I shot the CG only once at 600yd with S&B cheap ammo and was amazed at its accuracy!!! My question for you is this: WHAT VELOCITY IS BEST FOR MATCHING RANGE SETTINGS FOR THE REAR SIGHT ADJUSTMENT???? BC??? WEIGHT???
Now that I can't tell you. I had a service-match M1896 for many years. 1907 dated CG receiver which Joe Poyer listed as one of that year's spare components. Turned down bolt handle with a ball size that didn't match any of the sniper rifle bolts, and what looked like a slightly heavier profile than normal barrel. Receiver had been tapped and drilled for a Soderin diopter type. Luckily I quickly acquired one of these for what would nowadays be a steal - £50 sterling.
My assumption, which Joe Poyer agreed with, was that it was a high-spec bitzer put together by a military armourer for service rifle match shooting - what we in the UK called Service Rifle (b) in Enfield Number 4 Rifle days which allowed certain modifications such as diopter sights with SR (a) limited to as-issued standard infantry rifles.
I tried various load combinations and ended up with the ancient 140gn Sierra MK over 44.0gn Viht N160 loaded to the maximum COAL that still allowed reliable magazine operation. MV unknown as none of us had access to chronographs back then. That rifle and load won me a lot of Historic Arms sniper/match rifle medals at 200-500 yards, and it also shot very well indeed at 600 which was the furthest distance range I had access to in those days. I suspect the MV and the bullet's BC wasn't too far off the Swedish service 94/m41 139gn 'Torped' load, and the same likely applies to similar loadings of the Lapua 139gn Scenar and 140 Berger BT, but not the higher BC Berger 140gn LR BT, Hybrids, or the Sierra 142. The Swedes AFAIK simply use selected batches of the old m/41 139gn BT service round and don't have a special match 6.5X55mm.
As far as sight settings go, I set the marked distance on the Soderin dial and sighted myself in with a 6 o'clock hold on the target 'black' at 200, 300, 500 and 600 yards successively keeping a note of typical elevation settings at each distance which I then looked up before range days or matches for years subsequently.