Always Accepting Consignments

Consign With Us →

The Gunslinger Syndicated Radio Show • August 10, 2025

Alliant Unique Substitutes, ATF 4473 Records & Cowboy Action Shooting

The show's sixth anniversary on the Gunslinger Syndicated Radio Network opens with an unscheduled call from Leon the Motorman, the veteran automotive expert who has been part of the program since the beginning. The anniversary is short-lived as a topic: caller Ed from Riverside has questions about a recent ATF visit to Gunslinger's Gun Shop to collect Form 4473 paperwork, and Jeff explains what changed in the regulations, what the visit actually means, and why the version circulating online overstates it. Rick from Gardena has been reloading with Alliant Unique powder for decades and is hitting availability problems; the substitutes conversation runs longer than expected and rolls naturally into Rick's cowboy action shooting setup: a 45 Long Colt lever gun, 165-grain loads, and the Castaway Cowboys club in Norco.

1

Sixth Anniversary and a Call from Leon the Motorman

The show opens on the sixth anniversary of Gunslingers on the Gunslinger Syndicated Radio Network, and the crew gets an unscheduled gift in the form of a call from Leon the Motorman, the veteran automotive radio broadcaster who served as a mentor and role model for the Gunslinger crew in their early days. Leon watched them prep from the sidelines before they ever went to air and has been watching ever since. He calls to congratulate them, tells them they deserve a third hour, and gets the expected horrified reaction. He mentions he will be back on for a Motors Slingers segment on the 24th. Jeff closes the loop by reporting that alternator advice Leon gave him off-air worked, and the car is running right. The whole crew is grinning through the entire call.

2

Ed in Riverside on the Show's Sixth Anniversary

Caller Ed from Riverside calls in to mark the anniversary and ask about a topic that came up in the first hour: the ATF coming to collect paperwork from Gunslinger’s Gun Shop. He is surprised and concerned. He remembers being assured when he bought firearms years ago that the paperwork stayed at the store and never went to the federal government. Jeff confirms that things have changed, and not for the better, and walks through what that process actually looks like from the dealer’s side.

3

ATF Collection of Form 4473 Records: What Changed and What It Means

Jeff explains the situation plainly. The ATF Form 4473 is the two-page firearms transaction record filled out by every buyer at a licensed dealer. It used to be yellow, now it is white, but the function is the same. Dealers were historically required to hold those forms for twenty-five years, after which they could be destroyed. The forms stayed at the store. That was the deal.

The deal changed. Now, when a dealer closes, transfers their FFL, or changes the business name, the ATF comes and collects all of it. Jeff did not hit the twenty-five year mark at Gunslinger before the rules shifted, so his entire archive of 4473s is subject to collection. He describes the physical scope of what that looks like: approximately thirty four-drawer metal filing cabinets, with each drawer holding at least a box to a box and a half of forms. The California paperwork, which has only a three-year retention requirement, is already gone. What remains is the federal stack. Jeff says he plans to hold the door open and not lift a single box. Ed’s original understanding, that this information was not supposed to go to the federal government, was accurate when he bought those guns. It is not accurate anymore, and there is now effectively a microfiche record of everyone who has purchased a firearm through a licensed dealer in this country.

4

Rick from Gardena: Alliant Unique Powder Substitutes

Caller Rick from Gardena has been using Alliant Unique powder for reloading for decades and is running into availability problems. Alliant Unique is among the most versatile propellants ever produced, used successfully in everything from light pistol loads to heavy revolver cartridges to shotgun shells. Rick wants to know what to reach for when he cannot find it.

Jeff’s first answer is Alliant Bullseye, a faster-burning powder that covers a lot of the same ground as Unique. The caveat is that Bullseye is faster, so you would not want to use it in large cases where Unique shines in part because of its slower burn rate. Tight Group is another option with a similar burn rate to Unique and a good track record in handgun calibers. Rick confirms he has been running Tight Group in 45 ACP, 45 Colt, and 38 Special with good results.

Jeff widens the conversation to the supply chain behind these powders. Getting lead for cast bullets has become genuinely difficult. Bear Creek Supply, where Jeff’s contact Steve works, is now mining lead from old shooting ranges because domestic primary lead smelting in the United States was shut down under the Obama administration. That single regulatory decision pushed the entire reloading community toward recycled lead and imported materials. Rick adds that a resource worth bookmarking is the NSSF’s list of the top 100 gunpowder manufacturers for 2025, which is current and gives reloaders a broader map of what is actually available when the familiar names are out of stock.

5

Cowboy Action Shooting: 45 Colt in a Lever Gun, Small-Target Practice, and the Castaway Cowboys

Rick from Gardena is also a cowboy action shooter, and the conversation rolls naturally into the discipline. He shoots 45 Long Colt out of both a handgun and a lever-action rifle, running a 165-grain bullet through both. Out of a lever gun, that round moves with authority and almost no felt recoil, which matters when you are trying to put ten rounds on steel in under four seconds. Rick says he is not in the same league as the top competitors but is running a consistent four-second string, which is respectable.

His training method is straightforward and transferable. For years he has used a 5-by-8-inch index card as his practice target at standard distance. If you can hit that card consistently and quickly, the regulation cowboy action steel targets look like billboards by comparison. Jeff endorses the approach immediately: train hard to win easy. He notes that Rick ran one of his cards over with his truck recently, which says something about how long he has been at this.

The conversation shifts to the gunfighter category, where competitors shoot two single action revolvers simultaneously, one in each hand. Rick shoots gunfighter and recommends watching Molasses Moose, a standout competitor in the category, particularly on a Texas Star target. The Texas Star is a five-plate spinning steel target that requires the shooter to account for the star’s rotation as plates are knocked off and the balance shifts. Watching a top-level gunfighter clean a Texas Star in real time is the kind of thing that reminds you what dedicated practice actually looks like. Rick finished third in a recent gunfighter match. He notes there were three competitors that night, which he acknowledges freely.

Rick’s club, the Castaway Cowboys, holds their next match on August 24th, a Hawaiian shirt theme. A September match is planned for the 28th. New shooters are welcome at the September match, no personal firearms required.