- Видео 32
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Gerald Quinn
Добавлен 4 ноя 2013
This is a private channel primarily to share videos I have produced for family and friends. It is not for commercial use.
2016 Sporting Clays Year in Review
2016 Review of friends shooting Sporting Clays at events in several States (FL, GA, SC, MD, NJ, IL, VA, etc.)
Просмотров: 45
Видео
Judy's 80th birthday celebration tribute: 20 years of Joy
Просмотров 37Год назад
A tribute by her husband for the 20 years of Joy she has brought to him and others.
2006 Jon Kruger Exhibition Show X Kids
Просмотров 7 тыс.Год назад
Sporting Clays legend and Hall of Fame's first inductee, Jon Kruger demonstrates some of his amazing skills. As part of his "show", Jon busts balloons selected by the audience at 100 yards from the hip with a cylinder choke.
Jon Kruger busting balloons
Просмотров 558Год назад
Amazing skill. As part of his "show", Jon busts balloons selected by the audience at 100 yards from the hip with a cylinder choke.
Tom Frye - Remington Exhibition Shooter
Просмотров 145 тыс.2 года назад
This short clip of Tom Frye giving a shooting exhibition to some Boy Scouts was taken from a Remington Film about Exhibition Shooters. He set a world record with the Nylon 66 rimfire rifle, was an expert advisor to Hollywood movie stars like Clint Eastwood, and was a true expert with a shotgun in Skeet and Trap.
Olympic Gold Medalist Matt Dryke Shooting at Lordship V2
Просмотров 2,6 тыс.2 года назад
Edit V2.0 The best exhibition shooter with a shotgun ever, Matt Dryke shoots a perfect round of Skeet while riding a unicycle and shooting an 870 pump shotgun from the hip. No one has ever duplicated that skill. Video recorded in 1983.
Olympic Gold Medalist Matt Dryke Shooting at Lordship
Просмотров 2,1 тыс.2 года назад
The best exhibition shooter with a shotgun ever, Matt Dryke shoots a perfect round of Skeet while riding a unicycle and shooting an 870 pump shotgun from the hip. No one has ever duplicated that skill. Video recorded in 1983.
2022 05 14 Carson Graduation Part1 Bonus
Просмотров 192 года назад
A 3-minute photo-video (Introduction "My Little Girl" with added legacy video footage at the end) celebrating granddaughter, Carson, on her graduation from West Virginia University in 2022 at age 22!
2022 05 14 Carson Graduation Part1 2 3A
Просмотров 192 года назад
2022 05 14 Carson Graduation Part1 2 3A
2022 05 14 Carson Graduation Part1 2 3B
Просмотров 122 года назад
2022 05 14 Carson Graduation Part1 2 3B
😢saw this man demonstrate this rifle on a road trip to Rawlings Wyoming back in the good old days 😂
I was there that day and thanks sharing. My son was almost 4 and he still remembers it
The Nylon 66! My first firearm and I still use it regularly to this day! It's my small game gun and it is super reliable and maintenance free. Consistent with CCI standard ammo!
I grew up hanging around Sunnydell with Matt and Chuck. Chuck was one of the nicest, most generous people I've ever had the pleasure of knowing.
Forgotten Weapons brought me here! 👍
They used to have classes for school shooters? No wonder there’s so many now!
Професионал.🧐
I remember those times, no one thought killing a person. How people have degraded along with the USA
So cool to see this ole archive footage, great shooter, classic ole weapons!!
My very first firearm was a Nylon 66. I certainly knew the 100K block story and Tom Frye's part in it. What a POS that rifle was. Mine lasted for about 2000 rounds before it started to come apart. All that plastic crap in the action, the "self-lubricative" kaka that wore away despite being oiled with the best lube money could procure, and the completely unreliable feeding mechanism that ended up making the rifle a single-shot affair. I tossed it in the ashcan and got a 1911.
Sorry you were disappointed. Adding oil to the nylon probably contributed to the early deterioration and dysfunction.
@@geraldquinn1268 Actually, if was only after I tried thorough cleaning and a dry graphite luricant that I finally resorted to machine oil. By this time the rifle was puking its guts out on a regular basis anyway. As a side note, I've handled Model 60s and other .22s that have had ten thousand or more rounds through them. A well-kept .22 can last a long time. The Nylon 66 was just not a good rifle.
🇺🇲🗽⚖️👊 basic dude stuff
This is the life that was taken from you.
Epic❤
I still carry a nylon 66 in my excavator clearin land You know for varmints...4 legs or 2 legs. Never can be to safe.
Troops? Hes at a eagle scout meeting by the look of it
Thats a nice .22 pump.
Fun to watch. Great memories learning to shoot under the watchful eye of Chuck. RIP
Wow! Literally unbelievable talent! I always wanted a Nylon 66, but made up for it on the end with a few other Remingtons
The nylon 66 was a great rifle. Remington should have kept making them.
A great story about Tom Frye doing his last exhibition two weeks before he died at age 66. www.distinctlymontana.com/meeting-tom-frye-montana-marksman?
I remember the ads nylon 66 w him sittin on a pile of bocks!!! Good ole days!! He was one of a kind!!!
I had one growing up,such a fun fun,
Gerald great video!
Whoa, I thought this was joe biden at first, but then... (you finish the joke, i’m too sleepy)
I grew up shooting my dads nylon 66, i still have it .
I am 75 years old and still have my very first rifle.....a Remington Nylon 66. It was a cheap (about $50 around 1959). The durability of that rifle was legendary and very simple engineering design which used the most elaborate plastic mold up to that time. While Tom made it into a legendary rifle....in reality it was nothing special as far as accuracy. I have never had it misfire which says a lot about the desiogn.
I guess this is entertainment for some.
NACHO
Why are his glasses so high up?
Some shooters, especially trap shooters, prefer their glasses to sit higher because their head is bend slightly forward when the stock is mounted to their cheek. That enables their eyes to look through the center of the glass rather than through the top. One famous maker of shooting glasses, Bud Decot, named his glasses "Hy-Wyd" to reflect how they fit.
@@geraldquinn1268 oh, cool. That's really neat.
THE WORLD AS I REMEMBERED COMING UP . I WILL KEEP IT LIKE THAT 😢
1:17 nah bra😂😂😂😂
Where are you now Tom Frye, we need you again for our youths of America
Although he’s gone, there are some others doing great things like this for young people - like Travis Mears in TX, for example.
I don’t mean to be disrespectful but those thrown targets look to be only a few feet away from the end of the barrel
The Gould brothers put on gun shows for winchester. They're entertsining to watch.
I loved being in Scouts. Always remember shooting .22 rifles at Summer camp. Now I gotta go shoot
One of the best snd he didn't need a automatic just a good old pump gun 870 wingmaster👍👍
I would like to do this in my garden but it's illegal :v)
I assure 🫵🏻… not a single one of these “YOUNG MEN” went on to shoot up any of their schools…
Still have my Nylon 66. Bought it for around $50. Still shoots as new.
This shooting isn't even possible but yet here he does it
I knew that this video was from the 70's by the taco shaped brim of the straw hat. Great marksman! Thanks for the video!
He and Herb Parsons, who shot exhibitions for Winchester, were two of the very best...
Love my nylon 66. It's my rabbit gun. Also have an 1100 rem skeet gun.
My dad was worthless drunk but before that happened shooting guns was something I really enjoyed he had nylon 66 if one of neatest guns you could shoot an you could load it up. His drinking buddy got al the guns guess dad drank them but I can't find one anywhere hearing about one in this clip is first time in 50 years I've heard it brought up
I'm pretty sure I saw Tom Frye at our county fair in the 1960s. There were several "trick shot" guys who represented ammunition and firearms manufacturers making the circuit back then. As a 10 year old with a 14 year old brother, we used to shoot archery and .22 rifles almost everyday while growing up on a farm. We got to be pretty good shots and could replicate some of the trick shot experts with splitting playing cards and lighting matches, driving nails, etc. It's s shame kids can't grow up like that any more. Oh, we were shooting our BB guns probably from about age 6, so we were pretty good shots even before dad bought the bolt-action, Remington Nylon 12. That rifle went to my older brother (like everything else of course!) and he taught his son to shoot with it and now, his son is teaching his kids. For a cheap little rifle from the early 1960s (they were made from 1962-64) It's still in good shape and shoots well.
Was that an 870, or 1100 he was shooting?
12 ga. 870
He used an 870 with a 10-shot magazine extension in his exhibitions.
Bring back 🇺🇸 America.
Would have enjoyed having that job.
Wow! Honestly, the 4 clay's really impressed, both the rifle and the gentleman, Tom Frye. Thanks for posting.
my dad had a friend in the 50s-90s when dad passed away. i then became good friends with this man until he passed in around. 1996, dad said he could hit most anything with a 22 thrown into the air and kill a deer with a head shot as the deer ran! the man's son told me he could hit a nickel flipped in the air every time and a dime most times with a 22