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Trailrider #896

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Posts posted by Trailrider #896

  1. 48 minutes ago, Injun Ryder, SASS #36201L said:

    "Some Observations On The Failure Of U.S. Model 1903 Rifle Receivers"

     

    From: https://m1903.com/03rcvrfail/ 

     

     

    Gen. Hatcher's data is fascinating. While one can play the odds, I would NOT! Although my 81+ eyeballs ain't what they used to be, I prefer to lose the rest of my eyesight due to age, and I don't think I'd look good with a Springfield bolt sticking out of my eye socket, not having the docs try to pry pieces of receiver out of my brain!  I strongly recommend hanging that Springfield on the wall. 

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  2. If you are going to shoot an '03, be sure it is not a low-number receiver. Do not shoot rifles made at Springfield with serial numbers below 800,000 and those made at Rock Island with serial number below 285, 507 or thereabouts! Those under those numbers will have brittle receivers and could shatter!

    Ref. "Hatcher's Notebook".

  3. Depending on whether the rifle is a repeater or single shot, you may be able to shoot .45-70 ammo in it.  The relationship between the .45-70 and .45-90 is similar to that of the .44 Special with the .44 Magnum, just a difference in case length by about 0.3 inches. The only problem you might find with a .45-70 in a rifle chambered in .45-90 is whether a repeater will feed the shorter cartridge.  My first M1886 Winchester was a .45-90 and there was no ammo or brass available, so I shot .45-70's in it. Used 405 gr. bullets seated a little further out. If you do this, you should clean the chamber periodically so you won't have problems with .45-90 rounds encountering a roughened chamber. But the same is true shooting .44 Specials in a .44 Magnum gun.

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  4. No, not yet. I resent having to pay what Apple+ wants. I've read the book.  Besides which, I saw a lot of B-17 footage in freshman AFROTC classes, and talked with a number of ETO and PTO aircrewmen about how it was. Watch "Twelve-o'clock High" with Gregory Peck once in a while.  Bless 'em all!

  5. There is a question of course about whether Mrs. O'Leary's cow...  Right now, that is the least of the city's worries.  I know there are a LOT of innocent people in Chi Town, but maybe it and NYC would make good targets in case Pooty starts getting hinky. Maybe DC as well! :o:wacko:

  6. 7 hours ago, Marshal Mo Hare, SASS #45984 said:

    MICKEY MOUSE

     

     

    My freshman year at a major university, I was enrolled in AFROTC. They had all three service ROTC, and a tri-service band, commanded by a senior AF cadet (music major!). At the end of the year they had a tri-service parade and review.  Before the actual parade, they held a practice, with the band in the lead, and one of the tac officers standing in as reviewing officer.  As the band passed the reviewing stand, the band struck up the Mickey Mouse song. We though the tac officer was going to have a cerebral hemmerhoid. Now everyone knows you don't laugh in formation, but there sure were a bunch of snickers coming from the ranks. :lol:

    • Haha 3
  7. In "Paint Your Wagon",  Ben Rumson (Lee Marvin)) bids on the wife of a Morman and wins. One of his compatriots says, "You got a woman for money?"  Mad Jack (Ray Walston) replies, "You try and get one without it!" or words to that effect. (After 57 years, I oughta know!)

  8. Made belt holsters for several with Walkers or Dragoons. One customer was about 5-feet tall and couldn't have weighed more than 110 lbs. He had virtually no hips. I wonder how he kept his pants up, especially if he sneezed! :rolleyes:

    • Like 1
  9. On 2/8/2024 at 6:19 PM, H. K. Uriah, SASS #74619 said:

    If you mean physically loading and unloading the gun while shooting, they are all pretty much the same.  

     

    If you mean which one is easiest to reload ammunition FOR, then the first question is, what do you already load for with regard to rifle cartridges?  

    Generically, I'd say it's easier to reload something like .45-70 or .30-40 Krag than .43 Spanish or another "obscure to Americans" cartridge that it can be hard to get brass and/or bullets for.

    So, what about 7mm Mauser?  I'd avoid this caliber.  Not because I it's a hard cartridge to reload, but because I have read that the chambers in Rolling Blocks in that caliber tend to be oversized and that the brass will wear out a lot quicker, and may even bulge.  I discovered this when I was considering purchasing one in 7mm and did a little research. (I already reload the caliber.)  

    Good luck.

    The "problem" with the 7 x 57 Mauser in the rolling blocks is that the European standard for the cartridge makes headspacing longer than American.  The solution is to simply fireform with new brass and a lightly lubricated chamber, that will allow the case to back up and the shoulder to expand forward. Then just back the sizing die off until the resized case will just chamber with a little "feel".  If you reload for other 7 x 57mm rifles, you may want to separate the brass fired in other rifles from ones fired in the M1902 rolling blocks.

  10. I remember driving by Chicago Vocational School sometime after WWII, when there were a plethera of Navy fighters and maybe dive bombers inside the barbed wire fencing,. They were apparently there to train aircraft mechanics. Don' know what ever happened to them all. Maybe dumped in Lake Michigan?

  11. Back in the day, a cartridge that was the same as an original one was sometimes referred to as "long". For example, there was a .38 Short Colt's and the longer cased version called .38 Long Colt's. By the same token, the .44 Special could properly have been called ".44 Long Russian", and the .44 Magnum called ".44 Extra Long Russian".  Rim and base diameter ahead of the rim are basically the same; the only difference being the case length (and hence the OAL being different, when using the same bullet).  Just for grins, you will sometimes see me refer to the .44 Magnum as ".44 Extra Long Russian" or ".44 XLR".  The only thing you may have to do if you shoot a bunch of the shorter cartridge in the magnum chamber is to clean out the chamber thoroughly or you might have trouble chambering the longer cartridge.

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