Is he Daniel 250R? Being more of a dirt shooter? Lol. Interesting concept though. What's it take to convert the bolt head and chamber to shoot it?
I would have shot at a swinger, but the range inspector told the club that we weren't allowed steel targets any more.As you can see though, the shots were three on the money, one low and one high.
I have another video on youtube that goes through what I did to convert it. The rifle was wearing an ATI stock at the time. I replaced the stock for the video in this thread. I think it looks nicer with the wood.
The bolt head was done with a portion of a 5/16 lock washer silver soldered on, cut away and machined to the right size. The chamber was reamed with a finishing reamer after cutting a portion off of the receiver end and threading the barrel. A reasonably easy job as long as you have the right tools.
This a very fun rifle to shoot. I love it.
Very cool gun. I like the fact it uses common ammo. How is accuracy at 100 yards?
Why only 5 rounds? Centerfire bolt action is good for 10? (maybe no limit restriction at all? {been a while})
Very cool gun. I like the fact it uses common ammo. How is accuracy at 100 yards?
Damn lefties have all the cool toys.
Nothing uncommon about .303 British--check any Walmart or Canadian Tire.
Affordability is another issue, but 7.62X39 isn't going to stay this cheap forever, either.
I tried to find your thread but couldn't.
Nice job on the conversion! Would love to have something like that.
What some people have done, to make it easier to shoot cheap 7.62x39 ammo in a .303...(easier than the gunsmithing involved to convert a rifle)
1) Have some new, primed .303 cases ready
2) Get some cheap, corrosive 7.62x39 ammo as cheaply as you can
3) Pull the bullets and transfer the powder charge and bullet into the .303 cases. Scrap the corrosive ammo cases with their corrosive primers.
4) Enjoy, as cheaply as shooting the 7.62x39. And these rounds will feed in the .303 magazine.
Just add some effort and careful work.
I was told the first step should be to push the bullet into the 7.62 case a bit, to break the lacquer or sealant seal, often making them hard to knock apart.