Thoughts

Are camera guns a lost art?

A little while back, photos of a camera gun made the rounds on all the cool blogs, and people everywhere thought they were new and exciting. How easily we forget… Camera guns — analog cameras and film cameras mounted to gun barrels or provided with pistol grips — were more common in the 60s and 70s than we might think today.

I watched an episode of Columbo last night, entitled “The Greenhouse Jungle”, released 10/15/72 (almost 37 years ago) and in it, Columbo’s assistant pulled out a camera gun that looked even better than the stuff making the rounds these days.

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As he explained in the episode, the device was a “camera-mounted starlight scope”, used “quite a bit at Berkeley for night work”. camera-gun-columbo-episode-2

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Since I can find no modern camera guns, I’m tempted to call them a lost art, perhaps yet another victim of a PC society where everyone’s afraid of everything.

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I think the inspiration for camera guns came from the portable video cameras equipped with a pistol grip, sold around the same time period. They looked like this.

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These last two images came from a site called Atomic Rocket, where they have a whole page dedicated to futuristic sidearms.

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Thoughts

Speak softly and… what's that?

I guess when Theodore Roosevelt uttered his now famous phrase, “Speak softly and carry a big stick; you will go far,” he might have been thinking about something like this:

Punt Gun -- Washington, DC

It’s a punt gun. It would not have been used like pictured in the photo above, because the recoil action was too strong. It would have knocked both men on their backs and possibly dislocated the shooter’s shoulder.

There’s a demo video of one of these monster guns in action on YouTube. I recommend you see it to get an idea of the damage it can inflict. It was apparently used for shooting flocks (that’s right, entire flocks) of birds while mounted to the bow of a boat.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j7Vt0mr2sjE

[via Shorpy]

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