Baikal… keep it! will be worth $$$$ since it’s RussianI got a consignment in today that is not to my taste. A MP94 Baikal 12ga over 7x57R. It weighs a ton and is pretty crude. I looked it up in my Blue Book and it wasn't listed in that caliber, but my book is old. View attachment 1093615
WINNER!1USFA Zip pistol--not only the ugliest but also one of the poorest designs ever for a pistol. It jammed constantly, was unsafe, and put an end to an otherwise successful company that had been making some of the most excellent Single Action Army copies ever to hit the market!
ooooh come on! so wrongView attachment 1093666
Apologies to any owners, but I find this plastic, aluminum and steel Ruger less than aesthetically pleasing.
want one! how many rounds in that mag?This is a great shooting and carrying hunting rifle but daaaaaaaaaang, it's a mutt. Ruger American Ranch Rifle in 350 Legend. U.G.L.Y.
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want one! how many rounds in that mag?
does it use AR mags? I always liked the 350That's a ten rounder. You can literally carry this rifle all day long and not know it's there.
the sad thing is, it was a great idea. But the trigger was horrible, and it couldn't get through a single magazine without multiple malfunctionsUSFA Zip pistol--not only the ugliest but also one of the poorest designs ever for a pistol. It jammed constantly, was unsafe, and put an end to an otherwise successful company that had been making some of the most excellent Single Action Army copies ever to hit the market!
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Where's the pic?My VP70! It’s bad in ever way, UGLY, 25# striker fire trigger, heel toe mag release, $90 mags, weird shadow sights.
But, I keep it because it has a cool sound when shooting. cycles very fast
I’ll pull it out the safe late tonightWhere's the pic?
WINNER!1
they went from SAA to THAT? who hired the Harvard MBA to ruined that company
NICE COLLECTION!!!!I have three nominees for ugly guns I have actually owned:
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The first is a Stallard Arms 9mm. To me, it looks like a child's drawing of a pistol made 3-dimensional. It is the crudest mass produced automatic pistol I know of. Even the Spanish "Rubies" from WWI seem refined next to it. At least it evolved into the High Points of today, via Haskell and Maverick and maybe other brand names.
The second is a Cobray Pocket Pal. This is a case of "ugly is as ugly does". It's just an awful gun. Somebody looked at a Mossberg Browning and said "This would be great if only it was a revolver! And convertible between 22 and 380! And if we got rid of as much of that nasty steel as possible!, Sure, it'll be heavy as lead but it'll be cheap to make!" It is ingenious, admittedly, but the result is nothing that anybody wanted.
Finally, we have a LePage 32 automatic from the 1920's or 1930's. LePage wanted to get a leg up on the competition by doing something different, I guess, but the result had no practical advantages and was unsightly. I mean, it has kind of a packaged removable firing mechanism, like a Tokarev or a Clement, but how often do you really need that? It appealed to people like me, who find novelty attractive, but it's not actually good.
Wow! So it was the Owner Donnelly who messed up a good thing with a really Bad thingWhile I don't know much about his background, the United States Fire Arms company was founded by a man named Douglas Donnelly. They started out in Hartford, CT sometime in the early 2000s. Initially, they were importing revolver components from Italy and hand finishing them in the US. They also produced some reproduction Colt-type percussion revolvers but then seemed to gradually specialize in the SSA clones. They had actually taken over part of the old Colt Armory in Hartford after Colt moved to a new location. Eventually, as they added new CNC machinery, they started manufacturing their components from scratch and had a custom business that would perform all of the specialty work that Colt used to do in their custom shop, i.e., fancy engraving, ivory grips, etc.
Many felt that the quality was equal to, or actually exceeded, that of the Colts---and at a much better price point. Thus, they were more than a Uberti but less than a Colt. They were quite popular with the cowboy action crowd.
Donnelly was a bit of an eccentric maverick it seems and sometime around 2011 or so he came up with this idea for the ZIP pistol. It was mostly plastic along with a metal barrel and other metal parts where needed for wear. Evidently, to help finance converting over to the production of the ZIP gun exclusively, Donnelly sold off much of the equipment needed to continue or resume making Single Actions. The ZIP had a lot of problems and got nothing but bad reviews. It forced USAF into bankruptcy by around 2017 and Donnelly just seemed to disappear.
USFA Single action revolvers are quite collectible and bring prices approaching and sometimes even exceeding those of comparable Colts.
They also produced a very nice reproduction of the Colt Lightning pump action rifle from the late 19th century. Being a bit rare, the last one of those I saw at auction went for something like $3 or $4k.
Cheers
wow that’s UGLY. is this a ComBlock gun? this is what happened when you send the artist to the wheat fields to workThis little fella looks even uglier than the Haralamb Dimancea's abomination which did set the bar quite high...
Actually British... Made by the Gatling Arms & Ammunition Company in Birmingham in the end of the 19 century. The designer was a Romanian officer - Captain Haralamb Dimancea.is this a ComBlock gun?
Wow! That is fugly!This little fella looks even uglier than the Haralamb Dimancea's abomination which did set the bar quite high...
View attachment 1093765
Romanian us pretty much ComBlock! UGLY!!!!Actually British... Made by the Gatling Arms & Ammunition Company in Birmingham in the end of the 19 century. The designer was a Romanian officer - Captain Haralamb Dimancea.