the mag tube by a lot, I'm assuming it is just a 500. - Gunmaster45
- It's definitely a 500 for the reasons above. 590s always have extended mag tubes, and this gun clearly has a standard. -Gunman69 21:03, 18 August 2009 (UTC)
M16A2
- Based on the shape of the carry handle, I'd actually say they like more like M16A4s, the carry handles look removable. - Gunmaster45
Charter Arms Off Duty
There's no mention of which side the bullet hits, also the scapula (This is just how I read it, not sure if it's what he meant though) is essentially the shoulder. So what the coroner (Not the ballistics expert) said, is indeed correct. --Crazycrankle 10:10, 23 November 2009 (UTC)