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one of us |
Just picked up a very nice German dropblock, said by seller to be 8x57R for the .318" bullet, marked under the barrel "7.8mm57" "St.m.G. 10gr" and 7.35 which I guess means July 1935. Any way to tell from the markings if it is for the 8x57R or for the .323" bullet 8x57RS? I know I can get it slugged but am wondering if the marks tell the story by themselves. | ||
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one of us |
It's the .318 as denoted by the 7.8 mm marking. The .323 barrels are marked as 7.9 mm. | |||
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one of us |
Thanks, have located 4 boxes of 8x57R and will now buy it. Interesting rifle by H. Leue, Charlottenberg, has comparatively low mounted 2 3/4x scope sight, close pistol grip, full long forend, and made without any iron sights. Looks rather modern for 1935. | |||
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one of us |
Proofed with a 10 grams bullet? That can hardly be a 8x57 IR, which were proofed with heavier bullets. More likely a 8x57 R 360. Carcano -- "Those who sacrifice liberty for security deserve neither." "Is the world less safe now than before you declared your Holy war? You bet!" (DUK asking Americans, 14th June 2004) | |||
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one of us |
vigillinus,
St.m.G. 10gr = Stahl Mantel Geschoß 10 grams = 154 grain Steel Jacketed Bullet. Have fun with your new Boomer. Cheers, Number 10 | |||
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