Your thing just reminded me of one that happened to me! I had a bull$hitter at the gunshop when i was having a scope mounted tell me that "you can make longer range shots if you mount a high scope" He looked like the kind of fudd that would sporterise a lee enfield.
I guess I be one too...always knew that, actually...
I love that little gun. You've posted it a couple of times, and every time I see it I begin plotting and rationalizing and scheming...![]()
Couple of issues here. It's not "a Ross" that can have an incorrectly assembled bolt, it's ONLY the Mk III. And even then almost all were modified to make this impossible.
You can't see the bolt rotate from the rear of the action. The rear of the action is the cocking piece, which doesn't rotate. What you need to look for is if the lugs rotate AT ALL into the locking recesses. If it's assembled incorrectly, they don't. There's no such thing as "which way the bolt starts to turn" - it's if it turns period. The easiest way to tell is just to open the action and look at the bolt to make sure the bolt head is protruding from the sleeve about an inch. If it's assembled wrong, it'll be flush.
So kind of you, to tell me how to talk to people and ask questions!
I once bought a 303 ross with a riveted pin through the bolt. Only trouble was, I could take the bolt apart, assemble it correctly and it was safe to shoot.
Or, I could assemble it in an unsafe to shoot position to shoot and anyone firing it would likely lose half of there shooting hand.
All this with no tools and just looking at the rear of the action from an angle, to see if it was going to be safe, or in unsafe position.
There are a lot of ways to do things and a lot of nuances to satisfy, so one has to be very careful on getting too precise about such things.
My feel on someone asking to inspect my rifle would be to suggest what personal appendage of theirs they could go inspect instead, and perhaps ask them why on earth they thought they knew more about my rifle than I did. Maybe it's just the way you wrote it, but it sounds like you don't actually understand yourself what to look for. The non social leper way to check out a Mk III wouldn't be to say "hey, can I inspect that to see if it's assembled correctly", it would be to say "hey, neat Ross, mind if I see it?" No need for any more drama than that.
Now it is all mixed up and I can't get it straightened out. Must be time to go to bed.
Not really... I am sure there are errors in that vast website, but in general it can make everyone more knowledgeable.
Here is an old myth...
When shooting a scoped rifle the bullet rises and crosses the cross hair twice...
A bullet rising from the muzzle is a myth...
Draw an imaginary line through the center of the bore, extended to as far as you would like... point the rifle more or less level... a bullet fired through this barrel will begin dropping immediately upon exiting the muzzle. It will never rise above the center of the bore. The bullet doesn't rise, the scope is angled downwards and intersects the bullet trajectory. The trajectory is always below the center of the barrel and dropping more and more with distance traveled.
This is factual, not a myth.
Not really... I am sure there are errors in that vast website, but in general it can make everyone more knowledgeable.
Here is an old myth...
When shooting a scoped rifle the bullet rises and crosses the cross hair twice...
A bullet rising from the muzzle is a myth...
Draw an imaginary line through the center of the bore, extended to as far as you would like... point the rifle more or less level... a bullet fired through this barrel will begin dropping immediately upon exiting the muzzle. It will never rise above the center of the bore. The bullet doesn't rise, the scope is angled downwards and intersects the bullet trajectory. The trajectory is always below the center of the barrel and dropping more and more with distance traveled.
This is factual, not a myth.
Yes he did, at first.Hey, good start to things here!
You might want to take your own advice. Guntech is talking about line of bore. You're talking about line of sight. He didn't say the bullet doesn't rise above line of sight
Point a gun straight up, pull the trigger and tell me the bullet doesn't rise from the muzzle.
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Or when shooting off the bed of a Land Rover... ya definitely gotta remember that muzzle is below the line of sight![]()
And the 9.3x62 is a necked-up 30-06.




























