戦士の工房 YASU
3.4K posts

戦士の工房 YASU
@InakaUS
日本人初のKimber社専属ガンスミス🔫|実弾200万発の経験。アラバマ🇺🇸在住の栃木人🇯🇵。メーカーの裏側と幅広い実銃レビューを発信中!過去動画はハイライトへ→フォローで最新レビューをチェック! #GunSmith #RealGunReview
Alabama, USA Se unió Mayıs 2020
3K Siguiendo2.2K Seguidores

@Xx_Mochineko_xX 胸が熱くなるような素敵な言葉をありがとうございます。 「諦めちゃダメだよ」というエール、しっかり受け取りました。 私の宝物にさせていただきますね。これからも見守っていてください!
日本語

@InakaUS 夢で終わらせない
例え小さい願いでも
例え小さい希望でも
例え小さい勇気でも
叶うよ、きっと大丈夫
諦めちゃダメだよ
私の大好きな言葉をYasuさんに贈ります✨️
日本語

銃は『スペック』ではなく、『相性』がすべてだと思います。相性が悪い銃は、どんなに高級なものでもただの鉄の塊に過ぎません。
一方、相性が良い銃は、安価なものであっても自分の延長のように感じられます。今日もアラバマの工房でKimberを磨きながら、そんなことを考えていました。
ふと、銃に向かって心の中で問いかけました——
『お前は、俺のことを好きか?』と(真顔で)。
スペックに頼るのではなく、自分と銃の相性を深く理解し、魂を重ねていくことこそが大切だと感じています。皆さんは今使っている銃と、どのような相性を感じていますか?
「すごくしっくりくる」「まだ何か違和感がある」など、率直な感想をリプライで教えてください。
一つ一つ目を通します。一緒に考えていきましょう
日本語

That’s the most accurate description of the G19 I’ve ever heard. It’s the universal baseline. Whether you’re a beginner or a seasoned pro, the G19 provides that boring, relentless reliability that just works. It might not have the soul of a 1911 or the grace of a Python, but in a crisis, 'never the wrong answer' is exactly what you want. It’s the gold standard for a reason
English

@InakaUS A Glock 19 isn’t always the right answer, but it’s never the wrong answer.
English

There is a special kind of magic in a firearm that carries the weight of history and family. A 1948 shotgun from your grandfather isn't just a tool; it's a bridge between generations. When a gun has been cared for and used with purpose for decades, it develops a character you just can't find in a modern box. It’s as if the steel already knows your hands because it knew his. That kind of 'soul' is the ultimate objective truth in shooting.
English

@InakaUS There are times when a firearm can feel like it was made just for you, like it was meant for you. Every gun has a soul and when its soul compliments yours, magic happens.
I have a shotgun that feels like it was meant for me. It was made in 1948 and was a gift from my grandfather
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@InakaUS So true. Like how a dog and an owner can match. Here is my friend
Middy@Middytime
St. Michael the Archangel defend us in battle
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There is no better feeling than finding that one tool that just clicks. A Rossi lever gun in .357 is a fantastic, underrated choice. Rapid firing at 80 yards onto a dessert plate with iron sights? That’s not just the gun—that’s pure muscle memory and a perfect zero. It proves that a 'budget' rifle in the hands of a skilled shooter is more dangerous than a safe queen in the hands of an amateur. Respect for making that Rossi sing!
English

@InakaUS My favorite gun is an inexpensive .357 magnum Rossi lever gun. With just the original sights, I can rapid fire at a dessert plate-sized target at 80 yards and hit it every time without hardly trying.
English

Haha, you hit the limit with the LCP! We all have our Zen moments until that little mule starts kicking. It’s a classic case of physics—too little mass trying to soak up all that .380 snap. It’s the gun everyone carries but nobody actually wants to shoot for fun. Glad to hear the rest of your collection treats you better, but I think we can all agree the LCP is strictly for 'business,' not for a relaxing day at the range!
English

@InakaUS That's like totally Zen, man! Maybe I'm just lucky, but pretty much all my guns feel good and work well for me. Except the LCP 380, which is a nasty little gun to shoot.
English

That’s the ultimate pragmatist’s view. While I spend my days trying to make ergonomics perfect, I have massive respect for the shooter who says, 'I’ll adjust to the tool as long as the tool doesn't fail me.' Training around a grip you used to hate is a badge of honor—it shows discipline over comfort. In a life-or-death situation, I'd take a 'reliable brick' over a 'comfortable paperweight' any day.
English

You hit the nail on the head. You can’t buy muscle memory, and no amount of money can replace 'trigger time.' I’d take a guy who has run 10,000 rounds through a budget AR over a guy with a brand new HK and zero experience any day of the week. As a smith, my job is to make the machine reliable, but the real magic happens in the training. Your kit should be an extension of your intent, and that only comes from sweat and repetition.
English

@InakaUS Knowing how to use your kit is more important than the price of the gear. I'd rather have a cheap AR-15 that I am familiar with than a random high end rifle. Money does not make up for practice and skill, no matter how much big companies like HK want you to believe otherwise.
English

You've nailed the practical reality of modern ballistics. The weight savings and flatter trajectory of 5.56/5.45 aren't just numbers—they're tactical advantages that keep you in the fight longer and more accurately. It’s interesting how simulators like Squad and Arma reflect that so well; they show you that volume of fire and precision under stress win the day. And in the States, you can find 5.56 in any hardware store—that reliability is priceless.
English

I see this all the time. You can’t buy skill at the gun counter. However, as a smith, I believe my job is to remove every mechanical distraction so the shooter can focus entirely on their own growth. Once you've mastered the fundamentals on any platform, having that one 'comfortable' weapon allows you to push the boundaries of what's possible. It’s about removing the ceiling.
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@InakaUS A good shooter with lots of expirience can pick up any functional fun and be effective with it. An unpracticed shooter is slow and inaccurate even if he has an excellent weapon he finds comfortable.
But yes, our skills do usually improve using a weapon we're most comfortable with
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That 'strapping on' mentality is exactly what separates a gun owner from a true shooter. You can't just buy that connection; you have to earn it through thousands of reps and hours of dry fire. As a smith, I provide the precision machine, but the pilot provides the soul. When those two meet, the steel really does become an extension of the body. Love the fighter pilot analogy!
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@InakaUS Part of this is the weapon, and part of this is how much you train with it. Among US fighter pilots, this becomes known as “strapping on” the jet - it is an extension of their body at that point
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