Only 16,000 machine pistol trejo were made. My Grandfather bought one of them in 1954, he passed it on to my father and my father to me. I have it registered (in Mexico weapons must be registered) and it is wonderful, mine is the number 12,999. There aren't many left in good condition.
Mexicans can't have any weapons legally sorry. You're lying. In Mexico you can only have registered firearm as a cop or military so he must have been in the military which you left out. Big difference. Mexico is NOT a free country
Mexican designers are seriously underrated. The genius Mondragón and his futuristic semi-automatic rifle in the early 1900s, Obregón and his modified 1911 pistol etc. That Trejo looks like an amazing lot of fun.
@@1919apri wish it wasn't like that if the gun laws in mexico were like the south of the US then all of you could rebel and protect yourselves from the cartels
Correction Mr Mac the Trejo company it’s not defunct or out of business they are still producing their products and have them improved since the first models when the 1971 ban on guns manufacturing were implemented here in Mexico City the only thing and model they don’t produce anymore is the fully automatic model but models in 22 lr and .380 auto are still made and with really good quality
@@TokaDaPsLife The National Firearms Act (NFA), 73rd Congress, Sess. 2, ch. 757, 48 Stat. 1236 was enacted on June 26, 1934, and currently codified and amended as I.R.C. ch. 53. The law is an Act of Congress in the United States that, in general, imposes an excise tax on the manufacture and transfer of certain firearms and mandates the registration of those firearms.
@@TokaDaPsLife No you definitely have to pay the $200 tax on a pre 86 MG. Thats actually the only full auto you can pay the tax on because the post 86 ones are illegal except for SOTs
Mexico has a lot of cool/ unusual guns. My grandpa had this pistol & believe it or not a .22 shotgun that dates back to the Mexican American war. These weren’t mass produced, civilians/ ranchers that were protecting themselves would have to get creative with their weapons since they were poor. Shot shells had to be custom made & were hard to find. He also had an 18g shotgun and an old Mondragon bolt action but he didn’t have any ammo for those 2. He mainly carried a S&W .38 special since that was the ammo that was readily available to him & an old 12g for hunting. You can find alot of these unusual guns within the poor ranching villages in mexico. My family is from Michoacán for reference.
5.8x65mm Mondragon round.! almost flat shoulder, long 5.8mm bullet that fit into a hole in a washer within the cartridge case. Rifles were straight pull and made in Switzerland.
No such thing as 22 shotgun. If it's 22 it's not a shotgun if it's a shotgun it's not a 22. Think you mean pump action 22 rifle. There's many still around
A .22 shotgun from the Mexican American War? Lol are you sure? The Mexican American War was fought in 1846-48. The .22 long rifle cartridges started production in 1887.
@codyclem7146 if it's from the Mexican American war it could be a 22 cal ball shotgun back in the old days in the West they got pretty weird with their guns especially non Americans at that time
Thanks to the NRA and Reagan these are astronomically priced and thanks to the NFA they're an extra $200 and a registered weapon. I got a Modelo ad before the video lol.
@@EggplantHarmesan this Is the case for Trejo. They actually open up shop for a while then close again. They cant compete with all the new Fancy stuff. They would make damn good 1911 clones but mexican laws on calibers fuck them over
If Mexico is anything like Argentina then Trejo must have some good market in the form of middle-lower class shooters. Our Bersa handguns are inferior to Glock and CZ ones and yet they are sold pretty well since the latter cost around four times as much
Trejo still makes guns for civilians in Mexico, they now have a new version of the .22 lr (semi auto) a couple of years ago they where producing a .380 acp version. There's also another gun company in Mexico called Mendoza mostly known for their Air Rifles and .22 lr rifles which are sold in the U.S. but they also make .380 acp pistol for civilian use in Mexico and Sub compact rifles in the same caliber for security companies.
@@BeetleBuns we can now own handguns, but the barrel has to be a minimum of 12" in length, and there has to be a permanently attached rigid wrist brace on the grip making the pistol at least 24" overall length, you Americans are so lucky
The closing of the machinegun registry was due to the "Hughes Amendment" to the otherwise good bill known as the "Firearms Owners Protection Act of 1986". The bill, overall, rolled by much of the excesses of the Gun Control Act of 1968. Hughes, a New Jersey Democrat, wanted to shut down the bill because he hated firearms owners and loved the Gun Control Act. He used a dirty trick to push through his amendment literally at the last minute, hoping that President Reagan would not sign the bill, and thus preserving the GCA of 1968 intact. Reagan signed the bill anyway. So, Hughes got ONE thing through, but lost several others, such as having to sign an ammo registry each time you bought ammo. You can go look this up and see what I'm talking about.
You're still pretty lucky in like 99% of other countries you need to ask the government permission to own anything. Here in the UK we have an outright ban on semi-autos other than shotgun and .22 and pretty much a ban on handguns. Apparently over in Japan you have guys hunting bears with O/U shotguns because that's all they're allowed..
@@Ryan.90 it wasn't that long ago the UK had less restrictions than the US. And the US would have gone the same way if they never had it enshrined in their constitution. But make no mistake politicians will continually try and take away this right which is why Americans need to constantly challenge them. Otherwise they'd end up like us here. Part of me thinks why do I bother when illegal firearms are more easily acquired. Good thing I'm moving to the US.
Clarification as to what really happened in 1986: The Volkmer/McClure Firearms Owners Protection Act did get signed into law during the late great President Reagan's tenure. The NRA, however, objected to the last-second provision that restricted civilian ownership of full-auto firearms. This was an amendment tacked on to the legislation that slipped in very quietly and sneakily so that those in favor of gun control wouldn't call the FOPA a total loss. As I recall having read a book that documents how this went down, one of the primary sponsors of this legislation- Rep. Harold Volkmer from Missouri- objected vociferously when he realized this amendment was going to be slipped in at the very last minute.
This proves once gain that if you give the gun grabbers an inch, they will come back and take a mile. And then come back again for another two miles. Moral of the story : don't give them anything, ever!
Zacatlán mexico un pueblo de manzanas por eso la manzana en el arma❤ mi papa siendo militar siempre cargó una Trejo en el tobillo por 25 años de servicio y ahí sigue guardada!
Trejo company is from my hometown, it's not out of business it only changed their production to agricultural equipment and bicycles when the gun control act came out. They still producing guns, they're one of the few non-government authorized gun makers in Mexico.
I think you might want to look into replacing the magazine catch spring -- it's probably worn out on such an old pistol. After that, I would look at the catch itself to see how worn it is.
Forget the cyclic rate of fire, I was kind of impressed with the reliability as long as the mag stayed in place. Rimfire .22s are usually jam-o-matics.
My friend in Stratford, CT my ex-home state had been a gunsmiths as a self thought since 1948 and he has all types of old machines in his basements but he never get rich. He die with poverty and been audited by state after Sandy Hook incidents and he lost his customer Colt AR-15 , SP-1 before he passed away in 2017 after long term illness.
When I was still with a gunshop that had their SOT, I tried my damndest to get the powers at be to convert a Keltec CP33 into a post sample. Despite keltecs reputation, I have never had a feeding or extraction issue with my CP33 in the couple of years I have had it. I have maybe had five or six magazine issues when I loaded a round in the stack wrong. With the FT7 kit, I think it would be a fun a post sample rental.
I've had a lot of fun over the year's converting Ruger Mk 1s & 2s to auto's. I wore about every one of them out. There was a time when a guy could acquire them cheaply. But a great rimfire pistol
That would be a great pistol to have in 22LR semiauto. Looks well built and definitely works quite well indeed. Wish they sold a semiauto-only model here in the US.
Hey brother ! Mexico has the best tecnology in fire arm , but the Mexican goberment is the worst laws for guns and rifle since 1968 and 1969 , the good Mexicans citizens are very week because dont demand the slavery against the people , the constitution protects having a firearm in the article 10 for the self defence at any place in Mexican territory., to self defence ar any enemy af home or domestic traitor of the country or foreigh enemies , i use to be Mexican soldier , now i'm civilian and i need good firearms and rifles for self defense.
Tiempos hace siglos México era de los mejores países en construcción e invención de de armas creo que inventaron el primer fusil automático, pero por si no sabías Estados Unidos dio una fuerte cantidad de dinero para firmar un acuerdo con los políticos corruptos de esos tiempo y con eso no podría inventar ni constru armas en 100 años, pero eso ya venció y México inventó el fx-05 primeramente
I'm especially interested in the last question. Some will say "a long range cartridge in a short barrel is a waste," but I think long rifle performance in an SBR envelope (for the meager cost of four rounds) is just about perfect.
@Justice-ian garand thumb did a video about 6mm arc but with the longer barrel, he said its not gonna lose much velocity in a short barrel 6mm arc but did not do short barrel 6mm arc in this video. Thats something i wanna see cause im thinking about that 6mm arc could have big potentia and maybe even to start replacing 5.56x45 and using the 5.56 only for 11.5 barrel. Garand thumb will maybe do a video about that
@@froglord1559 I'd love to see that too, but I'm not sure what you mean about "using 5.56 only for 11.5 barrel". 5.56 _does_ lose a lot out of short barrels, and also gets concussive.
@@Justice-ian i mean that's for my opinion and no im no expert about that. My thoughts are if the 6mm arc is performing very well then it would be time replacing 5.56 with 6mm arc and all the golden m855a1 and other ammo still its worth and can be used as cqb 11.5 5.56 platform, you still tiny bit in advantage like having 30rd instead 25rd and a bit less recoil than 6arc. That's just my thoughts cause i did not do much research on that and i could be wrong with somethings i said. But i personally think 6mm arc having a very very high potential being like the so called choosen caliber against 7.62x51 and 5.56x45 in some situations.
@@froglord1559 My opinion is that one could gain all the benefits of cartridge standardization while still maintaining versatility by issuing different loadings for different roles (already proven sustainable for 5.56): VLDs for LMGs and DMRs, all the way down to 58 grainers with fast powder for PDWs - no reason it needs to recoil more if they do it right.
Most likely a super easy fix. Just find a stronger spring that will fit in place of the original magazine catch spring. You can test to see if that will fix the problem by stretching the original spring and testing it. But it won’t last very long.
My dad had one of these that his father gave him from his days working in the Mexican railroad. This is what Abuelito (Grandpa) carried with him on the rails. He USED it a couple of times... Unfortunately it disappeared who knows where.
I had one in 25 acp caliber in 2002 I sold it to a woman she was my neighbor in Mexico, and I regret having sold it , she gave it to her nephew and I have tried to buy it from him but no he doesn't sell it to me or anybody else he juts love that little gun
TY! Had not seen/heard of these before. And, for me, that is unusual. Imma info nut that reaches back DECADES!! I have a "1911" type 8-shot .22LR made by American Arms(1992-94) under franchise agreement w/Walther. Looks cool!! Pocket Rocket. Carried for years!! Semi-only, no "machine gun"capability.
My uncle had that gun here in mexico and he let me shoot it. It was a shame he didnt have the magazine so I had a litte single load machine gun. Was still a solid and fun gun. He then change it for a hunting rilfe
I dig it and I think I get the idea too; 1 hole in bad guy = good. Multiple holes in bad guy = better. Ultimate pocket PDW in a way and that's a cool idea.
Actually... TREJO GUNS still goes, I used to date Mr. Abraham trejo's granddaughter in college...a few years ago they were reactivated with the permission of the Mexican army and went back to production.
Only 16,000 machine pistol trejo were made. My Grandfather bought one of them in 1954, he passed it on to my father and my father to me. I have it registered (in Mexico weapons must be registered) and it is wonderful, mine is the number 12,999. There aren't many left in good condition.
Lucky lol !!
Very cool! Have you experienced the magazine issue with your example?
@@Purpmaster No, I never had that problem with my trejo.
Mexicans can't have any weapons legally sorry. You're lying. In Mexico you can only have registered firearm as a cop or military so he must have been in the military which you left out. Big difference. Mexico is NOT a free country
JF-SHARK!
I’ve never wanted a 22 so bad in my life….
😂😂
Mexican designers are seriously underrated. The genius Mondragón and his futuristic semi-automatic rifle in the early 1900s, Obregón and his modified 1911 pistol etc. That Trejo looks like an amazing lot of fun.
Not only pistol n rifle but he developed a long distance canon
because of the mexican army's monopoly on legal firearms the industry here is almost non existent.
Vean la nueva arma mexicana 100% !!! SERPIENTE DE FUEGO 🔥
@@1919apri wish it wasn't like that if the gun laws in mexico were like the south of the US then all of you could rebel and protect yourselves from the cartels
@presi08AMA thats what the government wants. To oppress.
Out here with the Muy Rapido
Excellent comment
Best comment ever😂😂
Correction Mr Mac the Trejo company it’s not defunct or out of business they are still producing their products and have them improved since the first models when the 1971 ban on guns manufacturing were implemented here in Mexico City the only thing and model they don’t produce anymore is the fully automatic model but models in 22 lr and .380 auto are still made and with really good quality
People think the same thing about American Derringer 😒
its outdated info... some companies are not dead
This is correct. They go by a slightly different name now.
@@JM-wd3dk let me guess... Danny lol... joking..
@@brockly7916 😂 I see what you did there.
The apple is because the Trejo factory was located in Zacatlan de las manzanas (apples) near Puebla, Mexico. Cool video !! Tks from Mexico !!
And that tax stamp costs twice as much as the gun when new...
No tax stamp on pre 86 full autos
@@TokaDaPsLife
The National Firearms Act (NFA), 73rd Congress, Sess. 2, ch. 757, 48 Stat. 1236 was enacted on June 26, 1934, and currently codified and amended as I.R.C. ch. 53. The law is an Act of Congress in the United States that, in general, imposes an excise tax on the manufacture and transfer of certain firearms and mandates the registration of those firearms.
@@TokaDaPsLifenot true.
@@TokaDaPsLife No you definitely have to pay the $200 tax on a pre 86 MG. Thats actually the only full auto you can pay the tax on because the post 86 ones are illegal except for SOTs
The tax stamp transfers with the gun…
Mexico has a lot of cool/ unusual guns. My grandpa had this pistol & believe it or not a .22 shotgun that dates back to the Mexican American war. These weren’t mass produced, civilians/ ranchers that were protecting themselves would have to get creative with their weapons since they were poor. Shot shells had to be custom made & were hard to find. He also had an 18g shotgun and an old Mondragon bolt action but he didn’t have any ammo for those 2. He mainly carried a S&W .38 special since that was the ammo that was readily available to him & an old 12g for hunting. You can find alot of these unusual guns within the poor ranching villages in mexico. My family is from Michoacán for reference.
5.8x65mm Mondragon round.! almost flat shoulder, long 5.8mm bullet that fit into a hole in a washer within the cartridge case. Rifles were straight pull and made in Switzerland.
No such thing as 22 shotgun. If it's 22 it's not a shotgun if it's a shotgun it's not a 22. Think you mean pump action 22 rifle. There's many still around
A .22 shotgun from the Mexican American War? Lol are you sure? The Mexican American War was fought in 1846-48. The .22 long rifle cartridges started production in 1887.
@codyclem7146 if it's from the Mexican American war it could be a 22 cal ball shotgun back in the old days in the West they got pretty weird with their guns especially non Americans at that time
@@AjninHaruI think he's talking about The Mexican Revolution that happened in the 1920's
Thanks to the NRA and Reagan these are astronomically priced and thanks to the NFA they're an extra $200 and a registered weapon. I got a Modelo ad before the video lol.
I thought law abiding squares loved that puke. My stepdad was him in a cowboy hat for Halloween in 82 or 83.
If Hell exists Reagan is burning lol
@@turnermd1302 Ive been there, He is indeed being punished.
Trejo is Still in business they sell .380s and .22s but people wont Buy them because they offer single stac pistols when glock and CZ Is available
If there still in business obviously people are buying them 😂
I'd buy one despite the singlestacky, they look fairly well made and ima kinda blue finish guy :3
@@tyler1768there are a bunch of businesses still in "business" but almost bankrupt
@@EggplantHarmesan this Is the case for Trejo. They actually open up shop for a while then close again. They cant compete with all the new Fancy stuff. They would make damn good 1911 clones but mexican laws on calibers fuck them over
If Mexico is anything like Argentina then Trejo must have some good market in the form of middle-lower class shooters. Our Bersa handguns are inferior to Glock and CZ ones and yet they are sold pretty well since the latter cost around four times as much
Trejo still makes guns for civilians in Mexico, they now have a new version of the .22 lr (semi auto) a couple of years ago they where producing a .380 acp version.
There's also another gun company in Mexico called Mendoza mostly known for their Air Rifles and .22 lr rifles which are sold in the U.S. but they also make .380 acp pistol for civilian use in Mexico and Sub compact rifles in the same caliber for security companies.
Here in Britain our gun laws are very strict, even shouting "BANG BANG" needs a licence
that's a pretty sad showing from the people that brought us Kitchen Gun
@@BeetleBuns we can now own handguns, but the barrel has to be a minimum of 12" in length, and there has to be a permanently attached rigid wrist brace on the grip making the pistol at least 24" overall length, you Americans are so lucky
@@stevelewis7263 damn, that's insane... how are you guys supposed to shoot sports like olympic style pistol with gear like that?
I can only imagine the paperwork, background checks and headache it takes just to do the finger gun thing at somebody.....
@@stevelewis7263thats because we have the 2amenment and we have to fight every day for it.
The closing of the machinegun registry was due to the "Hughes Amendment" to the otherwise good bill known as the "Firearms Owners Protection Act of 1986". The bill, overall, rolled by much of the excesses of the Gun Control Act of 1968. Hughes, a New Jersey Democrat, wanted to shut down the bill because he hated firearms owners and loved the Gun Control Act. He used a dirty trick to push through his amendment literally at the last minute, hoping that President Reagan would not sign the bill, and thus preserving the GCA of 1968 intact. Reagan signed the bill anyway. So, Hughes got ONE thing through, but lost several others, such as having to sign an ammo registry each time you bought ammo. You can go look this up and see what I'm talking about.
I know this will never happen but I would to see 1934,1968,1986 all go away and we can have the 2A the way our Forefathers wanted
There's no reason those infringements cant be repealed. It just takes concentrated effort. Look at constitutional carry these days.
You're still pretty lucky in like 99% of other countries you need to ask the government permission to own anything.
Here in the UK we have an outright ban on semi-autos other than shotgun and .22 and pretty much a ban on handguns.
Apparently over in Japan you have guys hunting bears with O/U shotguns because that's all they're allowed..
@@JW-YT I agree but it will never happen. This country will never be what it used to be.
@@Ryan.90 it wasn't that long ago the UK had less restrictions than the US. And the US would have gone the same way if they never had it enshrined in their constitution.
But make no mistake politicians will continually try and take away this right which is why Americans need to constantly challenge them.
Otherwise they'd end up like us here. Part of me thinks why do I bother when illegal firearms are more easily acquired.
Good thing I'm moving to the US.
@@Ryan.90 But oddly, you Brits can buy a "Moderator" / silencer, over the counter!
Clarification as to what really happened in 1986: The Volkmer/McClure Firearms Owners Protection Act did get signed into law during the late great President Reagan's tenure. The NRA, however, objected to the last-second provision that restricted civilian ownership of full-auto firearms. This was an amendment tacked on to the legislation that slipped in very quietly and sneakily so that those in favor of gun control wouldn't call the FOPA a total loss. As I recall having read a book that documents how this went down, one of the primary sponsors of this legislation- Rep. Harold Volkmer from Missouri- objected vociferously when he realized this amendment was going to be slipped in at the very last minute.
This proves once gain that if you give the gun grabbers an inch, they will come back and take a mile. And then come back again for another two miles. Moral of the story : don't give them anything, ever!
Can’t think of one practical use but it puts a giant grin on my face every time it goes brrrrrm!
Think outside the box ( there are possibly 87 reasons )... ☆
The company is alive and well thank you. Mexico will start manufacturing it's own again
Revive the company and name all the models after Danny Trejo roles.
I'll take a Machete
The company is still around today, they make compact pistols still
They should sell the Navajas with throwing knives from Desperado.
I wish that our local stores would import the pistols or other firearms that are still being made in Mexico.
Zacatlán mexico un pueblo de manzanas por eso la manzana en el arma❤ mi papa siendo militar siempre cargó una Trejo en el tobillo por 25 años de servicio y ahí sigue guardada!
❤me la cuidas mucho por favor.!!
Seria bueno que los civiles también se pudieran proteger a ellos y sus familias.
Nice, God bless Mexico and America!
> Safe
> Semi-Automatic
> ANDALE ANDALE ARRIBA ARRIBA YEEHAAW!
Swap out the magazine release spring. That is the most likely problem.
the Danny Trejo!
Reliable feeding especially for such a fast cycling 22 lr, nice 👍
Fully automatic has such a beautiful sound.
Sounds like the GOA lawsuit printer!
Love to see a resurrection of it with modern materials and machining.
That has gotta be one of the funnest range toys. No one would ever expect that little burp of .22 and you can have a lot of fun on $100 worth of ammo!
Who knew NFA violations were why Danny Trejo got sent to prison where he got the trademark scars.
Sounded like a future gun from the past.
Trejo factory is back on business making arms again.
Danny Trejo needs 2 of them, 1 for each hand.
Imagine a vest of them like Boondock Saints, or his role in Desperado with knives
Still haven’t seen any Mondragon rifle
There is a guy at my local range that can turn any .22 into a full auto by attempting to lighten the trigger pull with his dremel 😂
That guy is at every gun range😂. He can turn an AR full auto with a paper clip, too.
This is my second favorite Trejo.
(Only second to Danny Trejo).
6:11 Eight short and fast gyrations and it’s all over. Yeah.
Trejo company is from my hometown, it's not out of business it only changed their production to agricultural equipment and bicycles when the gun control act came out. They still producing guns, they're one of the few non-government authorized gun makers in Mexico.
I think you might want to look into replacing the magazine catch spring -- it's probably worn out on such an old pistol. After that, I would look at the catch itself to see how worn it is.
As a Mexican, all I can say is I want my 1852 Article 10 Back
Nice thanks for sharing this historic pistol
Forget the cyclic rate of fire, I was kind of impressed with the reliability as long as the mag stayed in place. Rimfire .22s are usually jam-o-matics.
That's a really neat little pistol. I'd love to own it
My friend in Stratford, CT my ex-home state had been a gunsmiths as a self thought since 1948 and he has all types of old machines in his basements but he never get rich. He die with poverty and been audited by state after Sandy Hook incidents and he lost his customer Colt AR-15 , SP-1 before he passed away in 2017 after long term illness.
There can only be one Trejo.
Danny Trejo.
MACHETE!!!
the mero mero GARROTE!!!!
When I was still with a gunshop that had their SOT, I tried my damndest to get the powers at be to convert a Keltec CP33 into a post sample. Despite keltecs reputation, I have never had a feeding or extraction issue with my CP33 in the couple of years I have had it. I have maybe had five or six magazine issues when I loaded a round in the stack wrong. With the FT7 kit, I think it would be a fun a post sample rental.
I've had a lot of fun over the year's converting Ruger Mk 1s & 2s to auto's. I wore about every one of them out. There was a time when a guy could acquire them cheaply. But a great rimfire pistol
Knowledgeable content indeed
That would be a great pistol to have in 22LR semiauto. Looks well built and definitely works quite well indeed. Wish they sold a semiauto-only model here in the US.
That looks like it would be really fun, once fixed. It’s too bad we can’t experience things like that in this country.
First time I have ever seen on of those.
Trejo did make guns again 5-6 years ago some were imported to the US. They make bicycles modernly
Still the best UA-cam intro song I've ever heard.
That was fast 👍 awesome little pis , wish I had one in my collection
I remember Ian doing a video on one of these, the giggle-matic 2000. It's so silly. That magazine catch spring definitely needs replacing.
nice pistol.
Neat little gun. Keep bringing the videos of the guns that the average gun people don't get to see.
Hey brother !
Mexico has the best tecnology in fire arm , but the Mexican goberment is the worst laws for guns and rifle since 1968 and 1969 , the good Mexicans citizens are very week because dont demand the slavery against the people , the constitution protects having a firearm in the article 10 for the self defence at any place in Mexican territory., to self defence ar any enemy af home or domestic traitor of the country or foreigh enemies , i use to be Mexican soldier , now i'm civilian and i need good firearms and rifles for self defense.
Tiempos hace siglos México era de los mejores países en construcción e invención de de armas creo que inventaron el primer fusil automático, pero por si no sabías Estados Unidos dio una fuerte cantidad de dinero para firmar un acuerdo con los políticos corruptos de esos tiempo y con eso no podría inventar ni constru armas en 100 años, pero eso ya venció y México inventó el fx-05 primeramente
Trejo still manufacturing weapons in Mexico, now they made a nice 1911 in 22 LR
Tim, would like to see a video on your combat deployments and the weapons you carried.
What a neat little gun!
Can you do a video about the 6mm arc caliber and doing some comparison against 5.56 and 7.62 and how does 6mm arc perform in short barrel like 11.5?
I'm especially interested in the last question. Some will say "a long range cartridge in a short barrel is a waste," but I think long rifle performance in an SBR envelope (for the meager cost of four rounds) is just about perfect.
@Justice-ian garand thumb did a video about 6mm arc but with the longer barrel, he said its not gonna lose much velocity in a short barrel 6mm arc but did not do short barrel 6mm arc in this video. Thats something i wanna see cause im thinking about that 6mm arc could have big potentia and maybe even to start replacing 5.56x45 and using the 5.56 only for 11.5 barrel. Garand thumb will maybe do a video about that
@@froglord1559 I'd love to see that too, but I'm not sure what you mean about "using 5.56 only for 11.5 barrel". 5.56 _does_ lose a lot out of short barrels, and also gets concussive.
@@Justice-ian i mean that's for my opinion and no im no expert about that. My thoughts are if the 6mm arc is performing very well then it would be time replacing 5.56 with 6mm arc and all the golden m855a1 and other ammo still its worth and can be used as cqb 11.5 5.56 platform, you still tiny bit in advantage like having 30rd instead 25rd and a bit less recoil than 6arc. That's just my thoughts cause i did not do much research on that and i could be wrong with somethings i said. But i personally think 6mm arc having a very very high potential being like the so called choosen caliber against 7.62x51 and 5.56x45 in some situations.
@@froglord1559 My opinion is that one could gain all the benefits of cartridge standardization while still maintaining versatility by issuing different loadings for different roles (already proven sustainable for 5.56): VLDs for LMGs and DMRs, all the way down to 58 grainers with fast powder for PDWs - no reason it needs to recoil more if they do it right.
Most likely a super easy fix. Just find a stronger spring that will fit in place of the original magazine catch spring. You can test to see if that will fix the problem by stretching the original spring and testing it. But it won’t last very long.
Trejo is not out of business, they’re still making 22LR pistols. Model 2 being the most popular.
Ok now that is cool, I did not know about this little guy. Thanks and take care!
My dad had one of these that his father gave him from his days working in the Mexican railroad. This is what Abuelito (Grandpa) carried with him on the rails. He USED it a couple of times... Unfortunately it disappeared who knows where.
A súper mini warthog brrrr
Aka the Danny trejo.the trejo family has come a long way from guns to movies
The .45 ACP variant is called the DANNY TREJO
Thanks for sharing! Great show!
Michael Herrell
I'd just be telling folks that I had Danny Trejo's gat...
Very interesting piece. Thanks for sharing!👍🏽
A close friend of mine had one, but I never got to shoot it before he passed away. Nice to see one being fired.
The beast is the Browning BAR 3006 fully auto my grandfather carried that in Germany in world war II
My grandpa had 3 of those trejo machine pistols and they were fun to shoot in the wood fr i wish i would've stayed with one of those😢
Thats a beautiful piece
Danny Treo says there on me like a cheap suit
With that rate of fire, it's safe to say, that's a Self Defense 22 LR platform.
First shot at 4:30,,,,, you're welcome 😁
That’s no “berreta bite”. That’s a mauling 😂
I NEED ONE NOW
is like a 1911 had a kid with a makarov
Very Cool! Thanks!
Thanks for the upload! Very unique pistol. 😊
Beautiful master piece and a collectible piece definitely 👌💵💵
I had one in 25 acp caliber in 2002 I sold it to a woman she was my neighbor in Mexico, and I regret having sold it , she gave it to her nephew and I have tried to buy it from him but no he doesn't sell it to me or anybody else he juts love that little gun
TY! Had not seen/heard of these before. And, for me, that is unusual. Imma info nut that reaches back DECADES!! I have a "1911" type 8-shot .22LR made by American Arms(1992-94) under franchise agreement w/Walther. Looks cool!! Pocket Rocket. Carried for years!! Semi-only, no "machine gun"capability.
My uncle had that gun here in mexico and he let me shoot it. It was a shame he didnt have the magazine so I had a litte single load machine gun. Was still a solid and fun gun. He then change it for a hunting rilfe
Of course out of simple curiosity, everyone was wondering how many rounds you actually put on target in full auto .... but well never know ..
Ian did a great video on this pistol also.
He called it a swarm of angry bees i believe
💥I was looking at my notifications and as I was looking at MAC... It mysteriously disappeared ‼️ no there's no censoring. 🤬
Trejo closed their doors but open them back again a few years back.
Trejo still in the hand guns bussiness in Mexico
that rate of fire is pretty cool. my full auto Glock 18 Gen3 has a rate of fire of 1300 rounds per minute and that's already pretty wild.
I dig it and I think I get the idea too; 1 hole in bad guy = good. Multiple holes in bad guy = better. Ultimate pocket PDW in a way and that's a cool idea.
Use a dual point rim striker. Spring needs to be a bit stiffer, usually, but not much.
So this thing is a 1911 copy with selective lever.
Actually... TREJO GUNS still goes, I used to date Mr. Abraham trejo's granddaughter in college...a few years ago they were reactivated with the permission of the Mexican army and went back to production.
Un poco de lo que se hace en mexico !!!
That baby burst was very cool
I like the chain bracelet!