My Carcano Collection

antidote1985

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hi !

Here another poste of my WW2 collection juste to introduce me again and to show you some of my weapons il my litle collection

here my 3 type of carcano used in WW2 by the italian army, M.V.S.N


1- Carcano M 91/41 Terni 1943
2- Carcano M 91/38 Terni 1940
3- Carcano M 91/38 Gardone V.T 1940

all of the 3 type is M 91 beceause they are in 6.5x52 carcano and the other numbers is the model of each guns..
i alson look to have a TS and a Carcano long gun 1891 Terni ( 1916 or 1917)


thanx for your time:cool:



Antidote
 
my m 91/38 is the best of the 3 i hate the sight on the long rifle m 91/41 and the cavalry carbine is prety cool and beautiful but that kick for a 6.5 and is too short so the m91/38 ( midle )
 
Original Fucile 91 had a barrel well over 30 inches, was beautifully balanced but just a bit too long for my taste. I have a couple, anyway, find that they are a good, solid Great War rifle which actually has very little to go wrong with it.

The Model 41 was a late variant and had a simplified (but still adjustable for range) rear sight.... and only a 27-inch barrel. I got one, almost perfect condition, a number of years ago in a multi-rifle deal, paid $56 for the thing, brought it home. Loaded up some rounds one day with 4198 powder because my proper Carcano slugs were 3 years behind at the local shop (and still haven't come in, but Trade-Ex has them AND sells them); thought was that the quick powder would help the flatbase Remington bulk-pack slugs to obturate if necessary. Took the thing out to the range and it shot an INCH at 100 yards, which absolutely wrecked my day because it left me NOTHING to b*tch about. Turned out that the bore on my 41 is very tight and handles the .264 slugs very well indeed.

On your Fascist-period Carcanos, notice that thre are TWO dates on the things, one using the standard calendar (1941) and the other using the Fascist calendar (a Roman numeral between I and XXII) to indicate the year since the Refounding of the Roman Empire by Benito Mussolini. Evviva Italia! Viva Duce!

I don't know what the deuce (or perhaps Duce) that last bit was about: Miss Vetterli mouthing off again, proud of her XVI (1938) re-re-rebuild marking, I guess!

But they are a fine ight rifle, and light is the keyword: the entire action is made no larger than necessary for the small Italian cartridge and it REALLY saves weight while keeping all the strength it possibly could need.

Given the insignifricant cost of wrecked Carcani, I have thought often about converting one to 7.62x45..... or perhaps to a 7x45 on the same case..... or even a 6x45 for a lightweight medium-range varmint rifle. Ammo would be strictly a handloading proposition, but you can pretty much say that for any Carcano. Components, fortunately, are MUCH easier to source today than they ere 40 years ago.

Lovely group of rifles above, though if you run into one from WWI, it will stand out because of the darker stock (often Italian Walnut).

Thanks for showing.
 
if you dont want a 6.5 x52 caliber you search for a 38 in 7.35 cal carbine so.... the 91 mean 6.5x52

I was unaware that there was carcanos in different calibers. Caliber makes no difference to me as long as I can buy brass, it just means another set of dies really. I've been looking at carcanos and Swedish mausers mainly for their smaller caliber and known accuracy, I need more guns that my wife can shoot comfortably. She's a trooper but my 303's beat her up by the end of the day.
Loading cast loads will help with that but I'd like to get her something cool in a smaller caliber for her birthday.
 
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