Well today was a beautiful day. Temps in the high 60s, breezy, but plenty nice to shoot some rifles I picked up over the cold months. Today's range trip consisted of an 1891 Argentine Mauser, a 91/30 ex Dragoon Mosin Nagant, and a Type 53 Mosin Nagant. The Argentine and Type 53 had pretty rough bores even after some intense soaking and scrubbing so I hoped these would clean up nicely after firing a few rounds through them.
I shot at 50 yards since I wanted to see what accuracy would be like with the stiff breezes we had down here in S.E. Mass. First was the 91/30 which shot a little low but nice and tight like a Mosin should. Second was the Argentine Mauser which shot nice and tight and had a great trigger. The diference between the boom of the 91/30 Mosin compared to the crack of the Argentine Mauser was definitely noticeable and each had their own style when firing. Then came the Type 53 Chinese Shotgun, errrrr. I mean Mosin Carbine.
This thing was horrible printing about 8 inches apart at 50 yards. Nice fireball and all like a Mosin Carbine is known for, but man what a sloppy rifle.
Real surprise came when it was time to clean up. I bring a small funnel with tubing attached and a bottle of glass cleaner to get rid of corrosive salts while still at the range. A quick swab of the Argentine Mauser bore and I was amazed at the smooth grooves with just a hint of frosting near the rifling. This one cleaned up beautifully from a crusty, frosted mess to a nice clean bore. The Chinese Mosin on the other hand was a diferent story. [sad2]
Talk about sewer pipe.
I've always heard you can really tell how a rifle will turn out after shooting a few rounds through the bore. I'd say it worked great for the Argentine Mauser but revealed horror for the Type 53. Oh well, at least it only cost me $75. and the $150 Argentine made up for it.![Grin [grin] [grin]](/xen/styles/default/xenforo/smilies.vb/041.gif)

I shot at 50 yards since I wanted to see what accuracy would be like with the stiff breezes we had down here in S.E. Mass. First was the 91/30 which shot a little low but nice and tight like a Mosin should. Second was the Argentine Mauser which shot nice and tight and had a great trigger. The diference between the boom of the 91/30 Mosin compared to the crack of the Argentine Mauser was definitely noticeable and each had their own style when firing. Then came the Type 53 Chinese Shotgun, errrrr. I mean Mosin Carbine.
This thing was horrible printing about 8 inches apart at 50 yards. Nice fireball and all like a Mosin Carbine is known for, but man what a sloppy rifle.
Real surprise came when it was time to clean up. I bring a small funnel with tubing attached and a bottle of glass cleaner to get rid of corrosive salts while still at the range. A quick swab of the Argentine Mauser bore and I was amazed at the smooth grooves with just a hint of frosting near the rifling. This one cleaned up beautifully from a crusty, frosted mess to a nice clean bore. The Chinese Mosin on the other hand was a diferent story. [sad2]

Talk about sewer pipe.
![Puke2 [puke2] [puke2]](/xen/styles/default/xenforo/smilies.vb/031.gif)
I've always heard you can really tell how a rifle will turn out after shooting a few rounds through the bore. I'd say it worked great for the Argentine Mauser but revealed horror for the Type 53. Oh well, at least it only cost me $75. and the $150 Argentine made up for it.
![Grin [grin] [grin]](/xen/styles/default/xenforo/smilies.vb/041.gif)