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i only see hi piont on 9 mm and i only see hi standard on .22's. and what is high point? i know there is the high pint carbine.

come on bound u gotta help me out here.

2006-11-22 11:13:12 · 8 answers · asked by Anonymous in Sports Outdoor Recreation Hunting

8 answers

Bound's hubby here:

Jon W gave you a good answer!

High Standard is currently a resurrection of the older High Standard company that specialized in the manufacture of .22 long rifle semi-auto pistols, most of which were match grade and are still highly sought after. In silhouette, the High Standard kinda looks like a M1911 Colt .45 ... perhaps part of its appeal. I shot them in college, they are well worth the price.

High Power is the "trade marked" model name of the Browning "Pistol Model 1935" [a.k.a.: P35]. It was originally manufactured as a 13+1 9mm Luger semi-auto, as a successor model to Colt's M1911A1. It seems the "moniker" 'High Power' is currently being applied to any and all P-35 clones!

High Point is not a brand I am familiar with. However, from what I have read here on Y!A, they make a limited line of "high quality" 9mm decoy anchors! Seems the High Point may be in contention as the newest "poster child" for the infamous "Saturday Night Special"!

Good luck!

2006-11-22 12:57:42 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

I was agnostic for a time, and felt very much like you do. I was a Pagan and raised a Jew prior to being agnostic, and although I loved both religions dearly, I felt something missing. I didn't leave Paganism, solely, on a matter of doubts, I left because I didn't feel as connected as I knew I could be. You sound like you believe in the Christian God (or another), you just believe everyone goes to Heaven. That's fine. That is called universalism, if I'm not mistaken. Their are many beliefs out there. Try Google, find out what you believe about this higher power, you have a right to do so. As an agnostic, I eventually decided that I believed in God, and that the Christian God was the one I believed in. I still have a very deeply based nature spirituality, and even though I didn't realize it, I followed many teachings of Christian Druidism. Good luck, God Bless,

2016-05-22 19:23:01 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I'll help you out. There's a spell checker available here...

"Hi Point" is the company that sells the 9mm carbine. That's the only caliber they offer. They're in Dayton Ohio.

"Hi Standard" is the name of a .22 pistol by another company.

High Point is not a gun company and neither is High Pint.

2006-11-22 11:19:05 · answer #3 · answered by Jon W 5 · 0 0

BH I have a HI-Point carbine and love it. It is dead nuts accurate and so quite the bolt makes more noise the report. They have a no question asked life time transferable warranty the stays with the firearm when it is sold. If you run over a Hi-Point with a lawn mower they will fix or replace for free for ever. From what I have seen and shot the Hi-Point will feed any brand of ammo. BH Call Hi-Point ask for Jim, talk to him he is the man the designed the carbine. Ask him about a carbine in .357 sig.

2006-11-22 22:52:36 · answer #4 · answered by idotusa 3 · 1 0

I know quite a few people that have Hi-Point pistols and carbines. All of them are very satisfied with the performance of their guns. They all also perform regular cleaning on their guns. Perhaps people having trouble with them are not cleaning or maintaining them properly?
Their website lists the guns they have and is listed below.
http://www.mkssupply.com/
The only High Point I know of is a motocross track in PA.

2006-11-23 02:06:58 · answer #5 · answered by bferg 6 · 1 0

Just a small correction to Jon W, Hi Point makes the 9mm carbine you mentioned, they also offer a 40sw carbine, I have one of each, next year they will be releasing a 45acp carbine, they also make pistols in 380 9mm, 45acp and 40sw, I WILL NOT own or shoot their pistols, their carbines are top notch tho.

2006-11-22 13:29:12 · answer #6 · answered by boker_magnum 6 · 2 0

Hi point could mean it is for larger game, requiring a good
distance to be safe. Thus the idea is hi point scopes are
to be aimed litely higher for the longer distance. The drop on
animals is different due to some fields of size and weights
thus a tiger from one half mile is at 3 inches hi, and on a
wildebest its prey nearby only 2 inches hi, one of the classic
hi point reports. These are written in some hunting camp
manuals showing the game hi point for the caliber and area.

2006-11-22 11:18:34 · answer #7 · answered by mtvtoni 6 · 0 3

mtvtoni doesn't know wtf she is talking about.

2006-11-22 18:30:58 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

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