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Andy Griffith - Times have changed

Posted: Tue Feb 14, 2012 12:45 pm
by TDDude
Was watching Andy Griffith and it was the one where Opie wants to win his dad a razor at the carnival. Looks like he was shooting a Winchester 61 Pump .22.

Imagine that, live fire at a carnival!! The Horror!! The Horror!!!

:lol:: :lol:: :lol::

Re: Andy Griffith - Times have changed

Posted: Tue Feb 14, 2012 1:39 pm
by Keith B
TDDude wrote:Was watching Andy Griffith and it was the one where Opie wants to win his dad a razor at the carnival. Looks like he was shooting a Winchester 61 Pump .22.

Imagine that, live fire at a carnival!! The Horror!! The Horror!!!

:lol:: :lol:: :lol::
I can personally remember shooting galleries at the Fair and Carnivals when I was a kid that used .22 shorts.

Re: Andy Griffith - Times have changed

Posted: Tue Feb 14, 2012 3:07 pm
by EricB
Keith B wrote:
TDDude wrote:Was watching Andy Griffith and it was the one where Opie wants to win his dad a razor at the carnival. Looks like he was shooting a Winchester 61 Pump .22.

Imagine that, live fire at a carnival!! The Horror!! The Horror!!!

:lol:: :lol:: :lol::
I can personally remember shooting galleries at the Fair and Carnivals when I was a kid that used .22 shorts.
Yessir... Born in the mid-Fifties, and growing up in SE Kansas I can remember the various county fairs had shooting galleries with .22 short rifles.
Seems like a lifetime ago! :shock:

Re: Andy Griffith - Times have changed

Posted: Tue Feb 14, 2012 3:11 pm
by Purplehood
My parents kept the rifles in the front-room closet.

My Grandparents kept the rifles on the front porch (enclosed).

I am the oldest of four boys. We never had a mishap.

Re: Andy Griffith - Times have changed

Posted: Tue Feb 14, 2012 3:16 pm
by RPB
Purplehood wrote:My parents kept the rifles in the front-room closet.

My Grandparents kept the rifles on the front porch (enclosed).

I am the oldest of four boys. We never had a mishap.
Those days the rifles were trained to stay put, nowadays they just run willy nilly all over the place by themselves so they need leashes and locks :willynilly:
Never know when one might "just go off" :lol:

Re: Andy Griffith - Times have changed

Posted: Tue Feb 14, 2012 3:23 pm
by karder
I love those old shows. I was watching an old Daniel Boone episode on Sunday. No violence, no sex, no uncomfortable moments that need to be explained to the kids. Sure the story lines were simplistic and there was a goofy edge to it, but that is ok with me. Somehow popular entertainment morphed in Jersey Shore. I don't know how that happened, but I'll stick with the old re-runs. Gotta go, Bonanza is about to start!

Re: Andy Griffith - Times have changed

Posted: Tue Feb 14, 2012 3:39 pm
by Keith B
I liked Andy Griffith as a kid, but wasn't really into the Westerns my Dad liked. I would usually go do other things when those were on. Today, I love to watch the old Andy Griffith, Bonanza and Gunsmoke reruns. I even like The Walton's. When that was on, if I tried to change the channel, my Dad would get almost as mad as Mom would if I tried to change the channel during 'The Guiding Light' :mrgreen:

Re: Andy Griffith - Times have changed

Posted: Tue Feb 14, 2012 4:03 pm
by wgoforth
Isn't there a .22 used just for carnivals and such that has no powder but only the cap?

Edit: Found it... a .22 colibri

Re: Andy Griffith - Times have changed

Posted: Tue Feb 14, 2012 4:30 pm
by FuziDave
not to hijack the .22 thread (or was it an old tv show thread :))

i've been watching Andy Griffith & Dick Van Dyke Show on Netflix. when there's nothing on worth watching (which is 99% of the time) i'll pop in Dick Van Dyke Show, which has 159 episodes on Netflix. so i got plenty of time :)

Re: Andy Griffith - Times have changed

Posted: Tue Feb 14, 2012 4:53 pm
by fishfree
wgoforth wrote:Isn't there a .22 used just for carnivals and such that has no powder but only the cap?

Edit: Found it... a .22 colibri
You can still buy cb cap rounds that are 22 short with little or no powder; just the primer in some brands IIRC... basically converts the .22 into a pellet gun in terms of noise and lethality. Just google "cb caps .22".

now back to the regularly scheduled programming:
Cheyenne (just watched an episode with James Garner and Michael Landon in bit parts)
Wagon Train
Gunsmoke
Twilight Zone (every day at lunch now :-)
Hitchcock Presents

Re: Andy Griffith - Times have changed

Posted: Tue Feb 14, 2012 5:02 pm
by Keith B
The rounds may have been Colibri's. I do remember there were two games that I shot .22. One was a regular animated shooting gallery (ducks, birds, bunnies, etc) all moving across the backstop. The other was a paper target with 5 stars and you had to get the bullet hole inside the star, one shot each, and not touch the line outline of the star.

If I remember right both of them used a rifle similar to the Winchester 61
Image

Re: Andy Griffith - Times have changed

Posted: Tue Feb 14, 2012 6:52 pm
by FL450
I still watch Andy Griffith, seen every episode. The show doesnt get old.

Re: Andy Griffith - Times have changed

Posted: Tue Feb 14, 2012 8:03 pm
by Heartland Patriot
Keith B wrote:I liked Andy Griffith as a kid, but wasn't really into the Westerns my Dad liked. I would usually go do other things when those were on. Today, I love to watch the old Andy Griffith, Bonanza and Gunsmoke reruns. I even like The Walton's. When that was on, if I tried to change the channel, my Dad would get almost as mad as Mom would if I tried to change the channel during 'The Guiding Light' :mrgreen:
I not only grew up with REAL guns, but also I used to watch war movies with my dad (and some Westerns). Stuff like Sands of Iwo Jima and The Longest Day (pretty much ANYTHING with John Wayne in it). We also hunted: rabbits, birds, deer...so firearms where I grew up were tools, and it was all about the use you put them to that mattered. I still like the older movies the best, BTW, even if the special effects aren't as good.

Re: Andy Griffith - Times have changed

Posted: Tue Feb 14, 2012 9:36 pm
by jimlongley
wgoforth wrote:Isn't there a .22 used just for carnivals and such that has no powder but only the cap?

Edit: Found it... a .22 colibri
Predating the Colibri by more than 100 years was the BB (Bulleted Breech) cap, and quite common in the county fair guns. I used to win at those fairly regularly, it was primarily a matter of getting the carny to let you use the same gun often enough to find out how far off its sights were and then using "Kentucky Windage" to run the score up. Most of the carnies would take notice if you kept using the same gun over and over and would make you change guns, but if you were sneaky enough you could get away with it, particularly noting that the carnies took breaks and moved from booth to booth. It helped that I didn't hit my growth spurt until I was almost 16, so I still looked like a kid even when I was an active NRA competitor.

One old carny switched me to a little gun that had the front sight bent almost 90 degrees, but after a few shots I had it figured out and put all my shots in the center of the star before he had a chance to switch me to another gun, and then when he was trying show me that all the shots hadn't made it through the center of the star, the piece of target that he had stuck to his finger fell off.

Got a big (6 foot) stuffed shark for my date out of that one, but I wound up carrying it.

A couple of other things the carnies used to do was not clean the guns, and some had the rifling, if not removed, at least severely compromised.

Re: Andy Griffith - Times have changed

Posted: Tue Feb 14, 2012 10:21 pm
by alvins
just about anything on the hallmark channel is terrible. the waltons is the worst. i guess you can guess my age.lol