Accurized? I think there are restrictions on that. Bedding and trigger jobs are usually a no-no. Usually just some minor tweaking is allowed. If your going to compete you need to know what's allowed where you go.how are the 98 mausers? in 8mm?
tradex has some vz-24's that are refurbed, in very good condition... i know that action can handle some "hot" loads.... can this rifle be accurized to compare with a ross, or a swede?
the range im shooting at has 100 and 200m
PP has the right idea. There is NUTHIN' that can keep up with a decent Ross.
Buddy and myself entered an ironsight comp at CFB Shilo a number of years ago. There were 23 teams and we were the ONLY one with two bolt rifles; all other teams had one or more SA or selective-fire rifles. We came in 10th place, shooting reactive steels against beltfeds and semi-autos. Our round count was about 50%, as compared to 2 to 3% for the Minimis. You won't have that problem.
I would point out that the 74/75-point 1100-yard Bisley target was shot 101 years ago..... by a Ross. It has been equalled 3 times but it has never been beaten.
Failing a decent Ross, a really good P-'14 is really hard to beat and a Number 4 is good competition for almost anything. SMLE sights are the same pattern as the MN 91/30; it just took the Russians 23 years to catch up. SMLE is capable of very decent shooting with a minimum of work.
Properly bedded and with a trigger job, ANY of them can do the job if you can work with the sights. Aperture sights are the best, post forward sight almost a necessity. That silly barleycorn-and-V-notch should have been scrapped in 1865..... British DID scrap it in 1907, come to think of it.
Most important point of all: be sure to have fun!
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If its just for fun I'd use an SVT40 and surplus ammo. The fireballs and sonic booms would throw everybody else off their game.
Very true. Didn't someone from Quebec win with an SKS a year ago at some Provincial Match showing all the AR-15 owners how it's done?I've shot two DCRA service conditions matches (1-12) with a Mosin-Nagant this year. Definitly different than using the AR-15. Lots of fun. My main piece of input is this: unless you're at the upper tier of competition the gun won't matter much or at all. It's all the shooter.
Can you guys that have club competitions for these old pre '45 rifles describe the event a bit more? I'm keen on trying something with my local club that uses the classic milsurp guns. But I'm not sure how best to set up the event.
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Sometimes generous sponsors have donated prizes; sometimes the shooters put things of their own on the prize table.




























