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| Normally theese rifles have very smooth barrels. I do not think it was done during its making. It will probably still give good groops, but will fill up with copper real fast,so use a good copper-remover!
Bent Fossdal Reiso 5685 Uggdal Norway
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| quote: Originally posted by 6.5Gibbs: I recently inherited a 1896 Swede carbine 6.5x55 barreled action (1907). After cleaning the barrel I noticed that the rifling looks pitted, but not pitted like it would be from rust. It looks more like the steel was torn as it was rifled. Is this normal for this model and year? The "pitting" looks consistent from one end to the other. After hearing how accurate these things are I thought I'd ask the experts! Any thoughts will be appreciated.
It had already been drilled for bases and has a Timney trigger. I want to build something for my sons to use for deer/first elk hunting. Hoping to end up with a light-weight, nice looking 150-200 yard shooter.
Thanks in advance!
I would put it in a stock and shoot it before I made any decisions. The 3 96's I have are excellent shooters. Your perfect first deer elk rifle might be closer than you think  |
| Posts: 2376 | Location: KENAI, ALASKA | Registered: 10 November 2001 | 
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| None of mine have pits either.
I have a new surplus, old Gustaf m38 barrel on a custom built swede action and its my most accurate rifle. Those swede barrels are very accurate |
| Posts: 4821 | Location: Idaho/North Mex. | Registered: 12 June 2002 | 
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| m94 barrel is same diameter but the barrel steps are different location |
| Posts: 4821 | Location: Idaho/North Mex. | Registered: 12 June 2002 | 
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| Samco advertized them in the Shotgun News |
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