Years ago and days gone by, back at the start of my career in gunsmithing, I was introduced to that epic tome by Donnelly; "The Handbook of Cartridge Conversion". I spent weeks pouring over every page multiple times until I could quote dimensions, pressures and the methodology of the conversions. I was captivated!

It was during this exploration that I happened upon the .25 Krag Improved. The fact that it was rimmed did not impress me at the time since I was inundated with rimless cartridges and bolt action rifles. Then miraculously I discovered the Siamese Mauser actions. Strong, well build, intelligently designed right down to that sliding dust cover. So now the plan could begin to take shape with the exception of actually having my hands on one of those actions. But it wasn't long before an acquaintance mentioned that he had several Siamese actions in excellent shape. His plan was to fall head long into that ridiculous idea of building .45-70s on these marvelous actions.


Some idiotic gun writer had tried to sell this as great idea (he got paid) when all he managed to do was encourage thousands of wannabes to trash these superb actions in an attempt to build a rifle with the power of the .458 Win. Mag. cartridge from the lowly .45-70.
Needless to say, I overstepped my usual conservative attitude when purchasing rifle parts but I eventually came home with all of them (mac 'n cheese and Ramen noodles for weeks

). New .25 caliber barrels, trigger work, stock work while waiting impatiently for a reamer to show up. I was smitten. Everything was all about the .25 caliber cartridges and bullets. When finished, the Krag helped me harvest Mule deer and antelope and even stepped up to assist in the Prairie Dog Wars. This is not a long range cartridge but a moderate range hunting cartridge. I used the Nosler 100 grain Partitions for my mainstay hunting load.