M96 Tale of Woe
Posted: Thu Aug 05, 2004 5:08 pm
Well, I was very excited to add an M96 to my collection. Mid-July I purchased an all matching 1917 CG. Stock disk said the bore was a 3, but it looked good and slugged out at 6.51. Wood was good, bluing was good - thought I'd be a decent gun for postal matches.
Long story short, pulled it apart, cleaned it thoroughly, inspected it and brought it to the range with a few boxes of Norma ammo.
It shot 8 inches high at 100yds (exactly what I was expecting) and 8 inches to the RIGHT (not what I was expecting). It grouped well (2x2) and the trigger was great, so I figured I just needed to drift the sight a bit.
Well, to center the rifle on the target the sight had to be drifted almost out of the dovetail.
Sent it to my gunsmith for a quick check only to find that a number of things were wrong.
- the barrel is slightly bent
- the crown is ovalized
- it failed the "field" headspace check
- the front sight was soldered slightly to the left of the centerline
- the front trigger-guard (action) screw was bottomed out and the action was loose in the stock
He's recommending that I get a new Samco Swede barrel and rebarrel it. They're cheap ($69), but it ruins the matched aspect of the rifle.
I know the Swedes would have rearsenaled and rebarreled the rifle if it was in their hands - but I still feel a bit wierd about it.
Lessons I learned:
- Don't buy auction guns!
- Get headspace guages and go to gunshows or shops looking for my new acquisitions.
- Make sure I can return rifles that don't pass inspection.
I'm not blaming the sellers. I don't think they knew and, at first pass, the rifle looks great.
Here's to hoping my Samco 98/29 and my FGS K-31 don't let me down. <!--EZCODE EMOTICON START : --><img src=http://www.ezboard.com/images/emoticons/ohwell.gif ALT=":">;
<p>Take care,
David
****************
Long story short, pulled it apart, cleaned it thoroughly, inspected it and brought it to the range with a few boxes of Norma ammo.
It shot 8 inches high at 100yds (exactly what I was expecting) and 8 inches to the RIGHT (not what I was expecting). It grouped well (2x2) and the trigger was great, so I figured I just needed to drift the sight a bit.
Well, to center the rifle on the target the sight had to be drifted almost out of the dovetail.
Sent it to my gunsmith for a quick check only to find that a number of things were wrong.
- the barrel is slightly bent
- the crown is ovalized
- it failed the "field" headspace check
- the front sight was soldered slightly to the left of the centerline
- the front trigger-guard (action) screw was bottomed out and the action was loose in the stock
He's recommending that I get a new Samco Swede barrel and rebarrel it. They're cheap ($69), but it ruins the matched aspect of the rifle.
I know the Swedes would have rearsenaled and rebarreled the rifle if it was in their hands - but I still feel a bit wierd about it.
Lessons I learned:
- Don't buy auction guns!
- Get headspace guages and go to gunshows or shops looking for my new acquisitions.
- Make sure I can return rifles that don't pass inspection.
I'm not blaming the sellers. I don't think they knew and, at first pass, the rifle looks great.
Here's to hoping my Samco 98/29 and my FGS K-31 don't let me down. <!--EZCODE EMOTICON START : --><img src=http://www.ezboard.com/images/emoticons/ohwell.gif ALT=":">;
<p>Take care,
David
****************