This is an all natural born train wreck because of the very nature of what exists in these magazines. Which is paid advertising about the same merchandise that is being written about. It is all but impossible to be objective. If say, Savage Arms is a high dollar advertiser in your magazine, and you are doing a write up on their latest rifle which has received a lot of press, you cannot possibly bad mouth the weapon in any way, shape, or form without jeopardizing your financial advertising stake with that company.
Gun companies advertise in gun magazines. Revlon advertises in Cosmopolitan. Cosmo can write an anti gun article and not be hurt just as Guns & Ammo can say Revlon sucks because they support an anti gun position. (I'm just using this as an example. I'm not saying Revlon is anti gun.) But you get the point. It is all but impossible for this situation to change because of the publisher / advertiser relationship.
I subscribe to most of the gun rags. I take the articles with a grain of salt, as far as the praise they seem to bestow on every weapon they test. I absorb the technical facts. Weight, barrel length, rate of twist, cost (MSRP), etc. For example in the newest issue of "Guns & Weapons For Law Enforcement", they just happen to do a writeup on the new Kimber 8400 Police Tactical in .300 Win. Mag. I just bought. I was surprised to read that Kimber test fires every single one, and won't let it out of the factory unless it groups 1/2 MOA or better. I didn't know that, and was quite pleased to read it. For me, who just spent a lot of money on that rifle, that alone was worth the price of the magazine. Most of the gun magazines just keep me current to whats on the market, and what is in the works. For most gun guys it's better reading than what you find in the dentists office while you're waiting for your root canal, and just heard the receptionist say, "We're out of Novocaine!". Bill T.