Categories
All About Guns

NRA Gun Of The Week: Franchi Affinity Turkey Elite by AMERICAN RIFLEMAN STAFF

Franchi USA’s Affinity lineup of semi-automatic shotguns has grown over the years with increasing popularity among waterfowlers, upland hunters and clay target shooters, providing well-built guns, made in Italy and feature a tried-and-true operating system developed by Benelli. Now Franchi offers a premium version of its Affinity-series shotgun to passionate turkey hunters. Watch the video above to see the Affinity 3 Turkey Elite in 20 gauge on the range.

Man shooting Franchi USA Affinity 3 Turkey Elite shotgun 20 gauge outdoors

 

The Franchi Affinity Turkey Elite provides a robust inertia-driven operating system wrapped within an aluminum receiver featuring Cerakote’s Midnight Bronze finish. The gun’s chrome-lined barrel comes with a ventilated rib and also covered in Cerakote’s premium finish to withstand the worst Mother Nature has to offer. Though Franchi has included a long list of creature comforts that really make this latest Affinity series a truly dedicated turkey-hunting gun, its features lend utility to hunting myriad big game animals while also serving as a defensive tool.

shotgun black plastic grip trigger camouflage

 

Proprietary forcing cones within the barrel work to reduce recoil and improve down-range pattern consistency, which is important when hunting wary, call-shy birds. Franchi USA includes a set of Rhino choke tubes, long and extra long range. Ports in the tube work to redirect expanding gas recoil mitigation, enabling its user to maintain eyes on target. The tube’s extended length gives a boost in ballistic performance and its machined exterior makes for easy changing.

Franchi shotgun outdoors loading yellow ammunition shotshell 20 gauge

 

Aiding the performance of the Affinity 3 Turkey Elite setup is a premium set of fiber-optic, rifle-type sights. The rear unit is adjustable for elevation and windage to effectively dial-in shot placement, and the front post is fixed with a hood for glare reduction and protection. In addition, Franchi includes a drilled-and-tapped receiver with a Picatinny rail for mounting optics.

shotgun pattern turkey target

 

On the range, the Franchi Affinity 3 Turkey Elite proved its ability to consistently print patterns on target, and at distance. The addition of a vertical grip pairs nicely with the gun setup as a dedicated turkey-hunting rig. The use of Gore’s Optifade Subalpine camouflage is a nice addition, too. An enlarged loading port, oversized controls and a cross-bolt safety, we found, are a boon to fully clothed hunters. Our testers noted the gun’s ergonomics as being woods friendly, providing all of the features you need with nothing you don’t.

Specifications
ImporterFranchi USA
Model: Affinity 3 Turkey Elite
Action Type: recoil-operated, semi-automatic shotgun
Gauge: 20; 3″ chamber
Barrel: 24″ chrome-lined steel
Receiver: aluminum
Finish: Cerakote Midnight Bronze
Stock: polymer; Optifade Subalpine camouflage finish, black pistol grip
Length: 41″
Weight: 6.8 lbs.
MSRP: $1,279

Categories
All About Guns

Lee Enfield bolt.

Categories
All About Guns

MarColMar CETME LC

Categories
All About Guns

Chrysanthemums in the Snow: Finnish Arisaka Rifles

Categories
All About Guns

Pedersoli Sharps 1874 – Observations & Modifications.

Categories
All About Guns

The Forgotten P14 Enfield Rifle James Slaughter

P14 Enfield Rifle Cover

Some firearms have interesting backstories; this is especially true with military firearms — many of which are designed to address a need, fill a gap, or overcome a perceived inferiority. It may be difficult to believe but the best bolt-action battle rifle of the 20th century, the No1 Mk III or SMLE (Short Magazine Lee Enfield), and its descendants were almost consigned to the scrap heap before World War I.

P14 Enfield Rifle
The volley sights on the P14 are the easiest way to tell it apart from the P17.

The British Army had an extremely difficult time subduing the Boers in South Africa. The Boers used terrain extremely effectively and were excellent at bushcraft. Additionally, most of them were accomplished marksmen and careful hunters. This combination of traits, combined with overconfidence and gross underestimation of enemy capability, led to a number of embarrassing British defeats. Like most organizations that experience difficulties that should have been “beneath them,” the British Army sought a scapegoat and found it in the Enfield rifle and the .303 cartridge. As the somewhat apocryphal story goes, it wasn’t the Boers’ excellent skill as irregular soldiers that stymied the British, but their damn powerful and accurate 7mm Mausers; it was a more comfortable thought.

P14 Enfield Rifle

In the aftermath of the Boer Wars, Britain set out to design a new infantry rifle that emulated the traits of the Boers’ Mausers. It would have a stronger action and a more powerful cartridge, and it would “close the gap” so the army wouldn’t suffer any more embarrassing defeats … or something like that.

The resulting rifle was the “forgotten” Enfield, the Pattern 14. Originally designed to chamber the new .276 Enfield cartridge, the bulk of all P14s made were chambered in .303 British. The simple reason was that WWI began well before mass production of the rifle could get underway. Since the new action was stronger, there was absolutely no problem chambering the P14 Enfield rifle in .303 British. In fact, the basic core of the P14 went on to create the P17 chambered in .30-06, and the P17 arguably armed more of the Americans in the trenches in 1917 and 1918 than the M1903 Springfield. What’s more, the action was so strong, it’d be readily modified to accept more powerful cartridges than the .30-06, and many were sporterized as such for hunting by companies after both World Wars.

P14 Enfield Rifle

The differences between the P14 Enfield Rifle and the SMLE are striking. The P14 has a five-round internal magazine instead of a detachable 10-round box magazine. The P14 has graduated peep sights instead of conventional notch and post rifle sights. The P14 bolt is clearly a Mauser derivative, and the receiver is significantly different.

P14 Enfield Rifle
The excellent peep sights on the P14 are arguably the best standard-issue sights for precision shooting.

However, unlike most Mausers, the British retained the cock-on-opening feature of the earlier SMLE. This feature was extremely important to the British Army. It made rapid fire easier to achieve. Soldiers were paid small bonuses for higher musketry (marksmanship) scores, and [largely] free access to ammunition and range time was common. Further, the P14 Enfield Rifle maintained the volley sights of the earlier SMLE.

P14 Enfield Rifle

While the diminished magazine capacity was a detriment, the improved action resulted in increased accuracy. In fact, the P14 was so accurate that it was modified for use as a sniper rifle, a role in which it served in both World Wars. The P14 Enfield Rifle gives the .303 more “legs” than either the SMLE or No. 4, stretching the effective range out to 800 yards, maybe a little more.

Other than in the sniping role, the P14 saw little active combat service. During WWII, it was relegated to rear area soldiers, excepting again, the sniper role. Most of the production run was made in the United States, as again it was too late for mass production in Britain once WWI began. Although over 1.2 million were made, the P14 isn’t a common rifle on the U.S. collectors’ market. They’re scarce, but they don’t break the bank when encountered. The tricky part is finding one with a nice bore, as many of these were sent to the far reaches of the world following WWII, and in some places, maintenance was clearly a matter of convenience. A nice P14 Enfield Rifle with a good or better bore will command $700. If it has the complete volley sight assembly (frequently removed), $950 to $1,000 isn’t unreasonable.


P14 Enfield Rifle

P14 ENFIELD RIFLE

Caliber: .303 British; very few in .276 Enfield
OAL: 46¼ inches
Barrel: 26 inches
Weight: 9 pounds, 6 ounces
Practical ROF: 15 to 20 rpm for most shooters
Muzzle Velocity: 2,380 fps
Effective Range: 800 yards +/-

Categories
All About Guns Grumpy's hall of Shame Some Sick Puppies! The Horror!

Let us hunt down this rascal that inflicted this desecration of such a Noble Weapon!

Categories
All About Guns

Shooting the S&W Model 15

One of the best target wheel guns that I have ever shot and usually you can pick one up for a fairly reasonable price too! Grumpy

Categories
All About Guns

WINCHESTER 1890. OLDIE BUT GOODIE! – YouTube

https://youtu.be/Cidke4VRetE

Aug 3, 2012 – Uploaded by 22plinkster

This is my take on the classic 1890 Winchester. I enjoy the old Winchester rifles. I apologize for the sound …

Categories
All About Guns

Luger automatic pistol

Ok, so the Luger isn’t exactly a Forgotten Weapon. In fact, it’s one of the most recognizable handguns ever made. But it traces its lineage directly so some much more obscure models (namely the Borchardt C93), and is an important part of firearms development.

Luger pistol

We have added some documents on the Luger to a new Luger automatic pistol page in the Vault. We have a Swiss military manual (the Swiss were the first nation to formally adopt the Luger), some photos of a prototype Japanese Luger, and a copy of the original US patent on the gun. More to come as we dig it up!