
How Pump Shotguns Stayed Relevant for So Long
From cornfields to clay ranges and city closets, pump shotguns never left. Here’s why the old slide-action still earns space in safes and behind doors, and what buyers and collectors should know now.
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From cornfields to clay ranges and city closets, pump shotguns never left. Here’s why the old slide-action still earns space in safes and behind doors, and what buyers and collectors should know now.

Born in 1955 with a flattop and adjustable sights, the Ruger Blackhawk bridged Old West feel and modern function. Decades later, it still earns a place on the firing line and in the safe.

Born in 1985 but with roots that reach back to John Browning’s early rimfire work, the Buck Mark keeps winning over new shooters and longtime hands with accuracy, easy manners, and a platform that just works.

Born in 1975 and built behind the Iron Curtain, the CZ 75 didn’t just survive the wonder nine era — it quietly set a standard. Here’s how a steel-framed Czech pistol won over shooters, buyers, and collectors.

From an Italian valley of barrel makers to the M9 on American belts and the APX in modern trials, Beretta’s service-pistol story is a chain of design choices that stuck with soldiers and cops when it mattered.

From 19th-century service guns to today’s trail companions and home-defense staples, double-action revolvers keep winning trust with simple mechanics, broad caliber flexibility, and model lineages that reward buyers and collectors alike.

Born as a Swiss service pistol and built like a match gun, the SIG P210 blends Petter-Browning engineering, hand-fitted craftsmanship, and modern revivals into a cult favorite that still wins hearts on the firing line.

From muddy trenches to Camp Perry podiums and custom shop benches, the Colt 1911 grew from a government sidearm into a culture-spanning platform with a life of its own.

From its double-stack magazine to a control layout many of us still use by feel, the Browning Hi-Power quietly set the pattern for modern service pistols. Here is how it happened and what it means for buyers and collectors.

From wartime issue to Cold War workhorse, the Walther P38 shaped the modern duty pistol. Here’s why it still has a place in a buyer’s range bag and a collector’s cabinet.

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