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#16
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Well JPL
I guess since almost every GOOD bolt action rifle is a copy of a Mauser or some such useless phrase...I'm just a gonna have to be a heretic. Of course some of those copies might just be a little better than the original...there I go spouting heresy again. Maybe i should just shut up, huh??
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skeet@huntchat.com Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what to have for lunch. Liberty is a well-armed lamb contesting the vote!" Benjamin Franklin |
#17
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"Yeah I know the Mauser is a great rifle but they have a tendency to have a lot of slop!"
That slop as you call it is there for a reason. Reliability under the most adverse conditions. Out here in the west, riding on dusty dirt roads, a Remington 660 or 700 gets mighty sticky from accumulated dust in a very short while. Bolt operation is slowed down somewhat. I can say the same for the push feed versions of the Model 70 as well because I have rifles of both brands. I like them, but recognize their drawbacks. I could probably say the same about all the other push feed bolt action rifles as well, but as i don't own any of those, i won't comment. However, that sloppy mauser will not only take dusty conditions in stride, it thrives on them. Remember, the design was for as close to total reliability as possible under the worst conditions of warfare, not as a hunting rifle. The fact that it has that reliabilty factor is what makes itr a great hunting rifle. Paul B. |
#18
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Hi Paul
I do understand the reasons for all that slop..I was just talking tongue in cheek so to speak. Reliable yes.. but still sloppy.
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skeet@huntchat.com Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what to have for lunch. Liberty is a well-armed lamb contesting the vote!" Benjamin Franklin |
#19
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Could you provide spoon with that Mini?
(To stir the s... with). By the way, the BEST rifle is a very ACCURATE one. ![]() |
#20
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"Ya gotta clean that gun of yours a little more often man!! I is in the dusty west too, ya know! Lotta dusty roads in Wyoming for certain..Montana too!"
I don't doubt that. ![]() The gun is strictly stock except for the stock which I replaced when I bought the gun with an H&S Precision Fiberthane stock glass bedded with Accra-glass. Scope is just an all steel El paso Weaver K-4. For myself, I'd rather have a rifle that shot 1.5" consistantly than one that shot .50" groups but wandered all over the place every time the humidity changed due to some bird sneezing 100 miles away. Paul B. |
#21
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Quote:
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"The American military is like a finely crafted sword. To be effective, it must be wielded by a discerning, skilled and merciless hand." |
#22
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I dont know if anyone else would say either of these two are among the best every but their my most beloved
1. 10/22 Ruger, pure joy 2. Any old Winchester 22 pump, classics and a joy to plink with
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tko |
#23
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#1 - AR-15/M-16 Too versatile to ignore. Many different caliber uppers (.22 up to .50) More extras than almost anything else, and a ton of different options from the factory. If I had to live with one gun for the rest of my life, give me an AR frame and a few barrels...
gd
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We hunt, not only because we want to, but because at our basest levels we must. |
#24
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So many great ones
There are so many great guns out there, I can't even think of them all, even if I knew them all. That's why one can never have too many guns.
Thanks for the thread. Hm...................excuse me now, I need to go and present this argument to my wife. Rev |
#25
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Best gun ever.
The Mauser Model 98 had all of the improvements since the Mauser 88 Commission Rifle. And the first thing was to be not dependent on a separate clip to fire the gun from the magazine.
Then there were 93s, 95, 96s and 98s. I don't know what would have happened to the 94s and 97s. Maybe they were so bad they were never made in any production numbers. The military Mausers had a lot of slop that didn't hurt anything because they were tight "enough" when they were in battery. But I had a famous dean of the gunmakers tell me you should never let a Mauser go out "sloppy" but should tighten it up. He told me how to do that, but I haven't been brave enough to try it "yet". I'll have to try that when I get time. The nicest Mausers were the commercial FNs, especially those on the Southgate Weatherbys. ![]() |
#26
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Browning FN's?
Weren't the old Browning FN rifles mousers? They seem OK, except for those three phase stepped bbls. Never had one but one of my hunting buddies has a .257 Rbts. It's kinda pretty in a nostalgic sort of way, but it only shoots fair.
Rev |
#27
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Best gun ever!!!
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#28
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Re: Best gun ever.
Quote:
Share the tightening up sequence with us. Is it in a book or journal? Best wishes, Bill |
#29
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Best gun ever!!!
![]() If you have learned to weld, you will remember that gas welding on a circle will shrink the circle because the molecules come to the heat. On the lathe, turn a rod to approximately 0.702. See if it will go through the rear bridge and into the lug area of the receiver ring. Leave it long enough to stick out past the rear tang about 5 inches. Clamp a pair of vise-grips onto the rear projection of the 0.702 rod sticking through the action. If you run scared, put heat stop paste on the rod and around the action between the front and rear rings. This should keep the receiver ring cool enough to bare hand. (Test gently) Use about a #2 welding tip and ply the heat to the top of the rear bridge. Bring it up to red and remove the heat. Try pulling the rod out. If the receiver is still loose put on a little more heat. If it starts to hold the rod DO NOT put on any more heat. You don't want to stick the rod. If you do, drive it back with a punch in the center so you don't swell the front of the rod by beating on it. That will make it VERY tight. If it is too snug, lap it with the rod and lapping compound. Don't forget; you asked! P.S. Don't do this with the barrel in place. |
#30
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Larry
Well a.......ah hem, I think that project is about three feet over my head. But thank you for the reply anyway. Thats one of those, I would if I could but it's best if I don't deals. Best wishes, Bill |
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