- Location
- Atascadero, California USA
I am finishing up the basic cleaning of my newly acquired Ross 1910 Mk.III* made in 1916. The bore is cleaning up very nicely as I have managed to get a lot of old dirt, dust, soot and copper fouling out. Some of the patches came out almost totally blue. The end result so far is sharper looking lines, smoother and shimey grooves. The bore depite all my previous moaning and groaning about the appearance slugs out at .311, no wear at the muzzle, no apparent erosion at the throat and the chamber is nice and smooth. My question is about assembly- the stock reinforcing screw can be tightened to the point where the action can't be lifted out. How tight or loose should I adjust the fit? also when I tighten down the front and rear receiver screws how tight? I know they should probably be snug but I know there are little tricks to action screw tightening for every rifle. Also when assembled the tip of the fore end is about 3/16ths of an inch below the top or front edge of the the upper band. The cross screw hole lines up properly, the band is a snug fit and the bayonet fits very well si I am curious about that little difference as most rifles are usually flush fitted with the end of the upper band. Does anyone have a butt swivel? I know these are hard to find but mine was apparently broken and was welded and it is the only unsightly repair job on the rifle. Would like to correspond with Ross shooters and collectors about trivia and targets but will also talk here. Thanks for any answers you can give me-great web site! Best regards, Joe


















































