That was the REAL reason. That 74-point score at 1100 yards still has not been broken and it has only been equalled a couple of times. That's one indication.
The PAPER reason was that it was not a standard military rifle.
The FACT is that the Ross in several models, INCLUDING the ones used in the big international shoots, was adopted by Canada as military equipment. This even included the utterly superb Military Match .280, which had been adopted for special uses..... including long-range targets.
Sir Charles was trying to get the whole British Empire to adopt the .280 Ross cartridge as its standard. Canada adopted it partially but it was anathema to the British. Can't have a mere COLONIAL development showing up the Mother Country, wot?
What the whole Ross Rifle saga showed Britain was that the Colonies were growing up. When Australia wanted to build their own rifle factory, Britain, very mindful of Canada, was more than happy to help out.
Very quietly, the Royal Laboratory at Woolwich began development n a steamy new 7mm cartridge which owed a LOT to Ross. This was the round for the P-13. Then Enfield set to work to develop a rifle HEAVY enough to handle it; that was the P-13...... which gave us the P-14 and the M-1917. The big high-pressure round is the reason that a Mauser had to be beefed-up that much. The Ross action, actually quite lightweight in most areas, handled the much MORE powerful .280 with ease. Work it out: how many 7mm rifles today can handle a 180-grain bullet at 3000 ft/sec? Answer: none really; only the Weatherby comes close.
It also showed that you should test your rifles THOROUGHLY before taking them into battle; that was the one BIG advantage which the Lee rifle (also a Canadian development) enjoyed: Britain had been working on it since 1879.
Unfortunately, the Ross also proved that you cannot feed a fine rifle with absolute garbage ammunition, stuff so grossly oversized that no other rifle will handle it, and expect the fine rifle to operate perfectly when it is ALSO full of mud.
But the rifles survive today and all of them still in decent condition, nearly all .303s. remain wonderfully accurate. I can remember a time when I was actually kept out of a rifle match because I wanted to use my Ross, even though my rifle was iron sights and some of the competitors were using scopes. The old guys said that the Ross was "unfair" because it was "too accurate"..... and the young guys were afraid it would blow up. Barnett Rifle Club, Coquitlam, 1965.
It is sure nice to see the tables turning at last!
See you on the range!
.
The PAPER reason was that it was not a standard military rifle.
The FACT is that the Ross in several models, INCLUDING the ones used in the big international shoots, was adopted by Canada as military equipment. This even included the utterly superb Military Match .280, which had been adopted for special uses..... including long-range targets.
Sir Charles was trying to get the whole British Empire to adopt the .280 Ross cartridge as its standard. Canada adopted it partially but it was anathema to the British. Can't have a mere COLONIAL development showing up the Mother Country, wot?
What the whole Ross Rifle saga showed Britain was that the Colonies were growing up. When Australia wanted to build their own rifle factory, Britain, very mindful of Canada, was more than happy to help out.
Very quietly, the Royal Laboratory at Woolwich began development n a steamy new 7mm cartridge which owed a LOT to Ross. This was the round for the P-13. Then Enfield set to work to develop a rifle HEAVY enough to handle it; that was the P-13...... which gave us the P-14 and the M-1917. The big high-pressure round is the reason that a Mauser had to be beefed-up that much. The Ross action, actually quite lightweight in most areas, handled the much MORE powerful .280 with ease. Work it out: how many 7mm rifles today can handle a 180-grain bullet at 3000 ft/sec? Answer: none really; only the Weatherby comes close.
It also showed that you should test your rifles THOROUGHLY before taking them into battle; that was the one BIG advantage which the Lee rifle (also a Canadian development) enjoyed: Britain had been working on it since 1879.
Unfortunately, the Ross also proved that you cannot feed a fine rifle with absolute garbage ammunition, stuff so grossly oversized that no other rifle will handle it, and expect the fine rifle to operate perfectly when it is ALSO full of mud.
But the rifles survive today and all of them still in decent condition, nearly all .303s. remain wonderfully accurate. I can remember a time when I was actually kept out of a rifle match because I wanted to use my Ross, even though my rifle was iron sights and some of the competitors were using scopes. The old guys said that the Ross was "unfair" because it was "too accurate"..... and the young guys were afraid it would blow up. Barnett Rifle Club, Coquitlam, 1965.
It is sure nice to see the tables turning at last!
See you on the range!
.





















































