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When I was about twelve I pestered my granddad about shooting his hunting rifle. He told me I was a bit too light for the big rifle saying if you shoot it now you might not want to shoot it again. I kept it up so he took me outside of town and handed me his .348 Winchester model 71 and said go ahead and put one in that stump over there. I did and he was right. At that age that thing kicked like a mule and I had no real desire to shoot it again. One round was enough for the day. A year or two later he handed me my first deer rifle it too was a Winchester, a model 94 .25-35 which I had admired for years in his den. I shot the hell out of that rifle, but it became a pea shooter compared to what I have acquired over the years.Maybe kinda like a .350 Legend-In-Its-Own-Mind.
Actually, it's be fun in either .260 Remington or .358 Winchester.
When I was about twelve I pestered my granddad about shooting his hunting rifle. He told me I was a bit too light for the big rifle saying if you shoot it now you might not want to shoot it again. I kept it up so he took me outside of town and handed me his .348 Winchester model 71 and said go ahead and put one in that stump over there. I did and he was right. At that age that thing kicked like a mule and I had no real desire to shoot it again. One round was enough for the day. A year or two later he handed me my first deer rifle it too was a Winchester, a model 94 .25-35 which I had admired for years in his den. I shot the hell out of that rifle, but it became a pea shooter compared to what I have acquired over the years.
That's for damn sure. Overcoming the fear and or anticipation of recoil is key to good marksmanship.My grandfathers didn't hunt. No matter. I remember taking my son shooting and letting him work his way up with rifle calibers. When I got him a good AR and he was target shooting (at age 12), he was largely immune to that caliber. It's comforting settling down into a hold when you know it ain't gonna beat you to pieces.
That's for damn sure. Overcoming the fear and or anticipation of recoil is key to good marksmanship.
Oh, that's about the same price as an unfired 1957 Colt Python w/6" barrel.Yeah, 4 grand? I don't think so, but I do see that shipping is usually included.
That's mighty considerate of them . . . .
Any Smith I own won't get much use with full house rounds anyway.
Now, SIGs on the other hand. Well, who wouldn't shoot the crap out of a SIG???
Oh, that's about the same price as an unfired 1957 Colt Python w/6" barrel.![]()

No, but if you can afford to buy one of those at those prices shipping is a rounding error.Is shipping included, too???
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I have two Mosins. A 1942 izthvek m91/30. And a Polish 1953 m44 carbine. It was never fired before I bought it but I fired it a few years ago. Short barrel, massive recoil and flames shooting out of the barrel. Fun stuff.I have several models of Mosins, and I gave one to my nephew. I have a Yugo SKS and some late model AK clone. If you take your time with the Simonov, it'll shoot decently. Mine is not bad. I wonder from time to time how it might shoot with something better than steel case Russian goes-bang ammo.
Not enough to spend the money to buy some, but wondered just the same.
I know beyond a shadow that if I were to pick any of them up and jack a round into it, that it's go bang. What more can one ask of a basic platform???
I have two Mosins. A 1942 izthvek m91/30. And a Polish 1953 m44 carbine. It was never fired before I bought it but I fired it a few years ago. Short barrel, massive recoil and flames shooting out of the barrel. Fun stuff.
Have a 1967 Chinese sks (pre norinco) that’s really solid. A heavy and fairly accurate rifle.
And a Zastava ak, in 7.62x39.
The ak and sks both eat up old school steel cased ammo no problems. My mini 30 is really picky about ammo.
WW1 era mosins sounds interesting…I have two WW1 era Mosins, and I think they were built outta spare parts. There's not a matching number anywhere. I use them as wallhangers on a dinky gun rack a guy gave me years ago. They hang with my shot-out Trapdoor. Fucking barrel is smooth as a sewer.
I had a Norinco SKS. It did okay for a while. One day at the range, I had it in the rifle stand and loaded it and dropped the bolt. It went off. My son yelled at me, "what the fuck was that?" I unloaded it and swapped it to a guy for a computer, of all things. I bought the Yugo a few years later. The sights look cockeyed on it but it shoots where it's looking.
WW1 era mosins sounds interesting…
I’d love a Yugo sks. My neighbor was one and it had a beautiful red wood stock. They’r ridiculously expensive now.
Some sks are known to “slamfire”, more than one round at a time. Happened to me once. You have to really keep the bolt and floating firing pin clean.
Why do you have enemies hunting you?Hiding behind a tree is pointless if your enemy can put a round through both it and your liver.
You said enemies were chasing you in the woods. Why would you have enemies and why would they be chasing you with guns?Your question lacks relevance.
You said enemies were chasing you in the woods. Why would you have enemies and why would they be chasing you with guns?
So you're saying that this hypothetical would never happen?I did not. You cherrypicked my statement to stir a bit of fecal matter. Did you miss the word "Army" in the post I replied to? Methinks you did.
Neat.Hiding behind a tree is pointless if your enemy can put a round through both it and your liver.