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New Guy with a New (to me) Rifle
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01-10-2012 07:06 PM
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A high number 1903 that has been sporterized. very common back in the day. Nice job on the wood and metal. A guy could build a damn good hunting rifle for not a lot of cash back then. $50-60 bucks total.
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OOH I'd love to restore that one!
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If only they were all done like that. Nice.
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Very nice old rifle. And someone just gave it to you?
Glad to see it is mostly unmolested (except for the nice metal finishing). It would be bee-u-tiful in uniform and it wouldn't take much to get it there. I am doing that with a similarly sporterized 03 so I can have a "convertible".
Shoot that sucker. Be sure to learn how to use the battle sight - the open (notch) sight is set for 300 yards or so.
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[QUOTE=2aimtrue;203965]Very nice old rifle. And someone just gave it to you?
Glad to see it is mostly unmolested (except for the nice metal finishing). It would be bee-u-tiful in uniform and it wouldn't take much to get it there. I am doing that with a similarly sporterized 03 so I can have a "convertible".
Shoot that sucker. Be sure to learn how to use the battle sight - the open (notch) sight is set for 300 yards or so.
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Yes, my father came into 4 guns, 3 rifles and one pistol sort of like an inheritance, but not really. One was a civil war rifled muzzle loader that was later converted into a trap door breech loader that shoots a 50-70 round and the other two were 1903's, mine was a SA and the other one was a remington. He gave my brother the remington and myself the SA.
Any suggestions on what grain of bullet would be good for deer hunting and/or target shooting?
I recently downloaded the user/owners manual from the above sticky thread and have been reading up on it a little
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The sights on your rifle are graduated for use with the M2 ball round that shoots a 150-152 gr bullet at around 2800 fps. Almost any bullet in the 150 to 180 gr range is effective on deer. Assuming you plan to keep the rifle as is and use the iron sights any standard velocity commercial 150 gr hunting load will be closest to P.O.A. With the ladder folded down the battle sight is set for something like 550 yds, or so I've been told, so keep that in mind or else you'll shoot right over your deer. I did that once, plundered right up on a real nice buck bout 100 yds off and forgot to hold low. Stayed mad at myself for a whole week.
Last edited by vintage hunter; 01-11-2012 at 07:07 PM.
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i did read that about the sight being in the down position was for your mentioned range whish is kind of disappointing. If i have to put the sight leaf up i'm going to be paranoid that it will never be set to the correct position. I guess i'll just have to take it to the range and let the gun speak for itself!
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You could also rig yourself a taller front sight blade and file down until the P.O.I is at whatever range you expect to do the most of your shooting. A simple temporary fix that would be easy to reverse.
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Originally Posted by
vintage hunter
You could also rig yourself a taller front sight blade and file down until the P.O.I is at whatever range you expect to do the most of your shooting. A simple temporary fix that would be easy to reverse.
i should have remembered that... someone said the same thing about my mosin negant. except it has a pin rather than a blade, so i was told to put a roll pin onto the sight pin and file down until i got it where i want it!
---------- Post added at 08:58 PM ---------- Previous post was at 08:57 PM ----------

Originally Posted by
vintage hunter
You could also rig yourself a taller front sight blade and file down until the P.O.I is at whatever range you expect to do the most of your shooting. A simple temporary fix that would be easy to reverse.
i should have remembered that... someone said the same thing about my mosin negant. except it has a pin rather than a blade, so i was told to put a roll pin onto the sight pin and file down until i got it where i want it!
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