19 September 2008, 01:21
Zedo"Modern" Military Rifles?
Modern . . . like smokeless and metalic cartridge?
I like the AK, grudgingly the AR, FAL and some others, but I'm a big Mauser fan, Mosin Nagant.
Bolt action mil-surp -- are these "modern" ???
There was a time I thought the Vetterli was ugly and antiquated, but I'm having a second look.
Enfield, Schmidt-Rubin, Martini-Henry ???
Are these "modern" ??? or are we just looking at the plastic, semi-auto, "black" stuff?
19 September 2008, 01:34
homebrewerI think a modern rifle is one using metallic cartridges and smokeless powder. That could make this Forum cover anything from about 1890 right up to the present day. Gives us lots to talk about...
19 September 2008, 03:57
ZedoShould have bought the Springfield Trapdoor 45/70 w/ matching bayo for $950 when I saw it ten years ago . . .
Ten years ago $950 was a lot of money for me. These days they're going at $1,500 and up, depending what it is. And I should have kept my Oberndorf 1900 vintage Mod. 96 Swede.
People tell me that Mitchell's Mausers are not what they're advertised to be -- despite appearing in NRA American Rifleman.
C'mon damn it! Post some discussion!

19 September 2008, 22:40
homebrewerquote:
People tell me that Mitchell's Mausers are not what they're advertised to be
I have seen their ads many times. How can they sell an "armory fresh" gun for 300 bucks? I see ratted-out Mausies at shows for many, many hundreds more...
19 September 2008, 23:52
BTW5Fresh from russian warehouses. The Soviets refinished and stored huge quantities of captured german weapons.
27 October 2008, 00:23
C1PNRI really like my "new" 1908 Brazilian 7 Mauser from J&G

27 October 2008, 04:41
Eric"Modern,"
anything that shots a metallic cartridge case versus anything that shoots via powder being dumped down the bore.
IMHO.
Eric
28 October 2008, 05:16
tom`quote:
Originally posted by homebrewer:
quote:
People tell me that Mitchell's Mausers are not what they're advertised to be
I have seen their ads many times. How can they sell an "armory fresh" gun for 300 bucks? I see ratted-out Mausies at shows for many, many hundreds more...
I pay about $300 for GOOD Mauser 98 actions, sans anything else.
Just saying.
If you want bargain Mauser actions/donor rifles that need work to build a rifle on, Century Arms has better deals (sporadically) by a factor of about 10 as far as pricing, especially if you are buying more than a couple. Depends on if you want bayonets and display stuff or want an action to make into a proper sporting arm. Lots of deals to be had on Arisakas too. Shame it's so hard to make them un-ugly, as the early war production ones were frightfully strong.
Tom in Texas
Reducing "collectable military rifles" into useful sporting arms one at a time for the past twenty odd years.
I just did another .30-40 K and put a proper stock and scope on it and AckImped the chamber.
I shall now duck and cover from the people who will call me a heathen.