Rare Factory Engraved New Haven Arms Company Henry Rifle sold $103,500
Moline IL, April 25, 26 & 27 – Rock Island Auction Company realizes strong sales during their April Premiere Auction. Peaked interest in the gun market, particularly collectable firearms has Rock Island defying the faltering economy. Strong bidding participation drove total sales to over $8.5 million; coupled with spectacular results from their Spring regional auction RIAC is set to break another industry record for the year. This sale featured over 2800 lots of quality firearms, edged weapons, military artifacts and more.
The economy had no hold on RIAC bidders, over 97% of this auction sold! This amazing sell through rate proves that bidders come to Rock Island Auction to buy.
Excellent Cased Engraved Prurdey & Sons Two Barrel Set Double Barrel Shotgun and Rifle with Scope sold $40,250
A portion of the proceeds from the Will Hoffeld’s estate benefited the NRA foundation. The NRA Foundation is the country’s leading charitable organization in support of the shooting sports. Will’s passion for firearms will continue through the family’s generous donation to this important organization.
This auction proved strong for all genres of firearms and every level of collecting. The outstanding selection of Winchesters were among the top sellers of the auction. A rare factory engraved New Haven Arms Company Henry rifle commanded a price of $103,500. Lot 3702 an exceptional Winchester panel-engraved model 1866 carbine sold for $63,250 followed by lot 3718, an exceptional Winchester Model 1886 musket with bayonet which brought a price of $54,625.
Special Order Winchester Pre-64 Model 70 Featherweight Bolt Action Rifle in Rare 7mm Mauser Chambering sold $12,650
At Rock Island Auction Company, Colts repeatedly show their importance as high value collectables and solid investments. Of the military inspected Colt Cavalry’s offered, an Ainsworth inspected U.S. Colt Model 1873 stood out bringing a within estimate price of $40,250. A Colt flattop double action model 1878 frontier revolver serial number 1 sold for $40,250. The collection of engraved Colts also did well, a documented factory engraved, silver-plated, Colt single action army revolver with carved pearl grips reached $21,850. The Hoffeld estate brought several rare Colts including 4 Patersons with no reserve! A rare Colt pocket model Paterson revolver no. 1 sold above estimate for $20,700. There were nearly 100 Colt Brevetes in this auction from the Hoffeld collection, a bid of $5,175 won an engraved Japanese copy of a Colt Model 1851 navy percussion revolver.
Outstanding results were seen in the spectacular selection of shotguns and sporting arms. An abundance of rare calibers and gauges drove bidding interest to achieve a total of over $2.3 million in this genre. Above estimate prices were obtained on an excellent cased engraved Purdey & Sons two barrel set double barrel shotgun and rifle with scope ($40,250) & a G. Gournet engraved Parker reproduction A-1 special three barrel set side by side shotgun with original leather takedown case ($28,750). The sporting rifles were led by the exceptional collection of pre-64 Winchester Model 70’s which were in high demand as collectors sought to own one of these hard to find guns in rare calibers. All of the model 70’s sold, many above the high estimate, in fact the price realized on this collection was nearly twice the high estimate!
Superb cased, engraved and gold banded pair of Henry Deringer percussion pistols with coin silver furniture sold $43,125
Scott Meadows lead off the military firearms in this auction with dozens of rare, experimental and prototype 1911’s. An exceptional early first year production two digit serial number Colt Model 1900 sight safety semi automatic pistol with factory letter brought $21,850. Ample participation in class III firearms brought $31,625 on a police-marked, Colt, model 1921/28 US Navy over-stamp Thompson submachine gun.
An impressive grouping of deringers came to the auction block with over 50 high condition Philadelphia and Henry deringers. A set of cased engraved and gold banded Henry deringer percussion pistols with coin silver furniture brought a within estimate price of $43,125. An above estimate prices were obtained for two San Francisco agent marked Henry deringer percussion pistols, a N. Curry marked, engraved and silver furnished with silver barrel bands and an A.J. Plate marked pocket pistol brought $17,250 and $18,400 respectively.
The Frank and Karen Sellers collection headlined the Sharps of this auction. His patent models and sharps drew bids up to $28,750 for a rare Sharps model 1877 No. 1 long range rifle. His parts also did well, a lot of three Sharps receivers with barrels sold for $6,325.
Edged weapons brought bids from phone, fax, email and the floor. Of the many fine Bowie knives offered, a rare English & Hubers Bowie knife with sheath and an A. Carr spear point Bowie knife with sheath sold for $13,800 and $2,875 respectively. A nice selection of swords included a rare Eagle Pommel U.S. Naval officer's sword which realized an above estimate price of $6,900.
Outstanding Ainsworth Inspected U.S. Colt Model 1873 Cavalry Revolver with Kopec Letter sold $40,250
RIAC continues to offer fine antique and collectable firearms at auction, this sale had over 2,100 items classified as antique or curio and relic! Many fine Indian war items and documented Custer battlefield relics drew interested buyers. A lot of items belonging to a Little Bighorn survivor, 1st Sergeant John M. Ryan sold for $6,900; this lot included rare discharge documents, an Indian War campaign medal and a forage cap. An outstanding U.S. Springfield Model 1873 Carbine in 7th Cavalry serial number range brought $25,875 and a U.S. Springfield model 1870 trapdoor Indian rifle with brass tack decorations sold for $6,325.
As a whole the April auction was a success, with a high sell through rate and sales reaching over $8.5 million. This auction had something for every level of collecting with interested buyers setting the auction prices not the house reserve. The result was satisfied buyers and sellers alike, a valuable goal for any auction house.
Join RIAC for their upcoming auctions: the next regional auction to be held June 27 & 28 and a Premiere Auction which will be held September 12, 13 & 14. Rock Island Auction Company is currently seeking consignments. Consign one piece or an entire collection and know that you are consigning with the best. For more information on selling at auction contact Pat Hogan or Judy Voss at 800-238-8022.
For more information about the April auction or upcoming auctions please call Letisha Murray or Judy Voss at 800-238-8022 or visit www.rockislandauction.com.
A Texas state representative has set his sights on having Texas-made firearms exempt from some federal laws.
As the Star-Telegram reported, “Rep. Leo Berman (R-Tyler)…has filed a bill to make guns, ammunition and gun parts that are made, sold and kept in Texas free from federal regulation. That would exempt them from federal gun registration, dealer licensing rules and buyer background checks. State laws would still apply.”
“This [bill] does two things,” Berman told the Star-Telegram. “It tests our sovereignty in relationship to the federal government, and it would attract new small gun manufacturers to the state to manufacture certain types of weapons and ammunition that are only used in intrastate commerce.”
“Lawmakers say the federal government regulates firearms and ammunition through its power to regulate interstate commerce. If Texas prevents those products from leaving the state, federal officials’ arguments for regulating them are rendered moot, state lawmakers say.”
Similar bills have surfaced in both Alaska and Montana. Currently, Berman’s bill is under consideration by the House Public Safety Committee.
LATE ONE NIGHT – we always work into the small hours – your editor called me, suggesting I dig through the files for some handloading hints or techniques, for solutions to problems that readers from all over the country have described to us. The odds and ends that follow are the careful gleanings of a couple evenings I spent going over the past two years' correspondence and columns.
Gl Cases
If you find yourself without something to ream out military-primer crimp, try this: pick up a low-cost 45” or 60” countersink at the hardware store; then grind its point back until it enters the primer pocket deeply enough to cut away the crimp. The end then acts as a stop to prevent cutting too deep. Used by hand it will do a good job, leaving a clean bevel at the pocket mouth to facilitate entry of a new primer.
It can also be used under power (as can a Lyman or other primer pocket reamer) in a variable-speed drill press or electric hand drill. Run at lowest speed and press cases over the cutter by hand. You might find this handier than other methods.
Primers
Rifle primers in handguns? It isn't a good practice for several reasons: rifle primers require a heavier firing pin blow for proper ignition; the greater amount of priming compound may increase pressures (not necessarily dangerously); and handgun-case primer pockets aren't always deep enough for rifle primers.
Big, heavy frame revolvers (S&W N, Colt New Service, Colt & Ruger SA, etc.) have heavy hammers, strong mainsprings, and long hammer travel. In my experience they will reliably ignite rifle primers. During wartime periods of component shortages I used thousands of rifle primers in such handguns without any ignition problems at all.
(Left) This long-tube Bonanza funnel will serve to get more powder in the case – greater falls of granules help compaction.
On the other hand, I've yet to encounter an autoloader, even the 45 Government Model, which would ignite rifle primers reliably. As for small- or medium-frame revolvers, the latter will sometimes do well with rifle caps, the former hardly ever.
Recognize these limitations and be guided accordingly, should you be tempted to use rifle primers in handgun loads simply because they are available or cheap.
Note well! Never take primers out of their compartmented containers until ready for use; never store loose primers in bulk, and never agitate or shock loose primers. To do any of these things can set up a dangerous condition, one which might produce an explosion.
Berdan Primers
In spite of Boxer primers being far more widely used today than ever before, someone will occasionally find it necessary to shoot – and eventually reload – Berdan-primed cases. With many of the older British and metric calibers now or soon-to-be discontinued, we have no choice but to hoard such ammo and cases as are available against future needs. Such ammunition is Berdan-primed, and no more will be produced. So long as you save the cases in good condition, you can generally find powder and bullets suitable for reloading them.
Primers, though, could be a problem in the future. The more common Berdan sizes suitable for fairly modern metric cases will likely be available for a long time. The principal sizes, .177-inch, .217-inch and slight variations thereof, are available. The 250-inch and .254-inch can still be had, but are getting scarcer. These basic metric sizes can be obtained through dealers from Godfrey Reloading Service, Box 12, Alton, Illinois 62002, and Stoeger Arms, 55 Ruta Court, South Hackensack, New Jersey 07606, in modern non-corrosive, non-mercuric form.
Berdan primers for the various big-bore British cartridges are of different sizes and harder to obtain. Further, they aren't likely to be available much longer. Some sizes are still available from Oregon Ammunition Service, Box 19341, Portland, Oregon 97291, but not in especially great quantities.
The solution to being able to shoot those odd calibers in the future is to lay in a supply of the primers you need now. Don't get greedy, though – you won't really shoot that 10.75x 68mm or that 475 No. 2 Nitro more than a few hundred times at most over the rest of your powder-burning days. So don't try to corner the Berdan primer market – a thousand will surely do in each of the sizes you'll need.
It may be quite a while, though, before you'll use all those primers. How to keep them from deteriorating so that a decade or so from now they'll perform properly? First, make sure the original containers are sealed and in good condition, then separate into batches of two or three hundred each (British are packed 250 per sealed tin). Obtain small containers that can be sealed air-tight and seal up each small batch separately, putting a few dessicant pellets in with each. Label and date, then store in a safe dry place where temperatures won't go above about 80 degrees. Don't mess with them and 10 years or more from now they'll still be perfect.
As for containers, I'm partial to half-pint glass Mason jars with gasketed, screw-on lids. I spray them with black paint after sealing to keep out light which will fade primer carton labels – not really necessary, but convenient.
Flash Holes
As long as these are located reasonably near the center of the pocket, there'll be no measurable effect on accuracy. Hole size also has very little effect except when very wide variations exist within the same lot. However, size can be controlled, location can't. In any given lot of cases, simply check flash holes with a set of small-size twist drills. Then pick the drill size matching the largest hole, and use it to open all others to match.
A variation of this is to use a set of taper-pin reamers. Fit a stop on the reamer that enters the largest hole about half its length, then run it into all others. The stop will limit reamer travel and insure uniform hole diameter.
Non-Corrosive vs. Corrosive Primers
This question comes up frequently – how do you tell which military ammunition is loaded with corrosive or non-corrosive primers? The best answer available, insofar as domestic ammunition is concerned, is found in the chart reprinted here from Modern Handloading, available from Winchester Press: Foreign military surplus ammunition is another problem entirely, and accurate information is almost impossible to obtain. During WW II and immediately following, only very small amounts of foreign military ammunition were assembled with non-corrosive primers. The most notable exceptions are the Boxer-primed Canadian production of 9mm Para-bellum and 30-06. Beyond that the only safe assumption is that any foreign military surplus manufactured before the late 1950s and early 1960s is probably assembled with corrosive chlorate primers and clean your guns accordingly.
Powder/Cases
We often hear complaints about an inability to get certain recommended powder charges into the case in question. For example, the Speer Reloading Manual No. 8 lists a charge of 59 grains of H4831 powder with a 180-gr. bullet. Shooters without a great deal of experience in this particular area choose this load, set up the powder measure, check it out, and then go into a sizzling sweat when they discover that as dropped from the measure, that charge overflows the case – you just can't get that much loose 4831 into the case. They immediately suspect that load of being erroneous – and naturally, that perhaps other data in the manual might also be incorrect. Now they're afraid to use any of the dope in their particular manual – and it may be the only one at hand.
All this is understandable, but just a wee bit more knowledge would save the day. Like any other granular material, propellant powders can be made to occupy a lot less space than they do when simply dumped loosely into a container. You think nothing of jarring or vibrating a container of other physically similar materials to settle the contents into less space, so why not powder?
The old-timers whipped this problem with black powder by using a long drop tube or loading tube, which caused the powder to fall as much as three feet before it entered the case, thus compacting itself. If no great amount of compaction was required to get the charge in the case, they simply compressed the powder during bullet seating. Both methods will work today, but the use of a long loading tube is a considerable inconvenience and compressing the charge with the bullet can result in the fracture of a good many powder granules, causing ignition and burning rates to vary. By far the best method I've found is to simply put the case fully up into the conical mouth of the measure drop tube, throw the charge, then rap on the head of the case with a length of brass rod to settle the powder. Depending on which powder is involved, this method settles the charge as much as 10-20% of its normal as-dropped bulk.
Autoloaders and Loads
Next time you have extraction or ejection difficulties with handloads in any auto shotgun, check the gun closely before blaming the ammunition. That the gun works OK with factory ammo doesn't mean it's perfect.
First, thoroughly clean the gas cylinder and piston (if present), all recoiling parts, and especially the chamber. Examine all moving parts carefully for burrs, deformation, or excessive wear that produces extra friction. Examine the chamber carefully for evidence of rust pitting, scratches and gouges, burrs, reamer marks, or hard-caked fouling patches. Make certain the gas port isn't partially clogged.
Autoloaders such as this FN M1949 ABL can be finicky about handloads and sometimes need extra care.
The chamber is especially important. In some guns functioning may be OK with factory loads, then erratic when same cases are handloaded to the same performance. Handloaded cases may cling just a little more to chamber walls – enough to slow down extraction and cause a bit of trouble.
Getting the chamber absolutely clean and then polishing away any roughness should cure the problem. But be sure you polish only; don't grind the chamber oversize. It only needs smoothing, not enlargement.
As a last resort – when you've a batch of handloads that just don't quite give full cycling – the situation can be salvaged by lubricating the cases. Hang me in effigy if you like for such a heretical suggestion, but it does often allow proper functioning without apparent ill effects. Just a trace of lube, though, or it will build up in the chamber. I've had good results with wiping cases lightly with a cloth into which has been rubbed a good paste wax. Other times I've rubbed just a trace of resizing lube on with my fingers.
As for handguns, it has long been the practice of many first-class competitive shooters to literally drench lightly-loaded cartridges with oil to insure reliable feeding. Many a 45 auto that won't work at all well with 3.2 or 3.3 grains of Bullseye in dry cases, will perform flawlessly when the same cartridges are well oiled. The usual procedure is to just squirt oil into the magazine after it is charged.
In the final analysis ammunition lubrication can be safe and worthwhile. Generally speaking, it becomes dangerous only when very high chamber pressures are combined with excessive amounts of lube.
Defense Loads
Much has been said about the use of lead, hollow-base wadcutter bullets in 38 Special for defense purposes. The 146/148-gr. full wadcutter bullet loaded by all ammunition manufacturers is a pretty fair manstopper in its own right, if its velocity is stepped up a bit. The current factory-load velocity of about 770 fps (in a 6” test barrel) dribbles off badly in barrels under 4” long, so it doesn't have much smash – but even so, it's more effective than the smaller revolver cartridges and most auto-pistol calibers under 9mm.
This current loading is labeled “mid-range,” thus its mild disposition. There was once a “full-charge” wadcutter load, now discontinued, with a good deal more authority, delivering the same bullet at 870 fps. On paper it was nearly as good as the standard 158-gr. round nose load, but in practice it was far superior.
That flat-ended, soft-lead slug penetrated far less, thus transferee! more energy to the target; it created a larger wound channel and more secondary projectiles; it was generally bad news to any animated target.
If you want to use the HB wadcutter in your defensive handloads, by all means copy the full-charge load of yesteryear. Bullseye powder does the job well, with 3.5 grains giving about 880 fps; 4.5 grains of Unique will do about the same.
Going higher, 4.4 grains of Bulls-eye or 5.6 grains of Unique will churn up just over 1000 fps for particularly deadly results. But at this MV level accuracy may go to pot unless bullets are cast quite hard. The walls of the bullet base, around the cavity, are thin and weak, and they may be badly deformed by gas pressure as the bullet leaves the muzzle.
Of course, all commercially available HB wadcutters are made from very soft lead, so they don't take kindly to being souped-up much past the old full-charge velocity.
There's also the practice of loading soft HB wadcutters inverted to produce what looks like a massive hollow point. Even at low velocities this will produce considerable expansion in tissue; at higher velocities it will fragment, throwing off pieces which add to the destruction it causes.
While the modest load of 3.5/Bulls-eye and the inverted HB is highly favored by some; others complain about its accuracy. The problem arises in the degree of accuracy required. Generally, it's recommended as a defense load in 2” guns at across-counter ranges where minimum blast and recoil are desired.
Micrometers
No serious hand-loader can consider himself properly equipped if he doesn't own a first-class zero-to-one-inch micrometer and a four-inch or larger capacity vernier caliper of comparable quality.
(Left) To insure higher accuracy and safety, all cases should be checked frequently, particularly those for rimless autoloaders. The 9mm Luger is shown. Every handloader should own good measuring instruments – a micrometer first, a 4” or 6” caliper like this as well.
They aren't exactly cheap, but the assurance that accurate measurements give you, and the hazards they help you avoid, are worth many times the cost. If you live in a highly industrialized area, you'll find excellent buys in good used tools in hock shops and second-hand stores. If not, any good hardware or tool store can fix you up, or you can use one of the many mailorder tool catalogs.
First-class domestic brands will cost in the $25-40 range, but adequate less expensive models are available. Some importers offer excellent imports for substantially less – but don't get the idea one of those “Super Precision” $2.98 mikes advertised in the pulp magazines will serve your purpose. It won't, and it might be so far off as to lead you into trouble.
A measuring tool is a precision instrument. If it doesn't look like it's made with precision, it likely isn't. Free but firm movement without backlash, smoothly finished parts, neat and mar-free assembly, clear and easily-read scales and graduations indicate good quality. If they aren't present, look elsewhere. A good mike or vernier will last all your life if properly used and cared for, so don't try to save fifty cents a year from now on by buying junk.
Case Annealing
The best method for annealing case necks is immersion in molten lead. It produces the most consistent case-to-case results, and it's simple and easy to do.
Fire up your electric bullet-casting furnace and generate a pot of molten lead; turn the heat as low as possible and still keep the lead completely fluid; skim off the dross, but do not flux the mixture.
(Right) Best way to anneal cases is in molten lead, using a thermostatically-controlled electric furnace.
Pick up a case – either in fingers or pliers or some secure holding device – and dip case neck/shoulder area in light oil or finely powdered graphite. Give it a quick flip to throw off the excess, then immerse neck and shoulder vertically into the molten lead. Leave it there four or five seconds – thick brass may require a bit longer. Then draw out the case, give it a quick flip to throw off any clinging lead, and quench by dropping it into a bucket of cold water.
That completes the job, and it can be done just as quickly as you can pick up and dunk cases – even faster if you want to make a holding fixture that takes several cases. I've used perforated plates or strap hinges drilled to accept as many as 10 or 12 cases for simultaneous dunking. In fact, I once used a battered old serving fork whose tines would hold a half-dozen 30-06 cases by their extractor grooves.
Experiment with the time of immersion. Keep it as short as possible to still produce the degree of softness required, but don't overdo it and get necks so soft they crumple. Just enough to produce a bluish-brown surface color on the brass is about right. If you're worried about overdoing it, hold cases between thumb and forefinger. That way, you'll feel the head getting hot and pull and quench the case before your fingers get burned. It's a fail-safe system, but warm on the hands.
Dirty Shotshells
Ever wind up with a batch of really dirty fired shot-shells? If they are one-piece plastic like the Winchester AA, just wash 'em. Dump them into mama's automatic washer with any good detergent, set water temperature to cold or warm (if the latter, check first to make sure it doesn't get hot enough to soften or warp cases), set for the shortest cycle available, and switch it on. It's a good idea to place these in an old pillow case or mesh bag to make sure the inside of the washer drum doesn't get chipped, and this also makes handling them easier. Cases will come out clean as a whistle, though the inked-on markings will probably be removed.
To dry quickly, tumble in mama's dryer, with heat turned off or at least set as low as possible. The dryer will also serve to dry out paper or built-up plastic cases you might pick up on the range after a shower or heavy dew. Just make sure you don't run it too hot. The “nylon” setting usually works fine, without damage to cases.
Waxing Shotshells
If you're having trouble with hard shotshell resizing, first check the die. It may have some annular reamer marks or other roughness (maybe from rust you allowed to accumulate) causing most of the trouble. If polishing the die doesn't cure the problem, try a little wax to lubricate both die and cases. A trace of beeswax rubbed on a few cases now and then may do the job. If not, give all cases a shot of aerosol wax. Make sure this is a hard wax, not just an oily furniture polish. In a few minutes the volatile spray vehicle will evaporate, leaving just enough wax on the cases so they'll run smoothly through the die.
Revolver Case Extraction
How often have you been told that so long as a revolver load extracted easily, it didn't produce excessive pressures? Don't believe that. We've seen 357 Magnum cases fired at 55-60,000 psi literally fall out of a test barrel of their own weight. On the other hand, I've seen cases fired in a new revolver that required being driven out of the chambers after firing at a conservative 15-20,000 psi.
Chamber finish and case hardness gradient are what really control extraction effort, far more than chamber pressure. Take a revolver with smooth, slippery chambers (like S&W used to burnish them) and keep running pressures up – you'll blow the gun before extraction effort becomes excessive. On the other hand, take a recently-made gun of a make and model with all-too-common rough chambers, and even light factory loads may hang cases up solidly in chambers. I've seen lots of new guns the past few years that required polishing of the chambers before cases could be gotten out without the aid of a mallet or boot heel.
Don't take easy extraction as an indicator of safe pressures; instead, stick with known safe loads, and you're a lot less likely to wreck a good gun or your shooting hand.
Cartridge Corrosion
If you carry handgun loads in a typical looped leather cartridge belt, you'll eventually encounter corrosion problems. Brass cases will invariably develop greenish verdigris from contact with residual acids or moisture in the leather. The only way to prevent this with naked brass is to keep the leather as dry as possible and to remove and wipe the cartridges clean daily. Some police officers, not particularly gun-wise, coat their belted cartridges with clear lacquer or varnish. This will hold off corrosion, but unless very carefully done, it can cause chambering difficulties – especially with handloads whose cases aren't resized quite down to original dimensions. The lacquer may be thick enough to prevent chambering, especially if it runs or drips. A thin, well-buffed coat of hard paste wax will protect from corrosion for a while, but requires occasional renewal.
Your best bet is unscratched, unmarred, nickeled cases. The nickel must be unbroken, not scratched by resizing, so new cases are best for loads to be belt-carried for a long time.
Bullets will also corrode from contact with leather, whether lead or jacketed. Frequent wiping will do the trick, and so will a wax coating. However, lacquer can be safely used on bullets if not allowed to lap over onto the case. Dipping is okay if the lacquer is quite thin and the cartridge is hung point down by its rim to drain dry.
By far the worst method of avoiding or removing cartridge corrosion is buffing. Many a cop with a blitz cloth shines his belt ammunition by hand. That's OK because no metal is removed. But if this is tried on a powered buffing or polishing wheel, half the vital wall thickness can disappear in a flash. If the same rounds get another treatment later, they may be paper-thin, and rupture when fired. The rupture won't hurt the shooter, but if he's in the middle of a shooting encounter when it happens, the consequences might well be fatal.
7.62x39mm Cartridges
We continue to get many queries for a source of ammunition and/or components for the Soviet 7.62x39mm M-43 service cartridge for use in SKS carbines and its various copies. At least we hope they're for use in the semi-automatic SKS, for all the other guns chambered for that cartridge are full-automatic and thus prohibited by Federal law.
You won't find this ammunition in the average gunshop, but some surplus vendors occasionally have a supply of military loads. They are Berdan primed, but usually non-corrosive, and of good quality. What I've shot has been quite accurate in a Sako Vixen sporter.
Boxer-primed ammunition is, for all practical purposes, non-existent – though many millions of rounds have been loaded at the Lake City ammunition plant for the U.S. government. While you just might run across some of this loaded ammo, I'd recommend extreme caution. NONE has been legally released, and any you might encounter is most certainly “liberated” (for which read stolen) and possession thereof is frowned upon.
(Right) These three 7.62x 39mm loads for Soviet SKS rifle are assembled in cases reformed from 6.5x 54mm Mannlicher-Schonauer brass.
The only other source of ready-made Boxer-primed cartridges I know is George Spence, Steele, Missouri. George custom-loads it, forming the cases from C.I.L. 6.5?54mm Mannlicher-Schoenauer primed cases he seems to have in plenty. He can also supply, at less cost, Berdan-primed loads made from reworked Italian 7.35mm ammunition of WW II vintage. Corrosive-primed, of course, but if you are too lazy to clean your guns, you deserve no better.
As a last resort for your own loading, use Norma unprimed cases in 6.5x54mm M-S or 6.5mm Carcano caliber and a set of 7.62x39mm forming dies, obtainable from RCBS, Inc., Box 1919, Oroville, California 95965. After resizing, trimming, neck-reaming, base-swaging, and annealing, you'll have excellent Boxer-primed cases which will serve for many, many reloadings if given proper care.
Though Russky and Chicom 7.62mm barrels usually run about .310” groove diameter, I've had fine results with standard .308” diameter 30-cal. bullets. Best were the 125/130-gr. weights, with fairly sharp points, ahead of IMR 4227 powder. Start at about 22 grains and work up until the gun in question gives reliable semi-auto functioning, then stop. This isn't a magnum, and even a smidgin more powder past the optimum level raises pressures sharply.
Black Powder
Having trouble getting enough black powder? Maybe it isn't as bad as it looks. The “User-Limited” purchase permit allows buying more than the picayunish 5 pounds normally allowed by Federal law, and also permits you to buy outside your state of residence.
In effect, a “User-Limited” permit enables the purchase of enough black powder at one time to make the often-necessary long drive pay off. A buying trip not worthwhile for 5 pounds isn't so bad if you can pick up 50 pounds, or if you can get together with several friends and send one man after enough powder for the whole lot.
Ask your local ATFD office for form #4707, execute it properly, then turn it in with the prescribed $2 fee. Eventually – there may be some delay – you'll receive a one-time purchase permit (Form #4709) which must be presented when and where your purchase is to be made. When making the purchase you'll also be required to execute a purchase record and to properly identify yourself.
Form #4709 is strictly a one-shot deal, and it's made out for a specific amount of powder. You can't buy more than the permit specifies – and if for some reason you buy less, you can't go back later and try to pick up the balance. Every individual purchase must be made under a new permit.
In some instances it might not be all that simple, depending upon your state and local laws and the state and local laws in force where you want to do the buying. Federal regulations specify that the permit will not be honored if the purchase or the transportation of the black powder will be in violation of state and local laws in the areas concerned.
Short Pistol Cases
A fellow dropped in the other day with his pet auto pistol and three or four boxes of cases fired in it – and with a problem. For years he had loaded straight rimless auto-pistol cases without any concern for case length. He knew that any case which had been fired successfully in that gun couldn't be too long – and he'd also felt that factory cases weren't likely to be too short.
He was a little shocked when he – for some reason – measured a few cases and found them much shorter than he'd expected. This prompted him to check quite a few cases – and none of them were long enough to headspace solidly on the chamber shoulder!
His first question was why the cases were generally a good bit shorter than published length. Well, there is no industry-standard minimum length for such cases, though maximum length is specified in SAAMI minimum-chamber/maximum-case drawings. Individual manufacturers set their own minimums compatible with tooling and production methods. So, since auto pistols are unusually tolerant of short cases and excess head-space conditions, tolerances are set rather loosely.
How loose? That information isn't released by the manufacturers, but a fair idea can be obtained by measuring a handful of cases from every make and lot you can find in one caliber. I once did this when a good many lots of commercial 45 ACP ammunition were handy. In one make alone I found a spread of.040” between longest and shortest cases. Other makes and lots showed a bit less spread, but still more than one might expect.
This doesn't mean that the cases or the makers are bad. As already mentioned, auto pistols are quite tolerant in this respect. Most autos have virtually unlimited firing pin protrusion, so will ignite a primer, even if the cartridge be rammed 1/16” deeper than normal in the chamber. So long as primers are ignited properly, the cartridges will function normally.
When it comes to producing maximum accuracy, though, those short cases can cause trouble. Uneven lengths will cause variations in ignition – which in turn produce greater velocity variations and a poorer degree of accuracy. The difference may not be much, even in a first-class target gun. But a half-inch in .50-yard group size can cost you a match just as easily as if it were a furlong.
To avoid such fuss and feathers, sort your once-fired cases by length. While a set of case gauges made up in .005” or .010” steps would be handy, I use a low-cost vernier caliper. Set aside for match use those cases no more than .010” shorter than breech-face/chamber-shoulder distance of the gun. The rest can be lumped together for general use, but you might want to split them into two batches, one for service use and the other for plinking where accuracy requirements are least stringent of all.
Minie Balls
Maybe you've acquired a muzzle-loading rifle of some sort (probably a 58) and want to use minie bullets in it. That presents no problem if your bore is of standard diameter. Lately, though, I've seen a few 58s with undersize bores – and standard minies are too large for easy loading. Of course, you can buy a new .575” or undersize mould, but that's expensive.
(Left) Minie bullets – and some others – can be rolled to size if overlarge for your barrel. See text for details.
Try this instead. Take the standard too-tight minie bullets (unlubricated) and lay them on a smooth, hard surface. Steel plate is best, but smooth hardwood, glass, formica, rnasonite, etc., is O.K. Lay a strip of hardwood or steel over the bullet(s), bear down equally with both hands, and roll it on them a few turns. Experiment with pressure and don't overdo it. You'll find you can reduce bullet diameter a small amount quickly and easily. With a little care, you can reduce them quite uniformly.
Greasy Cases
When your hand-loads finish up a bit greasy – whether from bullet lube, sizing lube, or greasy hands and dies – it's best to clean and dry them before use, or before boxing and storage.
A power-driven tumbler is great for this, but if you don't have or can't afford one, you don't have to wipe off individual cartridges slowly and tediously. Just dig out a large, thick-napped bath or beach towel and sprinkle it lightly with lighter fluid or some similar grease-cutting solvent that evaporates quickly. Dump a couple hundred 38 Specials – or whatever it will hold conveniently – fold the towel over lengthwise, grasp it by both ends, and rapidly shuffle the loose rounds from end to end for a couple of minutes. The long nap and solvent will clean the cartridges, leaving them dry and bright. No more messy handling, and no oil-produced misfires.
When seating lubed lead bullets, especially if you're loading lots of 'em, lubricant often accumulates in the hollow of the seating screw, gets packed there tightly, and progressively forces bullets deeper into the cases. That causes wide velocity variations and consequent vertical stringing on the target.
Some dies are vented through the seating screw to allow excess lube to escape. That works part of the time, but the necessarily tiny vent is easily clogged and hard to clean.
(Left) 45 ACP load at left is shown with bullet seated correctly. The case at right has had the bullet driven too deeply by grease and dirt compacted in seating die.
Lube-free bullet noses will help a lot, even though some grease will occasionally be forced up along the bullet by the case mouth. The only sure solution is to swab out the die and the punch cavity now and then with a solvent-wet wad of cotton on a stick. If bullets are clean-nosed, doing this every hundred rounds or so will insure uniform seating depth and clean loaded cartridges.
Straight Cases
When loading such old long straight cases as the 45-70 and 45-90 for maximum performance in modern guns, the powder charge usually fills the case pretty well.
Most of today's handloaders hold the charge to the rear of the case with a loose ball of toilet tissue, kapok fluff, Dacron or some other light material. They all work, but none actually secures the powder's position quite as well as what the factories used in years gone by.
In straight cases an ultra-light ball of fluff will shift inside the case under the weight of the powder through handling and recoil impacts. When that happens, you aren't much better off than without it.
A tight-fitting card wad will grip the case walls better and will not shift nearly so easily. Hard, stiff, smooth cardboard at least 1/32-inch thick is best, and the wad must be large enough to fit quite tightly. It is tight enough when the edges are forced up slightly as it is rammed solidly onto the powder charge with the largest dowel the case will accept. Start the wad squarely by thumbing it into the case mouth, then seating it with a single smooth thrust of the dowel. Check afterward to make certain the wad hasn't scooped up part of the powder charge.
A dry wad will normally do the trick, but dipping it first into melted beeswax may improve accuracy, and will sometimes help with any leading problem that occurs. Adding a 1/16-inch wax or grease wad directly under the bullet may also help. Just make up a sheet of lube or wax, then thumb it over the case mouth, and seat the bullet directly over the resulting wad.
Editor’s Note: This article originally appeared in the 1976 Edition of Gun Digest Annual Book. Click here to learn more about joining the most extensive online repository of gun articles – over 65 years of Gun Digest books – found only at Gun Digest Research.
“The National Parks Service has announced it will not challenge a court order that temporarily stops the late-term Bush administration policy of allowing CCW-permit holders to carry in National Parks.”
That's the news media's backwards way of saying the bureaucrats running the National Parks are delighted they don't have to allow CCW-permit holders to exercise their civil rights in the parks, at least for now.
U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly issued a temporary injunction, favoring a lawsuit brought by gun-control and environmental activists. She gave the Interior Dept., which runs the parks, until April 20 to respond.
The idea that parks must first undergo environmental-impact approval before partially honoring the right to keep and bear arms is a complete subterfuge and extremely dangerous on several grounds.
Most obvious, there is NO environmental impact of carrying an unfired gun in a park or elsewhere. Even fired, at the rate CCW permitees fire their guns, the impact is so small it is essentially unmeasurable. The District Court/EPA/Brady effort is a transparent deception, used by hoplophobes and gun banners, to stop a ruling that would restore limited civil rights (for government permitees only) and could save lives and deter crime. Read more
For four days in March, gun owners across the country were up in arms about a Department of Defense decision to not resell its spent brass casings.
The DOD sells more than 100 million used casings a year — in .223 and .308 variants — to businesses such as Georgia Arms, near Atlanta, which in turn reloads the cartridges and sells them to the public.
Rep. Jason Chaffetz says the decision not to resell was made intentionally by the Obama administration, and he plans to introduce legislation to ensure it doesn't happen again.
It was “a concerted effort by this administration to short the supply” of ammunition, said the 3rd District Republican who views it as back-door gun control.
Georgia Arms co-owner Larry Haynie agrees. He said he was told by government officials that it was a clerical error.
“Hell no,” he said when asked if he believed that. “That's just the government catch-all right there.” Read more
Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer this week signed into law a new self-defense statute that will “steal the thunder” from gun prohibitionists who invariably whine that armed citizens might “take the law into their own hands.”
The new statute squarely puts the law in the hands of the citizens, by plainly stating they have no duty to retreat if attacked in a place where they have a right to be.
The law also allows armed citizens to use force or threaten the use of force when he or she reasonably believes an attack is about to occur, or to stop an attack already in progress.
There is also a section on citizen’s arrest, and one that codifies the legality of open carry. It is a gun prohibitionist’s nightmare, but for the armed Montana citizen – or anybody visiting the Big Sky Country – it may just be the best news they’ve had this year.
Any person who is not otherwise prohibited from doing so by federal or state law may openly carry a weapon and may communicate to another person the fact that the person has a weapon.
Gary Marbut, president of the Montana Shooting Sports Association (MSSA) sent an e-mail the other day that applauded several people, including NRA's Brian Judy, but criticized others.
In particular, he leveled his remarks against “the few law enforcement administrators and prosecutors who are so afraid of armed citizens that they lied and claimed end-of-life-on-Earth in opposing HB 228.”
“You need to work locally to replace these people,” Marbut observed. “They just don’t have a Montana attitude.” Read more
BELLEVUE, WA and REDWOOD CITY, CA – The Second Amendment Foundation, The Calguns Foundation and four California residents today filed a lawsuit challenging a California state law and regulatory scheme that arbitrarily bans handguns based on a roster of “certified” handguns approved by the State. This case parallels a similar case filed in Washington, DC, Hanson v. District of Columbia.
California uses this list despite a ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court last summer that protects handguns that ordinary people traditionally use for self-defense, and a recent ruling by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals that the Second Amendment applies to state and local governments. The California scheme will eventually ban the purchase of almost all new handguns.
Attorney Alan Gura, representing the plaintiffs in this case, noted that California “tells Ivan Peña that his rights have an expiration date based on payment of a government fee. Americans are not limited to a government list of approved books, or approved religions,” he said. “A handgun protected by the Second Amendment does not need to appear on any government-approved list and cannot be banned because a manufacturer does not pay a special annual fee.”
“The Para Ordnance P-13 was once approved for sale in California,” Peña noted, “but now that a manufacturer didn’t pay a yearly fee, California claims the gun I want to own has somehow become ‘unsafe’.” Read more
Historical Notes: The 8mm or 7.92 Mauser was the German military rifle cartridge through both world wars. It was officially adopted in 1888 with a bullet diameter of 0.318-inch. In 1905, the bullet diameter was increased to 0.323-inch. In Europe, the 8mm Mauser and several other 8mm cartridges are available in both sizes. The larger size is always designated as S or JS bore. In the United States, ammunition companies load only the .323-inch diameter or “S” bullet. The 8mm Mauser is widely chambered in European sporting rifles, but American gunmakers have not adopted it as a standard sporting caliber. The “J” or “I” in the name denotes infantry ammunition. The German capital “I” was mistaken for a capital “J” by U.S. military interpreters after World War I and the “J” misnomer came into common use here and even in Europe thereafter!
General Comments The 8mm Mauser had not been very popular in the United States prior to World War II. However, the large number of obsolete, surplus 8mm military rifles sold here since the end of the war has increased its use substantially. American cartridge companies only put out one loading; the 170-grain bullet at 2360 fps or so. As loaded by Norma and by other European companies, such as RWS, it is in the same class as our 30-06. It is adequate for any North American big game if the proper bullets and full loadings are used. A large variety of good .323-inch bullets is now available for the individual handloader, and this has increased the usefulness of the 8mm Mauser for the American shooter.
Wisconsin Attorney General J.B. Van Hollen said last week that state law allows residents to walk the streets armed, provided their firearms are visible to others. Van Hollen's memo that outlined his opinion that carrying nonconcealed weapons is legal doesn't change the law, nor does it affect how officers respond to gun calls.
“It definitely causes us to notch up our awareness if people end up choosing to walk around with guns on their side and those type of issues,” said Stevens Point Police Chief Kevin Ruder.
Ruder said the city's seen few instances of people walking around with a holstered gun. Stevens Point is a safe community, he said, and it isn't necessary to carry a firearm.
“Basically, (what) it would do is excite people to a point where we would get calls,” Ruder said. “It makes people more nervous and upset.”
“Even though open carry enjoys constitutional protection, it still might give rise to reasonable suspicion when considered in totality,” Van Hollen wrote. “It is not a shield against police investigation or subsequent prosecution.”
Van Hollen issued his opinion after a West Allis man was acquitted in February on disorderly conduct charges filed after police found him doing yard work while carrying a holstered pistol.
“I believe that every person should have the right to carry a gun for self-defense and no one should tell us there is no need to carry a gun,” said Kevin Michalowski, the senior editor of Gun Digest magazine. “If you're not committing a crime with that gun, what is the problem?” Read more
“Los Angeles assemblyman Kevin De Leon's Assembly Bill 962, a…bill that would drastically restrict ammunition sales, require thumb-printing when purchasing ammunition and ban all mail-order sales, is still moving through the California legislature,” The Daily Bulletin reported. AB 962 passed out of the Assembly Committee on Public Safety last week, and moved to the Assembly Committee on Appropriations, where it could be heard as soon as this week.
According to the National Rifle Association, “AB962 would make it a crime to privately transfer more than 50 rounds of ammunition per month, even between family and friends, unless you are registered as a ‘handgun ammunition vendor’ in the Department of Justice’s database. Ammunition retailers would have to be licensed and store ammunition in such a manner that it would be inaccessible to purchasers. The bill would also require purchasers submit to fingerprinting, which would be submitted to the Department of Justice.”
The NRA urged all California gun owners to contact their Assembly members, especially those serving on the Appropriations Committee, “and respectfully urge them to oppose AB962.”
First, Senator Arlen Specter provided the instrumental Republican support to get anti-gun Attorney General Eric Holder confirmed by the Senate.
Then, he singlehandedly pushed through the massive economic bailout, the so-called stimulus bill, which contained several provisions of concern to gun owners.
So it comes as no surprise that liberal anti-gun Specter, who has no loyalty to the Constitution, also has no loyalty to the political party that elected him. Specter announced this week that he will leave the Republican Party and run as a Democrat in 2010.
Specter's announcement comes only after poll after poll showed him trailing pro-gun conservative Pat Toomey in a Republican primary.
Specter thinks that changing parties will improve his chances of winning next year.
What he's going to learn is that the voters of Pennsylvania are much more concerned about their Constitutional rights than they are with what political party a candidate belongs to.
Every time Attorney General Eric Holder opens his mouth and talks about reinstating the Clinton gun ban, gun owners know they have Arlen Specter to thank.
Back in early January, Sen. Specter said he had “grave concerns” about Eric Holder. He made it sound like he was going to join other pro-gun Senators and oppose the Holder nomination.
It was standing room only at the Soldotna Sports Center last night as many from the Kenai Peninsula attended the rally of the Second Amendment Task Force of the Kenai Peninsula.
Even the presenters discussed the turnout, including Bob Bird of Nikiski.
He was gratified with the turnout.
He explained to the audience that the rally was not called as part of the National Rifle Association, or as part of the Gun Owners of America.
Those speaking at the rally wanted to relay the message that there is a reason American’s should be concerned that the freedom to keep and bear arms is being threatened. Read more
A coalition of nearly two dozen organizations is launching a campaign that demands the resignation of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano and an apology from President Obama for labeling those who hold traditional American values and conservative ideals as terrorists.
“We, the law-abiding Citizens of America, demand: 1. The Resignation or Removal of DHS Secretary Janet Napolitano for her partisan political profiling of veterans and conservatives and her abuse of power,” says the petition, which is posted on the website for the coalition that goes under the name No Political Profiling.
It also demands, “An apology from President Barack Obama to ALL Americans for his administration's call for domestic spying,” and “The Immediate Retraction of the ‘Rightwing Extremism' report for labeling law-abiding citizens as ‘terrorists' because of their political views.”
As WND reported, a spokesman for the Department of Homeland Security cited executed Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh as an example of why “right wing” interests must be monitored closely by his agency in the United States. Read more
The [New York] Assembly continues to chip away this evening on a package of bills to combat gun violence. The legislation would help police investigate illegal firearms, prohibit felons from buying guns, require child-proof devices on guns, and banning advanced firearms and ammunition used to kill police officers, according to the Assembly.
A number of Republicans, who are in the minority in the Assembly, are speaking against the bills.
A bill that is being debated now would require that semiautomatic pistols manufactured or delivered to any licensed dealer in New York be capable of microstamping ammunition. Microstamping means information that identifies the make, model and serial number of a gun is “stamped” onto a cartridge as the weapon is fired.
The legislation is sponsored in the Senate by Eric Schneiderman, D-Manhattan, who is holding a news conference tomorrow with Assembly sponsor Michelle Schimel, D-Nassau County.
For more of the Assembly’s release about its gun legislation, read on:
“New York is one of the safest states in the nation and it must stay that way,” said Silver (D-Manhattan). To achieve this, we must craft laws that prevent dangerous felons from possessing weapons while assisting law enforcement agencies as they combat gun trafficking. Although the majority of gun owners are law-abiding citizens, we must ensure that guns do not fall into the hands of violent felons or children. This package contains bills that address public safety, while weighing the needs of hunters and sportspeople.” Read more
Civil disobedience is defined by Websters New World Dictionary as: nonviolent opposition to a government policy or law by refusing to comply with it, on the grounds of conscience”.
So what is civil obedience? It is a term that I could not find in the same dictionary where I found civil disobedience.
I’ll take a stab at it. (Note: where ever you see the word “citizen” it is an interchangeable term with “voter”)
Civil obedience is the expectation that citizens follow the law and those citizens expect others to do the same, particularly law enforcement officers. Law abiding citizens expect the police to understand the laws and to act lawfully. This is a very minimal expectation of citizens for the police to meet. Citizens will not tolerate the police abusing their “police powers” and treating citizens who do absolutely nothing wrong like a violent or dangerous criminal, by drawing their guns and pointing them at citizens and threatening citizens with death or great bodily harm. Read more
High-power shooters always benefit from position practice. Here Tim Cornish limbers up with his 8mm Persian Mauser.
Sometimes the acts done by a country – as much as acts performed by an individual – have unexpected results. So it is with almost a of century of American presence in Nicaragua. While many aspects of the US presence are well known (most recently the confrontation with a far-leftist government in the 1980s), what is less well known is that every significant involvement the United States undertook in Nicaragua resulted in American arms of that era being imported to this small, Central American country – and then left behind.
Perusing little-known nooks and crannies, usually looking for old and rare books, has provided an interesting source for aging American military weapons. And with a bit of ingenuity, sweat – and a very able machinist – I now have several of those old battle rifles – a Krag, Springfield, Garand and M-14 – up and shooting; in some cases shooting very well.
Reading mirage, doping wind. or simply relaxing? Mrs. Nellie Luna, distinguished rifle and pistol shot, considers her distant target.
“Civilize 'em with a Krag”
When I first started hanging around gunshops back in Michigan at the tender age of about 12,1 got to know some old machinists and gunsmiths, usually of German background, who spoke English with an accent, chewed tobacco, were cranky, and knew their business. Chronologically, that was about the end of the Eisenhower administration; a world much simpler, when most gunshops were awash with old WWII gaspipes – and some older pieces, like the Krag. I remember selling from the gun rack several sporterized Krags for $25. The word, from my tobacco-chewing mentors, was that they were a ‘smooth action' but pretty old and therefore not worth much. Also, even in those days, there were a lot of Krags with rotted barrels. There was still floating around some of the original GI ammo with corrosive primers that would frost a barrel overnight if it wasn't cleaned with soap and water soon after shooting. Still in all, I liked the Krag, especially when loaded with the venerable Lyman cast bullet design #311284. I decided one day I would have one of those elderly rifles.
Fast-forward through the decades to a time much later. in the spring of 2000 I was in Masaya, a regional town about 20 miles from Managua, looking for some old books. There had been a series of earthquakes caused by a local volcano that had shaken up many of the old adobe houses. People began cleaning out their back rooms and selling a few things. Quite by accident I found a house where the owner had an old collection of very rusty rifles. In looking them over, they appeared to be a collection of rifles that had been used in every revolution (of which there have been many) – successful and unsuccessful – since the 19th century. The collection began with an Erfurt Mauser Model 71/84, a Remington rolling block 7mm, a Model 1916 Spanish Mauser, a rusty (but still functioning) Model 1892 Winchester in 32-20, and a couple of really rusty Krags – one with bolt and action intact, but missing most of the furniture. The barrel was so rusty, light would barely shine down it. As usual, I paid too much for that piece, went next door to my favorite Mexican restaurant and celebrated with some fine mole.
The stock had termites, but I gassed them and found that with some judicious glass bedding I could make that stock work again, especially as a carbine. The major problem was the barrel – it simply had to be replaced. I soon found that Krag barrels in good condition are just about impossible to find. Even William Brophy's fine The Krag Rifle proved to be of little help in obtaining the dimensions of the Krag barrel at the shank end, where everything mattered.
In desperation I e-mailed Brownells and asked their advice. I said I wanted to communicate with an old, cranky gunsmith, who chewed tobacco and who remembered how to rebarrel a Krag. Four days later I got a response from old Reid Coffield, member of the staff of Brownells and gunsmith extraordinaire. He said he did not chew tobacco but otherwise met the bill as he was pretty old, remembered perfectly how to rebarrel Krags, and surely was cranky. Aha! I thought, a blast from the past. As one would figure, the Springfield barrel shank is really quite close to the Krag's, with a slightly different diameter and pitch of thread. Also, the extractor cut in the Krag barrel is on the top and completely unlike that of the Mauser-type Springfield. And, the chamber of the 30-40 Krag is different enough from the 30-06 so that it had to be rechambered if one used a Springfield barrel.
I found, in the old bodega of Somoza's army, a couple of Springfield barrels and so had only to find a machinist who could do the work that ‘Doctor' Coffield suggested. As it turns out, the tropics had an allure not just for me, but also for a semi-retired master machinist Catalunian, Don Jose Sanchez. Hailing from Barcelona, long Spain's manufacturing center, Don Jose simply knew his business. In his front room he has a large lathe, and he can make most anything out of metal that is required. I gave him the rusty Krag, the barrel, a chambering reamer for 30-40 Krag, a translation of ‘Doctor' Coffield's missive, Brophy's book -and a week later I had a Krag barreled action with a new barrel.
Having fired all four “war-horse” rifles, Ms. Shany Perez reports the ’03 Springfield kicks the most.
I specified that I wanted him to duplicate the Model 1898 carbine, complete with a 22-inch barrel and cut-down stock. He was able to cut down the stock, plug the termite holes, form a new handguard and braze on the original front sight -all without breaking into a sweat. The rear sight is still the 2nd model of the Model 1902 rifle sight, but I can live with that. I have not installed the saddle ring as they make noise and I use this carbine for deer hunting down here.
At the range, the virtue of a new barrel tightly bedded into the stock became apparent as, from the first, the carbine grouped 1 inches at 100 meters. The load? An FN 30-caliber 147-grain FMJ in front of a reasonable charge of 4064. Velocity? Probably 2400 fps. The result? A fine deer rifle that shoots well and handles surprisingly well. In fact, the Krag carbine, with its 22-inch barrel and shortened stock, handles very nicely, much like the trapdoor Springfield carbine. It is simply a lovely carbine, and one that is a pleasure to shoot. It would be at home in the forests of my native Michigan or in the black timber of the Yellowstone country, and would make a dandy rifle for the hunter that wants to put the hunt back into hunting and leave his ‘digital' rifle at home.
The M1903 Springfield in Action
As much as anything, Paul Mauser's Model 1898 bolt-action 8mm spelled the end of the Krag's career in the United States Army. By 1903 the Army had adopted a modified Mauser action that retained some of the lines and furniture of the Krag. The quaint side box magazine was changed into a conventional Mauser-type staggered box magazine fed by 5-round stripper clips. The action was straight Mauser, with the distinctive knurled cocking piece retained from the Krag. The barrel was set at 24 inches in length and the sights included a modified late-model Krag rear sight calibrated for a 30-caliber bullet of 150 grains at about 2750 feet per second.
The result was a rifle that was surprisingly light and that made a very fine target rifle. For horse cavalrymen like Col. Frank Tompkins, who led the chase after Pancho Villa after his raid on Columbus, New Mexico in 1916, the M1903 was a bit long for cavalry use. Later, writing of the incident, he evaluated the equipment he had used in north and central Chihuahua. He noted, regarding the rifle, “The present rifle[the M1903 Springfield] is too long and too heavy for the cavalry. I suggest a carbine about the size of the old Krag carbine chambered to shoot same ammunition as the infantry rifle.” (Tompkins: 235).
Still, the Model 1903 did have an interesting moment at the little-known encounter at Hidalgo de Parral. Known as the place where Pancho Villa was assassinated in 1923, in 1916 it was the scene of one fine shot by a good rifleman and a Springfield. Col. Tompkins and his mounted troopers had just been run out of Parral by irregular Mexican cavalry. The Mexican troops stopped on a hill about a half-mile from the Americans and appeared to ponder what to do next. One Captain Lippincott, a member of Tompkins' squadron, laid down on top of an adobe house and prepared to fire at one of the horsemen, a target he calculated to be 800 yards distant. He adjusted the Springfield's sights, slipped into the prone position, correctly used a tight sling and, with one shot, dropped one of the cavalrymen from his saddle.
In Nicaragua, the era when the Springfield spoke was the Marine intervention to fight against Cesar Augusto Sandino, 1927-1933. Much has been written about this guerrilla action, and much of what has been written is a bit fanciful. Total Marine casualties in the field for that six-year period were 43 dead; more died in brothels, barroom brawls, of disease, and suicide than died on the battlefield.
In the field the Marines used two weapons, the M1903 and the M1921 Thompson sub machine gun. The native troops were given the Krags. Due to the heavy growth on many of the mountains, the arm of choice of the Marines was the Thompson. Probably the last Marine living in Nicaragua was Mr. George Smith. He was the Marine provincial commandant of Esteli while his friend Chesty Puller was the Marine provincial commandant of Matagalpa, the next province to the east. Interviewed by the author in 1991 a month before his death, old George was emphatic that he went into battle and ambushes with a Thompson with four 50-round drums of ammo and left his Springfield at home. He was never sorry.
Still, the Springfield had its uses; one imaginatively applied by Matthew Ridgway, in the 1930s a young officer on duty at Managua. He developed a passion for hunting the Central American alligator, or caiman, that abounded in the waters of Lake Managua. He evidently spent many a happy afternoon crawling through the mud on the shores of Lake Managua drilling caimans with the Springfield. He even lost his West Point ring in that slime.
With the Masaya volcano in the background, the rebuilt Krag gets the once-over from an admirer.
A more important use of the Marine Springfields occurred in the July 16, 1927 Sandinista attack on the Marine headquarters in the northern mountain town of Ocotal. The Marine commander, one Capt. G.D. Hatfield, with 34 Marines under his direct command, entered into an exchange of telegrams with Augusto Sandino a few days prior to the attack. The exchange ended with Sandino writing, “I remain your most obedient servant, who ardently desires to put you in a handsome tomb with beautiful bouquets of flowers.”Hatfield replied,” Bravo General. If words were bullets and phrases were soldiers you would be a field marshal instead of a mule thief”. The attack came a couple of days later; with hundreds of Sandinistas attacking the Marine barracks in the town hall (and the town hall of Ocotal still today). The Marines fought off the Sandinistas with a couple of BARs, but mostly Springfields. The native troops, the nascent Guardia Nacional, were holed up two blocks away and fought off the attackers with their Krags. The fighting was fierce and the Marines were in a difficult position until a couple of Marine bi-planes flew up from Managua, saw the situation and returned to Managua for reinforcements. By middle afternoon five DeHavilands appeared over the Sandinista troops and began dive-bombing the troops, dropping small bombs. The air attack lasted only 45 minutes but it broke the back of the Sandinista attack. It also wrote a new page in military history by being the first organized dive-bombing attack in history, years before the German air force was credited with inventing this new use of the, warplane.
By chance I ran across remnants of a Springfield, built by Rock Island Arsenal. As usual, the barrel was rotted out, there was no stock, and the action was not exactly in mint condition. No matter, I checked with all of the gun repair shops in Managua and found the parts I needed: a stock, and a barrel in good shape. Again, old Don Jos? Sanchez came to the rescue and installed the barrel. I did the rest, installed the stock, handguard and furniture, glass-bedded the action into the stock, and put on a Lyman aperture sight, much lamenting they no longer make the great #48 sight. The result is what you would call a parts gun, but one that had the potential to shoot.
More interestingly, the action was made at Rock Island Armory, with a serial number of 374XXX. That rifle was made at – or shortly after – the end of WWI and may have taken part in the Marine activities in the U.S. intervention of 1929-1933. At least the serial number is correct for that period. And, judging from the deep pits in the action, that rifle had been in tropical America for a long time. Unfortunately, when I took the rifle to the range to test-fire it, I could not get it to shoot worth beans. I then had to enter into the voodoo world of Springfield bedding.
There are (or were, since few people still shoot the Springfield in its military condition – and especially at 300 meters, as was my intent) two schools of thought on Springfield bedding. One school, represented by the eloquent writings of Col. Townsend Whelan, argues for a free-floating (more or less) barrel within the military stock, including the handguard. The other school of thought was impressed on my tender sensibilities by some of the old WWII vets that shot at the local rifle club and who, in the early '60s were in their 50s. One old boy, Salvatore, told me that Springfields always shot better with a lot of upward pressure on the barrel under where the front band and bayonet lug was located. He told me to hang a coffee can of lead shot under the front of the stock and apply glass-bedding so that when the glass ‘set up,' constant pressure upward on the barrel would dampen barrel vibrations and improve accuracy.
On my second foray into glass-bedding with Brownell's original recipe, the kind you had to add in the glass fibers and dye powder -and that set up with a puff of smoke, I got the job done but it did not look good. My father, who thought my brother's and my enthusiasm for guns was a perversion of youth, found the sight of my Springfield, dripping that runny glass-bedding onto the floor – and with a coffee can of lead shot hanging from the front of the stock, complete with glass fingerprints all over the rifle -a funny sight indeed.
That was my first experience with what ‘Professor‘ Jerry Kuhnhausen calls ‘mechanical locking.' After not so gently separating the stock from the action and getting rid of the hard drips of glass, I took the rifle to the range. I found that Salvatore was right because that Springfield would really shoot and keep all of its shots inside of the old 5-ring at 300 yards, with many in the 5V-ring.
orty years later I found myself in the same predicament. I forwent the coffee can treatment and decided to use shims and a system of bedding that I found that worked on an old Model 52 Winchester and the 7.62 54Rmm Nagant carbine. The Winchester was one of the first ones, without the speed lock, and was bedded – mostly – with a very tight front barrel band and a tight forward screw. The action was almost loose in the stock. That old rifle would shoot inside of an inch at 50 yards with iron sights, with many groups approaching a half-inch. The Nagant was bedded the same way, with the barrel completely shimmed so that it could not flop, or vibrate very much at all.
I took the Springfield to the range with some file folder shims and tested out a couple of thicknesses until the Springfield began shooting sub-two-inch groups at 100 meters, with a couple groups approaching one inch. The accumulated thickness of the shims was 0.015 inches and the barrel within the front band was tight. I then substituted tuna fish tin-can shims for the paper shims – cut to the same thickness – and went back to the range. The Springfield easily shot into 1 1/2 inches on a regular basis. With a 100 meter ‘zero' the Springfield is sighted for the NRA 300-yard slow-fire target with 23 clicks elevation on the Lyman #57 sight. The Springfield, silent for over 70 years, was again honorably punching holes – in paper – in Nicaragua.
In the newly-ordained rifle matches down here held at 300 meters, shot from the sitting position and using the NRA 300-yard slow-fire target the Springfield, using old ball ammo, holds its own against the newer Garand and M-14. And, it is a pleasure to hear the bark of a Springfield that has been down here for almost 80 years and see the precision with which it can still punch 30-cali-ber holes in a target more than three football fields away.
Clearly putting in a full day at the range, author’s compadre Tim Cornish holds two classic U. S. battle rifles: the M14 (left)and the venerable M1 Garand (right).
The M1 Garand During the long, sleepy 40-year interlude of the Somoza family's political control of Nicaragua the prevalent arm of their army, the Guardia Nacional, was the M1 Garand. All of them were supplied by the United States. The Guardia carried their Garands everywhere. Later, after the Sandinistasdrove out Somoza in 1979, the arm of choice became the AK 47 and the Garands were relegated to guard duty, and finally oblivion. In fact, in the last 10 years it has become hard to locate an intact Garand. After some considerable efforts I located two junkers and began to rebuild them. As with the Krag and Springfield, the barrels were rotted and some parts inside were broken or missing. For some reason, both had parts of the rear sights missing, and the top of the safety lever broken off.
I must admit that I had, for years, a prejudice against Garands. While a young lad, I began sighting-in rifles for deer season at the local gun shop and had the opportunity to get to know many different rifles. At the range I never could get a Garand to group better than three inches, and I thought that all Garands were mediocre in the accuracy department. Then one day I had that youthful illusion shattered. While at the 300-yard range test-firing an FN 270 Winchester, I noticed that one Johnny Zajac came to the firing line with a Garand in good shape. Old Johnny was the city plumbing inspector, spoke English with a plainly Polish accent, and always chewed cigars, usually unlit. But old Johnny could shoot. I watched him, from the sitting position, shoot 10 rounds in one minute with his Garand. I then drove him down to the target and saw nine shots in a circle of about three inches, with one shot that had ‘leaked' two inches outside of the group. He was furious with that leaked shot and used cusswords in both languages. I became converted to the accuracy possibility of the Garand.
In Nicaragua, parts for the Garand can still be found locally and I rebarreled both rifles. Since, like the Springfield, I intended to use both rifles for high-power target shooting at 200 and 300 meters, I had to do something to improve their 4-inch groups. The answer was simple. I bought one of the first copies of ‘Professor' Jerry Kuhnhausen's book on accurizing the Ml and M14.1 read the book several times and went to work. The result was two highly accurate Garands that will shoot 5- to 6-inch groups at 300 meters, with the ‘issue' iron sights. And they will probably shoot better than that, but my eyes don't see the front sight as clearly as they once did.
‘Professor' Kuhnhausen's theory is that by tightening up everything that hangs from the barrel, including the entire gas system (and ensuring the gas system hangs directly under the barrel assembly, what he calls centerlining), and by glass-bedding the action into the stock so that it is drawn down tightly into the stock by closing the trigger guard, the Garand will shoot as well as any bolt gun and do so for many rounds without changing point of impact. One of his secrets is ‘pressure bedding,' or glass-bedding the action in such a fashion that the barrel is flexed downward by some 25 to 40 pounds of pressure. Obviously, with the gas system, one cannot speak of a free-floating Garand barrel, so the service armorers began to experiment with ways to dampen barrel vibration – exactly as I had done with the Springfield. Their solution – and Kuhnhausen's -was to apply Rube Goldberg technology. A small fixture is made and placed under the barrel so that, when the action is glass-bedded, the back of the action must be forced down to the stock – by either a clamp, fixture or surgical elastic tubing. It really looks weird but it works like gangbusters.
The result is a rifle that must be assembled with some force, but which will not change its point of impact even under repeated shot strings. It changes the Garand from being a run-of-the-mill battle rifle, that will group 3-4 inches with a good barrel, into a precision instrument that will group between 1-2 inches – even with the half-century-old ball ammo that I shoot – and not change its point of impact, regardless of barrel temperature. The Garand becomes every bit as accurate as the Springfield.
The M14 The last of the American battle rifles commonly found in Nicaragua is the M14. How it came to Nicaragua has to do with one of the more colorful Contra commandantes, Eden Pastora, “Commandante Zero.” Never one to suffer from an inferiority complex, during a couple of years in the Contra War he had considerable support of the United States government. He was known for his unorthodox manner of waging war. For example, he would perform amorous interludes with known Sandinista spies in the hopes of converting them by means of his prowess. He also had the Contra headquarters with the most information leaks. When he decided to attack the southern border town of Greytown in the middle 1980s, he scrounged a bunch of M 14s from some American warehouse, some in almost-new condition. The Sandinista Army, of course, knew all about it and confiscated the arms cache of about 1500 rifles. A decade later many of them were sold to Century Arms. A few of those rifles made their way into civilian hands and the Nicaraguan army retained a small amount.
My rebuilt Krag balances nicely in the experienced hands of Ms. Perez. She took up shooting to share an activity with her boyfriend – and she now shoots better than he does.
I was asked to accurize several M14s and so I turned to ‘Professor' Kuhnhausen again. In dissembling the M14 it occurred to me that it is nothing so much as an Ml with a much-improved gas system and with the ability to accept a magazine from the bottom of the receiver. That's about it. It does have a selective-fire switch, but that is about useless as the cyclic rate is so high that it climbs uncontrollably. Should one have any doubt of its limited use as a machine gun, try firing a G-3 on full auto – and then the M14 – and it becomes obvious that the G-3 has a very useful rate of fire and the M14 just wastes ammo. Moreover, the M14 is made completely of forgings and has no stampings. It is one fine rifle.
To accurize the M14, the exact same theory that was useful with the Ml can be applied. The process involves tightening up the gas system in relation to the barrel, and pressure-bedding the barreled action tightly into the service stock with adequate ‘draw' from the trigger guard. In fact, of all three American battle rifles the M14, at least to me, is the easiest to accurize. And they really do shoot. From the bench, with iron sights, several that I have worked on will group 5-7 inches at 300 meters. And I am sure that younger eyes could improve on that grouping, seems to shoot best with either FN ball ammo or Portuguese ammo that was imported into Nicaragua in the early 1980s. And, like the Garand, when properly glass-bedded the point of impact does not change in slow- or timed-fire. As good as is the Garand, the M14 is a bit better.
Regarding Ammunition, Ergonomics, And Rifle Use
One of the more interesting, but little-known facts about the 30-06 and 7.62mm NATO rounds is that they are ballistically identical. Frank Barnes, some time ago, collected all of the ordnance data on U.S. military cartridges, including powder charges, and found that the standard load was a 150-grain (or thereabouts) bullet traveling at 2750 feet per second at the muzzle. That appears to be the case from WWI, except for a time when the M72 bullet of 172 grains with a boattail was substituted for the 150-grain ball. The common charge was 50 grains of 4895, a hotter load than found in modern loading manuals. That load became the standard load for WWII and afterward; when the 7.62mm NATO was adopted in 1957 it was loaded to the same, exact ballistics – which leads to some unanticipated advantages.
For example, when the Ml is sighted correctly to shoot off the front sight at 100 yards and the rear sight is indexed on the 100-yard setting, the ability to sight for longer distances is made very easy with the aperture rear sights, which have one-minute clicks and are calibrated to distances past 1200 yards. The sights on the M14 are almost the same, being set for 100-meter intervals and the clicks being one minute at 100 meters, rather than yards. But they are set up the same fashion as the Garand sights. And since they shoot equal weight bullets at the same velocity, the trajectory is the same.
At 300 meters, and shooting at the 18-inch bullseye of the 300-yard slow-fire target, my sight setting, using a 6 o'clock hold, for the Garand is the 300-yard setting, plus three clicks. The center of the target is nine inches, or three minutes of angle, above the point of aim. Ditto for the M14, where my sight setting is also the 300-meter setting, plus three clicks. No other battle rifle known to me has this facility for changing sight setting, or returning to an old sight setting, with no change in point of impact.
After going through the exercise of reconditioning old American war-horses, the inevitable question is which rifle shoots the best. In answering the question, some consideration should be given to the type of shooting in which the rifles have been used. The Springfield, Garand and M14 all have been used with iron sights in offhand, sitting, and prone positions; the last two positions with a tight sling. The common range has been 300 meters at the Nicaraguan regular rifle matches, and the target is the NRA 300 yard slow-fire target. The Krag sits in a class by itself. It is a fine offhand rifle – period. Of the four American battle rifles, it handles most like an American sporting rifle. It is my choice for hunting the small Nicaraguan whitetail deer in thick forest. Its smooth bolt action is unparalleled and it is the most fun of all the battle rifles to use to kill rocks and tin cans. And it is, to my eyes, the most nostalgic and attractive of all American bolt-action rifles. No gun collection can be complete without a Krag.
The ’03 Springfield, proudly wearing faded military markings and showing some wear and tear on the forearm, now sports a fully adjustable aperture receiver sight.
For me, the Springfield is the most difficult rifle to shoot, for two reasons. First, it is the lightest, making it very easy to throw a shot into the white, or beyond. Secondly, its stock has a lot of ‘drop' and so the recoil, during a shot string, is more noticeable than with the other two rifles. The Springfield has the most nostalgia and the best trigger – but I don't shoot it as well as the others, I am sad to say.
The Garand is muzzle-heavy and some days seems to just go to sleep under the bullseye. My Garand has a better trigger than the M14 and the scores I shoot with it and the M14 are almost identical. But I average a few points more with the M14 than the Garand. Why? I dunno. Finally, when the pressure of a match approaches and my friends all become enthusiastic competitors, I reach for the Winchester M14 that I got, courtesy of some governmental agency and Eden Pastora. It is the first M14 that I ever glass-bedded and I made a bunch of mistakes in that first attempt. But occasionally I will get a one-inch group from a benchrest at 100 meters, and at 300 meters I can call almost every shot – even the bad ones that go wandering toward Masaya volcano. It is a bit lighter towards the muzzle than the Garand and should be a bit more difficult to hold steady from the sitting position. But it is the rifle that somehow shoots the best for me, and in which I have confidence. It goes to every match and always shoots better than I. It is much rifle.
Lastly, a few words are in order about modern rifle use. One of the biggest impediments to getting shooters to participate in the Nicaraguan national rifle matches has been “shooter shock” at shooting at 300 meters and shooting with iron sights. Many of my friends read English-language gun magazines, reload and can quote the latest article about the 300 Dragon Killer Diller that shoots a 150-grain bullet at almost 4000 fps. They also are adept at benchresting such flamethrowers at 100 meters, and discussing the fine points of pillar-bedding, rifle powders, etc. But get them off the bench, suggest they learn to use a sling and shoot at 300 meters – and some folks become plainly nervous. When some folks try shooting at the bullseye with scope sights, they discover that the scope is not necessarily superior sighting equipment, if you have a fixed point of aim for iron sights and those iron sights are properly sighted in. With its image vibrations the scope may actually be a hindrance.
Times change and fashion changes. The old riflemen at the Bay City Rifle Club that got me shooting decades ago are long departed. Somehow the idea of teaching the basics of rifle shooting with 3- or 4-position shooting of the 22 long rifle at 50 feet got lost in America, as did the idea of shooting high-power rifles – using the same theory of position, sight alignment and trigger control – as for the 22 rimfire. The use of the tight sling becomes almost a lost art. More velocity, synthetic stocks, and other innovations cannot replace the pure theory and practice of rifle fire, and no medium has reduced rifle fire to its essence, or to its classic simplicity, as does shooting the American battle rifle from position, at extended ranges and with iron sights. ‘Digital' guns have their use, and are now most popular, but somehow the magic and skill of directed rifle fire has gotten lost in technological developments. A return to using American battle rifles, those dependable warhorses, so much a part of the American past of target shooting and history, should once again become a part of the present and future of shooting. There can be no more elegant use for a centerfire rifle.
For further Reading:
Brophy, Lt. Col. William S. USAR Ret. 1985 The Krag Rifle, The Gun Room Press, Highland Park, NJ
Kuhnhausen, Jerry 1985 The Gas Operated Service Rifles A Shop Manual, Volumes I&II, VSP Publishers, McCall, ID
Macaulay, Neill 1985 The Sandino Affair, Duke University Press, Chapel Hill, NC
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