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Shuggy

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Posts posted by Shuggy

  1. Strange, exactly the same thing happened to me on Saturday. However, I had luckily recently upgraded my vice with a nice set of V-shaped nylon jaws designed for motorsport hose end assembly. This allows it to get a really solid, but non-marring grip on the barrel: it’s great for rifle maintenance and has allowed me to ditch the old Tipton gun vice, which took up loads of room. A good 2 handed grip on the moderator, a bit of a grunt and it was free.

    Lesson learned - a good daub of VP90 grease was placed on the thread for the next time.

  2. That brings back some fond memories. The model 28 was the first fullbore pistol that I learnt to shoot. At the the time they were considered to be a bit plain and heavy, but I absolutely loved it.

    I have to disagree on swaged. They will work really well if used in the right way. I must have made many thousands of hollow based wadcutters, swaged from pure lead wire on an old Wamadet press and then lubed in a polythene bag. Load was 2.7 grains of Viht. N310 if I recall correctly. And they would shoot into tight clusters at 25 yards, with very little leading.

    But back to the OP, swaged bullets would be completely wrong for a gallery rifle. Viht. N320 is a good way to go for a 158 grain cast bullet.

  3. I think that you would be hard pushed to tell the difference in low light. They are both excellent scopes. PM2s may be dismissed by some these days as an old design, but the one thing that they do have is mileage, i.e. many decades of successful military use. I once had the opportunity to inspect PM2 scopes that were on the tail end of an operational tour in Afghanistan. On the surface they appeared half bashed and scratched to death, but the glass was still crystal clear and the users assured me that they still dialled perfectly. That may not matter much to someone on a range or heading for a gentle hunt, but it’s certainly reassuring when you are spending a lot of money.

  4. The only thing that I don’t particularly care for is the ugly ATI plastic stock. One day I hope to fit a decent laminate stock. Boyds sell one, but it reportedly needs a fair bit of fitting. Here’s hoping that Form Rifle Stocks will start selling one. 

  5. 4 hours ago, geek said:

    I would be interested to see a picture. I have always liked the look of Armalon, however, they do seem quite expensive (but I assume to pay for what you get).

    Certainly, here you go. I seem to recall that I paid £650 for it, back in 1997, when I had a large wad of pistol compensation money in my pocket. Over the years I have always enjoyed how it makes the Marlin owners do a double take!

     

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  6. No direct experience, but I have seen some superb stock inletting work done by Neil McKillop. I recall him saying that he always prefers to do his own inletting, as this means that everything will be perfect.

    I believe that laminate stocks with blank inlets can be obtained from Joe West, Form Rifle Stocks and Wood2Stock.

  7. On 11/18/2020 at 6:39 AM, baldie said:

    The cartridge HAS been adopted as far as I know. If so, there won't be an ammo problem.

    The Fury has only just received SAAMI acceptance. It will have to do the same with CIP.

    It isn't going to sell here, with estimated ammo costs circa £3 a bang. Shame, because its a real game changer, power wise.

    Hate to say this Scotch, but I really hope the cross isn't like the Fix. I've shot the fix, and it was frankly, horrible. That bolt handle is a joke on a 4.5K rifle.

    Not quite, there is still a competition running. There are 3 contenders: the Sig one, a cased telescoped round and a polymer cased one. The only bit that has been fixed is the 6.8mm General Purpose Projectile and its velocity specs, which is a government furnished design.

    Personally, I am pretty sceptical. It reminds me a lot of the failed .276 Enfield from 1913. That failed due to excessive heating, recoil, muzzle flash and barrel wear - and it was only about 60,000 psi chamber pressure, rather than the 80,000 psi of the new designs! It remains to be seen whether modern technologies can overcome these issues.

     

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  8. I suppose it could work. Rather than using washers, barrel tuners use nylon tipped grub screws to set the position. I suppose that you could have your Jet-Z retrofitted with one of the spigot mount options and then have the spigot drilled and tapped for the grub screws, but this sounds like an awful lot of bother to go to.

    However, if you look at the the EC tuners sold by Erik Cortina, these are designed specifically so that they can be fitted behind a muzzle brake or moderator.

  9. One point not mentioned so far: are you using the original Sabatti plastic stock? The Sabatti that one of our club members owned looked like the stock was made from a glass-filled nylon. If that is the case, then I would be concerned that any epoxy based bedding compounds might have problems with adhesion. You might be better off changing to a fibreglass or laminate stock or chassis, each of which would be more compatible with bedding materials.

     

     

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