very poor quality IMO, I bought one and sold it before even firing it
Too bad. I haven't been a fan of Mossberg rifles generally, in the past, but it must have been really poor if you didn't even bother shooting it.
very poor quality IMO, I bought one and sold it before even firing it
yeah, painted wood stock, very sloppy/notchy bolt, poor quality machining, very loose mag even when locked up (actually fell out just handling the rifle) If you insert the mag on an open bolt it goes in to deep, and overly heavy for how compact it is.Too bad. I haven't been a fan of Mossberg rifles generally, in the past, but it must have been really poor if you didn't even bother shooting it.
hahaha, see you here again! is that the original recoil pad or a limbsave one?
You can always re barrel any bolt action rifle with a new barrel of any length so long as the OAL stays at 26" or more.
Whoever manufactures it decides the length, so If your smith is making the barrel from a blank that would be the guy.Where is the last place the barrel length can be altered? Before the smith installs it into the action, or before it leaves the factory, or what? I honestly never thought of that angle before, the #1 reason for choosing the M77 Compact was it's 16.5" barrel, where all other options were 18"+
Whoever manufactures it decides the length, so If your smith is making the barrel from a blank that would be the guy.
Just look at all the short barrels you can buy and swap on to your shotgun keeping it NR but if you were to cut the factory one down to the same length, it would not retain the status. A prime example of this is Dlask arms who makes a Remington 870 with their own 8.5" barrel and it is non restricted because the new barrel was manufactured that length.
Whoever manufactures it decides the length, so If your smith is making the barrel from a blank that would be the guy.
Just look at all the short barrels you can buy and swap on to your shotgun keeping it NR but if you were to cut the factory one down to the same length, it would not retain the status. A prime example of this is Dlask arms who makes a Remington 870 with their own 8.5" barrel and it is non restricted because the new barrel was manufactured that length.
any gunsmith that does re barrelinggood to know!
so, where can we Canadians get short factory barrels from ?
Thanks
Whoever manufactures it decides the length, so If your smith is making the barrel from a blank that would be the guy.
...... or cut a bbl and stock shorter.any gunsmith that does re barreling
you can not cut an existing barrel shorter than 18" and retain the NR status....... or cut a bbl and stock shorter.
you can not cut an existing barrel shorter than 18" and retain the NR status.
Shortening the length of pull is not always a good option, for tall people like myself.
he did quote me with that commentHe wasn't talking to a "tall person like" yourself... he was talking to the OP, who wants a compact rifle...
An 18.5" bbl is plenty short for a rifle without sacrificing handling too much. Cut the LOP and you're GTG overall for a compact rifle for a smaller person. I would not want a rifle with a bbl shorter than that.you can not cut an existing barrel shorter than 18" and retain the NR status.
Shortening the length of pull is not always a good option, for tall people like myself.
he did quote me with that comment
I want a 16" barrel on a 308, Currently waiting for someone to get the rifle that I want so I can get it re barreled. My RFB put the muzzle closer to the shooter than any conventional rifle I own and I had no issue with it.I would not want a rifle with a bbl shorter than that.