.22 Long Rifle
Ruger 10/22 & Browning Buck Mark
Known far and wide as the ultimate cartridge for small game and plinking, it’s hard to doubt the
.22 Long Rifle is a great multi-purpose round.
The semi-auto
Ruger 10/22 comes in many configurations to fit the objectives of hunters and plinkers alike. Its aftermarket part availability is astounding, allowing you to customize your rifle from the ground up.
What better pistol to pair with a 10/22 than the
Browning Buck Mark. One of the best rimfire pistols ever made, the Buck Mark deserves its place in nearly any gun collection.
.22 Magnum
Henry Golden Boy & Kel-Tec PMR-30
As opposed in looks as a stagecoach and a flying saucer, the
Golden Boy lever gun and the
Kel-Tec PMR-30 nonetheless go together like milk and cookies. Chambered in .22 Magnum, they make a prime pair for everything from small game hunting to close-and-personal predator shooting.
With the 30-round capacity of the PMR-30 pistol, you’ll have to work to empty it. The Golden Boy rifle compliments it with western looks, smooth reliable functioning, and precision. How can you go wrong?
.223 Remington
Colt LE6940 & Bushmaster XM-15 Pistol
Combine it’s military & law enforcement experience with availability and standardized parts, and the .223 Remington is a great cartridge to fit many applications. With this combo, the rifle-length gun can reach out to several hundred yards, while the pistol makes for a great truck gun.
The
Colt LE6940 is one of the most well-known AR-15 pattern rifle platforms. Its flat-top upper receiver and quad-rail forend allow operators to quickly attach
optics and accessories as they please.
Though they don't have the looks or size of a traditional handgun, AR-15 pistols such as the
Bushmaster Patrolman's Pistol are trending, especially when paired with the ergonomics of a
SIG Sauer SB15 pistol stabilizing brace. You get all the functionality of the AR-15 platform in a small package with a short barrel that doesn’t require ATF registration.
5.7x28mm
FN PS90 & FN Five-SeveN
For pure cool factor, no rifle-handgun combo can beat these two from
FN-USA. Chambered in the zippy, ultra-performance 5.7x28 cartridge, both guns are lightweight and uber-ergonomic—in a modern sense. Recoil is almost nil and trajectory is laser-like courtesy of the very small diameter, fast-paced projectile. Capacity of the
Five-SeveN handgun is 20 rounds; that of the
PS90 carbine is an astonishing 50 rounds.
9mm Luger
Kel-Tec SUB-2000 & Glock 17
Since the
Kel-Tec SUB-2000 is available in a version that uses
Glock 17 magazines, you can feed both your carbine and your polymer high-cap pistol from the same mag pouch. While this compact, concealable combo doesn’t give you tons of rifle-like reach, it does increase the effective range of the 9mm to 100 yards or so and enhances fast and accurate shooting up close.
.357 Magnum
Uberti 1873 & Uberti Single Action Army
This is without doubt the most archetypical rifle/handgun same-caliber combo—originally chambered in .44-40—known 140 years ago as .44 WCF—westerners and sportsmen alike loved the fact they could carry one type of ammo to serve both guns.
Known variously as “the rifle that won the West” and “the rifle you load on Sunday and shoot all week,” the
Model 1873 was the AR-15 of the 19th century. Characterized by it’s reliability, ergonomics and firepower, it’s still much loved by serious lever-action shooters, especially the cowboy action competitive crowd.
Likewise, the Single Action Army revolver—epitomized here by this
"Cattleman" reproduction model by
Uberti—was the first hugely successful cartridge handgun. Even today it is the six-shooter; the revolver that all cowboys worth their salt carried. Together the two—now chambered in the versatile .357 Magnum, which also accepts and safely shoots the mild .38 Special—still serves as a classic, capable example of the same-caliber rifle/handgun combo.
.40 S&W
Beretta Cx4 Storm & Beretta Px4 Storm
Who could forget the cartridge originally developed by the FBI as the 10mm, and then shortened into the 40 S&W.
The
Beretta Cx4 Storm carbine and
Px4 Storm pistol both fire the zippy .40 S&W cartridge from the same 17-round magazines. The Px4 Storm pistol is small enough to conceal, while maintaining enough size to fit the bill as a primary sidearm.
.44 Magnum
Winchester 1892 & Smith & Wesson Model 29
Nothing could have more panache than a combination of John Wayne’s favorite Winchester and Clint Eastwood’s “Dirty Harry”
Model 29 Smith & Wesson—both chambered in the powerful, popular .44 Magnum.
The
Winchester '92 is considered by many to be both the strongest and the smoothest-operating of all Winchester’s compact lever-actions—but that goes without saying:
John Browning designed it. And no double-action revolver is more recognizable—or more capable—than the Model 29. This pair makes an ideal truck team, will serve honorably for personal protection and is as good as combos get for brush-country hunting.
.410 Gauge
Rossi Circuit Judge & Taurus Judge Revolver
Burgeoning into popularity when a Florida courtroom judge reputedly began wearing a 410/.45 Colt-chambered
Taurus Judge revolver under his judicial robes, the Judge revolver is both unique and uncommonly good for self defense.
Who wouldn’t want a revolver that throws your choice of buckshot, birdshot or .45 Colt slugs? Combine that with a revolving rifle-length version from
Rossi, and you’ve got a versatile setup for small game, plinking, the occasional clay target and home-defense.
.45 Colt
Marlin 1894 & Ruger Vaquero
With western-esque looks and ultra-strong design,
Marlin's 1894 and
Ruger's Vaquero emerged as arguably the most popular hard-working competition guns during the huge cowboy-action movement of the ’90s. Few guns are more durable or offer higher performance, especially if a gunsmith worked a little magic tuning the actions.
Ruger Vaqueros also lifted the caution of single-action shooters who stepped lightly around weaker designs.
Marlin 1894s use a side-eject, fully-closing bolt, so they shrug off dust and grime, while allowing the use of a scope for those deviants that want optics on a lever gun.
Together, the two have won many tournaments, and will win many more—in addition to bringing home the bacon or defending a home.
.500 S&W Magnum
H&R Handi-Rifle & Smith & Wesson 500
When firepower can’t be compromised, the .500 S&W Magnum is just the ticket. When carrying an
H&R Handi-Rifle and
Smith & Wesson 500—both chambered in the beastly .500 S&W Magnum—backpackers can strut through bear country with the confidence that they have enough firepower to defend themselves with this mighty cartridge.