@@stranger5011as much as I love that game a lotta stuff like the wanted system and sneaking kinda suck but that's how most rockstar games are hopefully GTA 6 will be different
Всем хорошего времени суток! А у меня к сожалению случилось несчастье! Так бывает в жизни! Что теперь у меня, исполнительных производств и долгов на 2 миллиона 400 тысяч рублей, высчитывают с моей маленькой пенсии... НИКОГДА не думал, что придётся так делать!!! Но... другого выхода у меня нет! Только надеяться на помощь Людей!!! Возможно кто то сможет помочь, любой доступной суммой!? Ведь на улице подаёте!? Может прочитает какой нибудь альтруист, благотворитель, просто неравнодушный к чужому горю!!! И отправит мне перевод, хоть 100₽ 1€, 1£, 1$! Или передайте тому кто может помочь!!! Добрые люди, для Вас эта незначительная сумма не будет бременем, а мне очень поможет!!! Очень буду благодарен любой сумме! 5559 4941 6750 5733 /..../ 5536 9139 9434 2505 /...../ 2200 2407 9989 3132
personally i liked the falling block over rolling block... Rolling block was 1867 and remingtons response to Henry's falling block. Honestly Rem and henry seemed to have a war trying to out do each other. Let remember 1860 gave us the henry leaver action which was much faster firing... but slow to reload. 1871 henry matted their lever action to a martini falling block, for a rifle that continued to be made till 1918 (except that illegal clones of the Martini-henry falling block are still made today in pakistan)
@chosenrubric7308 I have no idea where they fit in the time-line, but thats a great point. I just know the bolt got popular for prone shooting around wwi and levers were big for horseback.
@@JFTSwiertz If I'm not mistaken trapdoors were popularized in the American military for about 50 years following the civil war as they could be made by converting muskets of the time. Breach-loaders required entirely new designs so came into popular use later, and didn't really see as much widespread production since they were rapidly replaced by bolt/lever actions, but both trapdoor and breach loading actually existed hundreds of years earlier, it just wasn't feasible for military scale production and had issues because they were still using ball and powder instead of cased munitions. It's kind of like how the Greeks and Chinese both independently invented crossbows over a thousand years before they actually saw widespread use in the mediaeval period.
@@christo-gj1qkDon’t forget the lengthy intros and outros a lot of channels are adding to their videos just make their videos fit the short category with barely any content, basically a waste of time. Edit: iPhone autocorrect typos
@@michaelswagson4457 Yeah, you should give us a source though. And consider that this one is probably cheaper than the other repeating rifles of the time, and punches with more force. There's a reason they used these, and not repeater carbines, to hunt buffalo.
@@user-ti5cn3hv4gMartini-Henry and Mauser Model 1871 are two that come to mind as being contemporary to the Remington Rolling Block and having a better action mechanism
I really enjoy the mechanics of this gun. The "rolling" part of the rolling block is very simple and quite an elegant design, and it's definitely withstood the test of time. The gun never jams, it's probably extremely hard to break. Independent of the warfare angle, where speed and rate of fire get pretty essential, this is a machine with quite excellent engineering.
Incredibly easy to take care of, too, roll the breechblock back and you can see the chamber and bore clear as day, full access from both ends, and the mechanism is only a few mostly large parts. Extremely brilliant. -The cool part is that it was invented by two dudes who had independently come up with basically the same concept at basically the same time, one discovering the other when trying to patent his and seeing it was already patented. They meet, decide that they should work together, eventually selling their further developed rifle design to Remington, and both of them profited quite well.-
Surprises me that this didn’t make it into Battlefield 1 but the Martini-Henry did. The Rolling Block was still being issued to rear-echelon troops in the French army during the war
@@mrflapjacklover And might have been in much higher quantity compared to the Rolling Block, even if this gun was to be issued to soldiers in WW1 it probably wouldn't be a main infantry weapon but rather a sniper's primary since most snipers only did get one shot off before they themselves were hit by another sniper.
@@cursedhawkins1305 i feel like this isn't an issue of how many were produced since i'm pretty sure battlefield one didn't have about that with a few guns
I built my father a 45-70 with a 33” round heavy barrel on a 1867 Danish Rolling Block. He loved that rifle. After he passed away in 1995, I took it back to Wyoming with me and took 2 elk, 4 mule deer and 2 antelope… I lost count of the prairie dogs. It will be handed down to my youngest grandson after I am gone
@@Steve-ev6vxas long as the mount wasn’t permanent haha. I wouldn’t be able to conscience drilling that beautiful old gun. I’d rather just grab a $600 modern rifle to fuck with instead of permanently sporterizing.
@@Marines_Memelevolent yeah, that's the only problem, ya gotta drill it. But, that just gives me justification to buy two of them. Gotta have one that's original and then one to deer hunt.
@@Qwerty0791 It was a hypothetical scenario where he could arm and train them with better weapons (but limited time.) The idea was to enable them to survive.
@bobcampbell5151 The Texans were Mexican citizens, and they weren't the only ones in Mexico who had a problem with Santa Anna openly trashing the Mexican Constitution. The Texans were just the only ones to successfully wage a revolution and gain independence, the others elsewhere in Mexico were brutally suppressed.
You need to pick up the game Hunt: Showdown. We don't yet have a rolling block, but we have the breach loaded Sprinfield 1866. Both the Martini and the Sharps are in the game.
The amount of care that was put in to gently placing that piece of history on that table gives you all the respect I had set aside for YT shorts accounts today
@@1SilverDollar Can't blame you there. There's a bunch of guns I'd never turn loose of without major compensation. Storage space? Who needs storage space?/s
@@dustyoatmilk It doesn't mean the physical construction or the metallurgy you nitwit THE ACTION locks up stronger THAN ANY OTHER RIFLE ACTION BEFORE OR SINCE Rather than school you on the physics, which have been established for decades, I would suggest you educate yourself instead of selecting the choice of ignorance However I have no doubt the path you will choose
As a kid the way I imagined these worked was so different I feel kinda silly actually seeing them in action. Oh well, I’m sure it’s not the first time that’s happened.
@@Nina_White Mexican M1897 in 7x57 Mauser, Argentina's Mod.1879 was chambered in .43 Spanish but a few got arsenal rebarreled in 7,65X53 Argentine in the late 1890's.
The O'Driscolls won't know what hit them 😎
Rdr2 huh
Actually after the first guy dies they Will, because the enemy detection system in this game is busted.
@@stranger5011as much as I love that game a lotta stuff like the wanted system and sneaking kinda suck but that's how most rockstar games are hopefully GTA 6 will be different
There's O'Driscolls brothers in GTA V too.
Всем хорошего времени суток! А у меня к сожалению случилось несчастье! Так бывает в жизни! Что теперь у меня, исполнительных производств и долгов на 2 миллиона 400 тысяч рублей, высчитывают с моей маленькой пенсии... НИКОГДА не думал, что придётся так делать!!! Но... другого выхода у меня нет! Только надеяться на помощь Людей!!! Возможно кто то сможет помочь, любой доступной суммой!? Ведь на улице подаёте!? Может прочитает какой нибудь альтруист, благотворитель, просто неравнодушный к чужому горю!!! И отправит мне перевод, хоть 100₽ 1€, 1£, 1$! Или передайте тому кто может помочь!!! Добрые люди, для Вас эта незначительная сумма не будет бременем, а мне очень поможет!!! Очень буду благодарен любой сумме! 5559 4941 6750 5733 /..../ 5536 9139 9434 2505 /...../ 2200 2407 9989 3132
While it is slow, it is a machine gun compared to a muzzle loader
For the time it was good and reliable
@@dominicviner6619 Kinda hard to mess up something like this, unless you are determined to.
Are flint lock
personally i liked the falling block over rolling block...
Rolling block was 1867 and remingtons response to Henry's falling block. Honestly Rem and henry seemed to have a war trying to out do each other.
Let remember 1860 gave us the henry leaver action which was much faster firing... but slow to reload.
1871 henry matted their lever action to a martini falling block, for a rifle that continued to be made till 1918 (except that illegal clones of the Martini-henry falling block are still made today in pakistan)
Like most if not all breach loaders? When this design came out muzzle loading was long gone from the perspective of people that were there.
This feels like the missing link between a musket and a bolt action rifle.
Im no historian, but i believe it was, followed by the lever, then the bolt.
@@JFTSwiertz Don't forget trapdoor rifles.
@chosenrubric7308
I have no idea where they fit in the time-line, but thats a great point. I just know the bolt got popular for prone shooting around wwi and levers were big for horseback.
@@JFTSwiertz If I'm not mistaken trapdoors were popularized in the American military for about 50 years following the civil war as they could be made by converting muskets of the time. Breach-loaders required entirely new designs so came into popular use later, and didn't really see as much widespread production since they were rapidly replaced by bolt/lever actions, but both trapdoor and breach loading actually existed hundreds of years earlier, it just wasn't feasible for military scale production and had issues because they were still using ball and powder instead of cased munitions.
It's kind of like how the Greeks and Chinese both independently invented crossbows over a thousand years before they actually saw widespread use in the mediaeval period.
Missing link? Have you just discovered single shot rifles existed?
"Looking for a rifle, something with a sight on it." a good man 1899
I see what's happening here...
*tips hat*
Arthur, I have a plan.
LUMBAGO
And It's a good one
I just need timmme… I need timmmme
MUNEH FAITH *PLAN*
😊
them pinkertons ain't got a chance
I suck my girlfriend's toes.
I nicked the census man pa.
Oh no my precious antique cans!
We abouta save abigail with this one
In my opinion, one of the most aesthetically pleasing rifles ever made.
Ppp
You might like to check out the assorted works of John Moses Browning, LOLOLOL.
I don’t know man…
I agree, it's beautiful! What rifle is it?
Almost has a musket look about it 👍
Red Dead Redemption really shows how skilled Arthur was at reloading that rolling block.
no shitty background music, no inflated ego, just pure firearm asmr. 10/10
Yeah that's why I hate modern videos cause they put these annoying background music with all this shakey, light up screens.
@@christo-gj1qkDon’t forget the lengthy intros and outros a lot of channels are adding to their videos just make their videos fit the short category with barely any content, basically a waste of time.
Edit: iPhone autocorrect typos
I like the porn music from those old schools Japanese gun shows tho
Let me guess,youre about 64 years old?@christo-gj1qk
Jaeger Z999 be like
“You sir, are a fish”
-Arthur Morgan
Best quote of 1899:
John: “Arthur, I’ll need you to go in there and buy a sniper rifle”
Arthur: “why can’t you do it?”
John: “I’ll explain later, just get it, I’ll pay.”
“I got lumbago” ahh gun
restarted grape addiction unalived
"Idiots admire complexity, geniuses admire simplicity."
@@FirAco-lu7brhuh
@@FirAco-lu7bryou know you can proof read before hitting send right?
maybe but in case of guns, both geniuses and idiots admire that 1 reload multiple shots.
I think idiots and geniuses prefer simplicity
That's not what that means. It means complexity isn't an inherently advantages trait but rather a necessary one.
One of the most clever actions in History, in my opinion. Such a basic concept worked so well with so many cartridges.
Still a shitty gun compared to other guns of its time
@@michaelswagson4457what other rifles were available at that time?
@@michaelswagson4457 Yeah, you should give us a source though. And consider that this one is probably cheaper than the other repeating rifles of the time, and punches with more force. There's a reason they used these, and not repeater carbines, to hunt buffalo.
Watch blud say "Carcano rifle" @@michaelswagson4457
@@user-ti5cn3hv4gMartini-Henry and Mauser Model 1871 are two that come to mind as being contemporary to the Remington Rolling Block and having a better action mechanism
"switching to your pistol is always faster than reloading"
- gaz MW4
I really enjoy the mechanics of this gun. The "rolling" part of the rolling block is very simple and quite an elegant design, and it's definitely withstood the test of time. The gun never jams, it's probably extremely hard to break. Independent of the warfare angle, where speed and rate of fire get pretty essential, this is a machine with quite excellent engineering.
Incredibly easy to take care of, too, roll the breechblock back and you can see the chamber and bore clear as day, full access from both ends, and the mechanism is only a few mostly large parts. Extremely brilliant.
-The cool part is that it was invented by two dudes who had independently come up with basically the same concept at basically the same time, one discovering the other when trying to patent his and seeing it was already patented. They meet, decide that they should work together, eventually selling their further developed rifle design to Remington, and both of them profited quite well.-
Actually, I completely misremembered that part, they didn't really work together like that.
"HEY ARTHUR, wanna go huntin?"
What are you hunting? An elephant?
A bison@@AngelCastroZambrano
"No a big bear"
@@kimsumner9443I’d reckon around 1,000 pounds!
WE MAKIN IT OUTTA VALENTINE WITH THIS ONE🗣🗣🗣🗣🗣🗣🗣🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥💯
I dunno, but old guns have that certain charm that is simply unmatched ❤
Them damn Murphy broods won’t know what hit em 🤠
Soo that's a rolling block. Using that in red dead redemption.. ha
That word is spelled with one O
The one in Red Dead is an american rolling block in 45-70. This i presume would probably be a spanish one if it's in 7mm Mauser
@@DafodilWorkshopProductions awh ..ok
@@DafodilWorkshopProductionsI was thinking that when he pulled out the ammo box lol. I've only seen the 45-70 version before.
@willtherealrustyschacklefo3812 so many countries adopted the rolling block, even I couldn't tell you how many calibers there are of these babies.
Surprises me that this didn’t make it into Battlefield 1 but the Martini-Henry did. The Rolling Block was still being issued to rear-echelon troops in the French army during the war
so was the martini henry :p
@@mrflapjacklover And might have been in much higher quantity compared to the Rolling Block, even if this gun was to be issued to soldiers in WW1 it probably wouldn't be a main infantry weapon but rather a sniper's primary since most snipers only did get one shot off before they themselves were hit by another sniper.
@@cursedhawkins1305 i feel like this isn't an issue of how many were produced since i'm pretty sure battlefield one didn't have about that with a few guns
did i just unironically type out "one"
@@cursedhawkins1305 snipers were issued with SMLEs with optics, martini henry rifles chambered in .303 were reserved for rear echelon units
The definition of smoothness in a firearm.
"What are you huntin, an elephant?"
"You wanna go hunting?"
"What are you hunting, an elephant?"
"No, a big bear! "
Rdr2 sniper of my choice.
esp if it's the rare version
I used to have a mod that removed scope and used it with iron sights throughout the whole game. Pretty fun marksmanship challenge
@@fareastslavyou don’t need a mod you can just glitch it
Springfield for life
imma tell u rn dawg slap a medium scope on a carcano and you’ll never look
The only gun politicians will allow.
as they should, unhinged conservative raised boys are a threat to all students across america
I built my father a 45-70 with a 33” round heavy barrel on a 1867 Danish Rolling Block. He loved that rifle. After he passed away in 1995, I took it back to Wyoming with me and took 2 elk, 4 mule deer and 2 antelope… I lost count of the prairie dogs. It will be handed down to my youngest grandson after I am gone
We getting kidnapped by o’Driscolls with this one
I have a plan Arthur, but we need money
What goddamn plan Dutch?! Tahiti?
@@egertroos-qh7hw or Australia
Ohh black lung...
Meanwhile Arthur roaming around camp with 30k in cash and gold on his person
@@egertroos-qh7hwtimbuktoo?
"Okay Mr Milton, I guess we're gonna have to talk this out like gentleman."
the Rolling Block action design visually reminds me of how most breech-loading artillery works.
These were once rather common on the US surplus market. A wee bit before my time. Great rifles. 🤠
I'd hunt with it. Especially if it was sporterized with a ascope mount.
@@Steve-ev6vxas long as the mount wasn’t permanent haha. I wouldn’t be able to conscience drilling that beautiful old gun. I’d rather just grab a $600 modern rifle to fuck with instead of permanently sporterizing.
@@Marines_Memelevolent yeah, that's the only problem, ya gotta drill it. But, that just gives me justification to buy two of them. Gotta have one that's original and then one to deer hunt.
@@Steve-ev6vx all the while the ol lady thinks they the same gun
@@jacecadle1801 She thinks I inherited all these guns from my grandfather anyway...
“Damn us both!” Bro it’s been 5 years and it still hits hard fr
The last thing the deer hears before I get a perfect pelt
POV me when I need to scope in from a distance to make sure that my gang leader doesn’t get killed bye O'Driscolls
Remington Rolling Block, single shot breech loading rifle used by many Armies.
You bet your ass every country in history, atleast had 1 of these.
@@ewelinanajgebauer8862 yeah I bet
What year?
@@briankoester9302mine is 1873, if that helps.
US make crap firearms compared to Europe.
This is the rifle and caliber that Ian McCollum said that he would give to the Alamo defenders given one hour to train them on any weapon.
The Alamo isn’t the best place to mention in terms of defensive victories.
@@Qwerty0791 It was a hypothetical scenario where he could arm and train them with better weapons (but limited time.) The idea was to enable them to survive.
@@Axemantitan oh I gotcha
Why you should have trained the other side or
the owners of the LAND .With no fort to
cover them!!
@bobcampbell5151
The Texans were Mexican citizens, and they weren't the only ones in Mexico who had a problem with Santa Anna openly trashing the Mexican Constitution. The Texans were just the only ones to successfully wage a revolution and gain independence, the others elsewhere in Mexico were brutally suppressed.
That rifle is absolutely gorgeous in every aspect.
modern firearms are better, but there is something about the old ones that just feels so good.
Sure one shots something to scoff at from a combat perspective; but at the time it must've been quite revolutionary
Coming from muzzle loaders to this was quite the jump.
Damn O'Driscolls.
Arthur, you are like a son to me. And Arthur, I.. HAVE.. A PLAN!!
All the rdr quotes are fkn great XD
Would love to own one. But I need more MONEY!
Sorry I spent it all in Saint Denis
@@refrigerator-13 MARSTON! You do hWHAT?
You just need a plan
MARSTON. YOU BAFOON, now we don’t got money TO GO TO TAHITI
We gettin kidnapped by O'Driscolls with this one
I've seen this come it twice. I don't understand it
The O’Driscolls are the villains in the very popular video game red dead redemption 2
I have a rolling block shotgun 20 gauge. Love the old thing.
Finally a gun channel actually shows the star 🌟
Looks like a good rifle for hunting.
My father had a 7mm Rolling Block when our family lived in a cabin from 1999-2002. He used it to scare off black bears mostly
Did you mean to say 1899-1902?
@@Roadwarior2 lolol I love it! It was the mountains of central PA, I think he got it at a gun show in Harrisburg.
Whoah! You're over 100!?!?
My family comes from that area. Little college town on the Susquehanna called Bloomsburg mostly @@DraiganW
yeah we know what you mean
This is like doing a Sunday afternoon drive w a restored Model T, a classic experience
You have kept that perfectly maintained. I love to see that.
Favorite Red Dead Redemption 2 Sniper Rifle
I love that you dnt throw your shit on the table like all these youtubers do. Respect your tools man
I know exactly who you're talking about lol. I used to be subbed to him a while back. He only made shorts. Forgot his channel name.
With how this thing is built it might break the table...
Always loved the rolling block idea. Such simplicity yet so effective.
Just the audio that is needed. No stupid unnecessary music or voice over. Grand video.
Everyone's expecting another RDR2 reference but all I gotta say is "Auf Wiedersehen!"
Nobody here is talking about Quigley Down Under which was the first thing that came to my mind when I saw that rifle lol
Real
Dr King Schultz?
@@yak-machining correct
I would love a rolling block, a martini Henry, and a sharps. I have such a strange love for old single shots yet I can’t afford any
Come visit me in NZ! You can fire a Trapdoor too.
The Snider is my favorite breechloader
You need to pick up the game Hunt: Showdown.
We don't yet have a rolling block, but we have the breach loaded Sprinfield 1866.
Both the Martini and the Sharps are in the game.
We herdin sheep wit this one🔥🔥🗣
I wish we had this variant of the Rolling Block in rdr2
The amount of care that was put in to gently placing that piece of history on that table gives you all the respect I had set aside for YT shorts accounts today
Making sure it doesn't break the table
One of my favorite in RDR2
Just something about old school guns that are so satisfying
a simple yet elegant design, I love rolling block and falling block rifles
"Look, just do one thing or another, not be two people at once..."
I swear this guy has every gun that is made…
I wonder if he trades them around to fund the next gun video
@@1SilverDollar Probably just borrows them from others to make vids.
@@kylekatarn5964 Could be that too. I know I couldn't afford to return the Lebel 1886 if I got one.
@@1SilverDollar
Can't blame you there.
There's a bunch of guns I'd never turn loose of without major compensation.
Storage space? Who needs storage space?/s
W short, keep up the great work my guy!
The single strongest action ever incorporated into any rifle
not true, most high pressure 45-70 cant even be shot in them. But yes for the time it was great
@@dustyoatmilk It doesn't mean the physical construction or the metallurgy you nitwit
THE ACTION locks up stronger THAN ANY OTHER RIFLE ACTION BEFORE OR SINCE
Rather than school you on the physics, which have been established for decades, I would suggest you educate yourself instead of selecting the choice of ignorance
However I have no doubt the path you will choose
My ancestors in Mexico used these exact same rifles to overthrow a government
That’s so metal.
Based hombres
My favorite rifle in Red dead 2
This is one of those guns that is just so satisfying to me
Always loved the simplicity of the rolling block rifle.
One of my favorite breech loading rifles!
As a kid the way I imagined these worked was so different I feel kinda silly actually seeing them in action.
Oh well, I’m sure it’s not the first time that’s happened.
Beautiful historical document. Thanks!
Pete 🏴
Ive never liked guns like this. But damn it makes me appreciate the ones i have today
I have never seen a rifle operate like that before. Pretty cool
Система не перестает удивлять своей простотой и надёжностью.
Ah yes, a rolling block rifle. A gun so overkill its the entire selling point
Si , did you get the snake? Nah.
Those sights are actually pretty nice for the time that gun was made!
Still are. Crisp
Dato curioso. En España ese fue el tipo de rifle reglamentario para la infantería y la caballería hasta la guerra de 1898.
You know dead you'll be when you see your opponent reload his rifle like a canon
Nice history lesson with no wasted words.
Fun fact, rolling block rifles were for a short while the standard Vatican rifle for their army
it's less of a army and more of a private security force made up of swiss security guards tasked with protecting the pope
True rifles for true Romans
Most countries used them in some form as well. Although different calibers
This channel feels like me testing every gun in the gun range on siege
A blackpowder design strong enough to handle even the fabulous 30-06.
Gonna scare some sheperds with this one
Beautiful wood and steel rifle!
What else could it be composed of
@@manender1020 Maybe polymer and steel or something of that sort?
That's a great design that I wish was still popular
He forgot to do some kind of intro where he whispers, "today we're going to do rifle ASMR"
firearms and educational shorts are the only shorts i accept
Rifle 🤑👍
En Cuba conocemos a ese rifle como remintong de un disparo. Fue el arma principal de los mambises en las guerras de independencia de España.
This is so satisfying. It's simple and elegant.
Its really good an gives off western and revolutionary vibes even though they used different rounds
Прекрасный день выдался у чувака, отличная винтовка...
Это прекрасная винтовка)
South American model? I used to have this very rifle also in 7mm, but it didn't headspace properly with modern off-the-shelf 7mm. Neat piece.
Spanish.
probably argentinian, or spanish
Mexicano
@@Nina_White Mexican M1897 in 7x57 Mauser, Argentina's Mod.1879 was chambered in .43 Spanish but a few got arsenal rebarreled in 7,65X53 Argentine in the late 1890's.
@@chapiit08 I didnt know that, thanks for the info!
Bro is training for Micah
That sounds soooo clean, love it!