whats dina
Let us know how it works. I would even consider permanently attaching a .357 adapter to a backpacker to have a folding 38 special carbine if it could hit a tin can at 25 yards reliably.I'm only going to be using .22 shorts for grouse in my backpacker. I bought the .357 one just because I was paying shipping anyway. I'll shoot a few cast .38 plinkers out of it.
Now I have a backpacker that shoots 12 gauge slug with a .410 and .22 adapter for grouse.
Let us know how it works. I would even consider permanently attaching a .357 adapter to a backpacker to have a folding 38 special carbine if it could hit a tin can at 25 yards reliably.
38 Special fails to penetrate cardboard at 100 yards, who knew?
Edit: The longer rifled inserts, I'm just thinking they would spin in the barrel in the opposite direction to the bullet. Which doesn't sound great for accuracy, maybe you would have to JB Weld the thing in. On an old single shot with a bulged barrel that wasn't fit for much else, say. You would need adjustable rifle sights though.
Aye, but would the insert rotate in the opposite direction to the bullet? I expect the rubber ring would help a fair bit, as you suggest.The longer rifled units typically have rubber o-rings on them to help hold them in place in the barrel so that they don't move around.
Dina Arms
Inserts are aluminum - good for 100 rounds before they start losing accuracy (says the manufacturer)
http://store.dinaarms.com/default.asp