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ARCHIVE
TOPIC:
Grips
Q: Of course having a perfectly working gun is important. How important
are the grips?
Bob Munden:
If you watch me doing exhibition shooting on shows like American
Shooter or most recently on the Super Shots! – with Bob Munden
segment that was on
Trophy Quest Outdoors, I do things with six guns that are really
out there – especially with rapid firing. When I take a .45 Colt
single action using 250 grain bullets that travel at 785 feet per
second, and I’m shooting multiple shots so fast it sounds like a machine
gun, how do I do that? The grips are a major factor.
Q: What are
the differences between stock grips, other custom grips on the market
and Munden Grips?
Bob Munden:
The grip configuration was designed in the 1870s, and people,
genetically
speaking, were much smaller then. Well we have changed but
stock grips really haven’t.
You have two primary problems with stock grips from Ruger, Colt, Uberti,
San Marcos or any other company, and that is when you grip the gun, the
little finger of your hand drops off the bottom. That’s
because the palm of your hand is wider than the grip. Second, and most
important, when you fire the gun, especially in rapid fire, you find
your hand jumping up the back strap on recoil. Then you have to slide
back down and re-grip the gun right in the middle of a string of shots.
That’s because the grip design prevents you from maintaining your grip.
Look at any grip; look at it from the rear. You’ll notice the grips are
narrow at the top, wider in the middle and even wider at the bottom –
and they’re beveled upward from the bottom left and right. There is
nothing to keep the gun from moving up your hand on recoil. Of course
you lose lots of time because you constantly have to re-grip the gun.
You don’t really slide up the grip -- it actually rolls in your hand.
What people do is grip the gun tighter trying to hold on to it – and of
course the tighter you grip the gun, the less you’re going to hit.
We build most of our grips one piece for a nicer look. You can’t build
one piece grips for a Ruger though because the trigger guard and back
strap are one piece. In our one-piece grips for Colt single action
revolvers or Colt clones, we incorporate a panel on the left and right
side of the grip. The panel has to be in the right place, and we
actually use the size and shape of your hand to determine where to put
the panels and how big they should be. The result is that with these
grips, which are flush, beveled or extended depending on your hand size
and preference, are shaped sort of like an hour glass so when shooting
the gun, the precisely placed panels of the grips keep your hand from
sliding up the back strap. The gun doesn’t roll around in your hand as
you’re shooting. This absolutely gives you more control and you can get
back on target much more quickly.
I designed my grips in the 1950’s. In the 1990’s I schooled my grip
maker Mike Wallace in how to make them, and a true artist, Mike has
absolutely perfected the design and does fabulous work using simply
gorgeous to exotic materials.
Not too long ago, one of the national gun magazines asked me to write an
article about grips for single action shooting. I was set to do it and
send in pictures, but they said they didn’t want the article to sound
like a commercial for Munden Grips. I tried to think of other grip ideas
that would work, but in the end I had to tell them I couldn’t do the
article because I really couldn’t think of other grips that even come
close to what we offer. Checkered grips tear up your hand and other
grips don’t allow control because the gun rolls around in your hand on
recoil, forcing you to re-grip, or grip the gun too tightly and miss.
Along with my custom gun work, Munden grips are an option, but they are
like no other grips made. Our grips do not look like target grips. They
are for single actions. People can go to the grip section on our Web
site and see photos of these grips made from materials that are just
incredibly beautiful – and lots of people request that Mike do
spectacular inlays to really personalize them. Our grips for Colts or
Colt clones are one-piece grips unless the customer prefers two piece,
but the one-piece grips go on easily, are fit to the gun precisely --
and aren’t uglied up by screws right in the middle of them.
The most critical thing is that these are not one-size-fits-all grips
like some grips out there that look like copies of my design. Munden
grips are made to fit your hand and your gun for the
purpose of superior control. My grips are the reason I can shoot Cowboy
Action Shooting, Fast Draw and do exhibition shooting with .45 caliber,
250 grain bullets fast and stay on target.
WARNING:
DO NOT EVER
TRY FAST DRAW WITH A
GUN THAT HAS HAD ONLY A BASIC ACTION & TRIGGER JOB – OR WITH LIVE
AMMUNITION.
Do you have questions about custom grips, Bob Munden's Six-Gun Magic
gunsmith work on single actions, Marlin
Lever-Action Rifles, Stoeger (or IGA) Double-Barrel Shotguns, Smith &
Wesson Double-Action Revolvers, the Bond Derringer and other guns? Contact
Munden Enterprises at 406.494.2833 (8am- 8pm MST), or
visit our contact page.

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