After the work I did shooting and then cleaning with my 358 Norma, my AR 15 A2 in 5.56 and my Aero Precision AR in 6MM ARC I decided that I wanted to add some strength building too my regime.
I took my sporterized 8MM Mauser to the range with a bandolier of 174 grain 1944 surplus ammo. The rifle was cut to 20 1/2", has a synthetic stock, a Lyman peep sight and front blade. BTW I paid $4.70 for the entire 70 rounds many years ago. The bolt and receiver have matching numbers, the magazine follower has been ground down and a Timney trigger added. I paid, I believe, $125 for it as it is.
I started about 9:30 AM and wanted to keep moving as 87 degrees was going to be the high. Shooting off hand and from a seated position, no front or rear bags at 50 then 100 yards I found that I needed to go slower. Three bouts with cancer and the resulting reduced range times over the last 3 years leaves me desiring MORE range time.
After shooting about half the bandolier I took a bit of a break and looked longingly at a 12" x 12" white steel plate, backed up with a deer silhouette down at the 300 yard backstop. I sat at the bench supporting my elbow on the top and loaded a stripper clip of 5 rounds. I hit 2 out of 5, I loaded another clip and hit 1 out of 5, the next clip I hit 3 out of 5.
That ratio kept up until the ammunition ran out, which was OK as it was getting warm and my lack of stamina training was showing.
Yes the rifle is heavy and clunky, it's also 81 years old, but it only cost $125, (I don't know the cost today), was shooting 81 year old military surplus ammunition by a shooter who needs to get his lazy ass back on the range and it was still capable of placing hits on medium sized game at 300 yards and about 40% on a much smaller target. Buy one if you can find one.
I took my sporterized 8MM Mauser to the range with a bandolier of 174 grain 1944 surplus ammo. The rifle was cut to 20 1/2", has a synthetic stock, a Lyman peep sight and front blade. BTW I paid $4.70 for the entire 70 rounds many years ago. The bolt and receiver have matching numbers, the magazine follower has been ground down and a Timney trigger added. I paid, I believe, $125 for it as it is.
I started about 9:30 AM and wanted to keep moving as 87 degrees was going to be the high. Shooting off hand and from a seated position, no front or rear bags at 50 then 100 yards I found that I needed to go slower. Three bouts with cancer and the resulting reduced range times over the last 3 years leaves me desiring MORE range time.
After shooting about half the bandolier I took a bit of a break and looked longingly at a 12" x 12" white steel plate, backed up with a deer silhouette down at the 300 yard backstop. I sat at the bench supporting my elbow on the top and loaded a stripper clip of 5 rounds. I hit 2 out of 5, I loaded another clip and hit 1 out of 5, the next clip I hit 3 out of 5.
That ratio kept up until the ammunition ran out, which was OK as it was getting warm and my lack of stamina training was showing.
Yes the rifle is heavy and clunky, it's also 81 years old, but it only cost $125, (I don't know the cost today), was shooting 81 year old military surplus ammunition by a shooter who needs to get his lazy ass back on the range and it was still capable of placing hits on medium sized game at 300 yards and about 40% on a much smaller target. Buy one if you can find one.