DShortt
Gold $$ Contributor
So.It does to me. Asking the OP.
THE question was.....Does your rifle look like this?
It looks bad, but shoots well.
Or.
It looks bad and shoots bad.
There is a difference.
So.It does to me. Asking the OP.
THE question was.....Does your rifle look like this?
Exterior pics of the rifle.View attachment 1745072View attachment 1745073View attachment 1745074View attachment 1745075
So.
It looks bad, but shoots well.
Or.
It looks bad and shoots bad.
There is a difference.
You have 1 post in the thread with images of a rifle not previously posted in the thread.No clue what you're talking about. READ my post agian. I asked if his rifle looked like the one in my pic, said nothing about shooting mine or his. You're coming up short.....
Later
Dave
yes Hornady. Must be a bore rider type, allowing it to ride on the rifling lands.If that's the Hornady 160 It's about .260" diameter in front of the cannelure
So.
It looks bad, but shoots well.
Or.
It looks bad and shoots bad.
There is a difference.
If you really want to find out and you have access to some private property, you could affix it to a makeshift rest and fire it from behind a building corner or something similar with a string.I was gifted an old Arisaka that looks bad, and I'm not sure I want to shoot it. That's not exactly accurate - I want to shoot it but I value my body parts too much to risk it. It'll be a wall hanger or conversation piece or something.
If you really want to find out and you have access to some private property, you could affix it to a makeshift rest and fire it from behind a building corner or something similar with a string.
If all you have access to is a club or public range, they probably wouldn't like a plan like that.
Clean the bore the best you can. Using rust removers will not help the pitting left behind, Thats going to take something abrasive to take the sharp edges off. JB and elbow grease is about it.I know it probably a lost cause but I do not like owning a gun that I can not use.
slug it and lap the barrel with 600 grit, best its gonna doOk, expanded a few cases to 7mm and resized only enough to be chambered. Loaded the cases with 140 gr bullets and they fired without a hitch. But the barrel is in such bad shape it will not keep shots on a 24" dia. target at 50 yards. Visually viewing from the muzzle the barrel seems to have rifling, but using a borescope you see nothing but a badly rusted bore. I believe if you could remove the rust the bore would be badly oversize with severe pitting. Kind of a shame because the rifle is in good shape externally.
Well, it was fun but I don't think I will put any more time and money in the rifle. It will be a wall hanger.
