Wednesday, January 12, 2005

Indy 1500 Gun Show

January 14-16, 2005

Indy 1500 Gun & Knife Show in Indianapolis, IN at the Indiana State Fairgrounds 1202 E. 38th
World Class Gun Shows


-
Jeff

Wednesday, January 5, 2005

New Dealer - Mike's Main Street Sports

JSMP welcomes Mike's Main Street Sports in Lamar, CO as a Dealer.

- Jeff

Saturday, January 1, 2005

Guns Magazine Dec05

Guns Magazine Dec05
by John Connor


Strange? Nah!

In the "Essential Oddities" category (right), that rubber-rope thingie is McNett's GruntLine. An indispensable braid of live rubber with clips at both ends, it's a bungee, tourniquet, lanyard, clothesline, gear strap, and 52 other things. Send at least two. The funky orange polymer blocks are Sniper Training Cube reactive targets from Just Shoot Me Products. Troops in-country train constantly, and this is one tough, durable, jumping, spinning, challenging target. My well-used one on the right has now sucked up over 14,000 rounds of 5.56mm, 8,200 7.62mm, and 578 rounds of .50 BMG. She still dances delightfully every time the music plays. By the time you read this, the Pistol Cube will be available, too.

Shooting Industry Magazine Jan05

Shooting Industry Magazine Jan05
by Lisa Parsons-Wraith




The Ballistic Cube from Just Shoot Me Products jumps and
wiggles even after thousands of rounds have gone through it.



The Ballistic Polymer Torso Unit has been dubbed the
“Safest Target in the World” by its creator Jeff Kruse.



Shooters are forever looking for a way to spice up their target practice, and there is a new product out called the Ballistic Cube that will do just that. Just Shoot Me Products and its parent company, Ballistic Technology, are the brainchild of Jeff Kruse. A metallurgist by trade, Kruse spent 25 year (on and off) tinkering with the idea of the Ballistic Cube. When the Marine Corps wanted a target with unpredictable movement to help train its snipers, Kruse took a polymer material, added other chemicals and elements, formed it all into a military spec 4-inch cube and, voila, a resilient target that reacts violently when shot was born. When I asked Kruse what makes the Cube move, he got a little technical, “The unpredictable movement is formulated by the velocity and size of projectiles in conjunction with a high speed solidification process of a slurry of chemicals and elements that when combined provide an amazing resilience of elongation, yield and tensile qualities.” Basically, “it is an elemental reaction,” he finished.

Click here to read the full article
.