I ran across a can of KOREAN M1 Garand 30-06 Ammo for $155.00 on Wednesday great condition. Now I just need the M1 Garand to go with it.
Attachment 103113Attachment 103114Attachment 103115Attachment 103116Attachment 103117Attachment 103118
Printable View
I ran across a can of KOREAN M1 Garand 30-06 Ammo for $155.00 on Wednesday great condition. Now I just need the M1 Garand to go with it.
Attachment 103113Attachment 103114Attachment 103115Attachment 103116Attachment 103117Attachment 103118
KA Korean ammo is generally considered to be corrosive. I’d stay away from it in a gas gun — too many nooks and crannies for salts to hide.
A bolt gun would happily eat it up.
...but you still need an M1 Garand. Everyone needs an M1 Garand!
LOL!! You hit that one 'DEAD ON THE HEAD' ---- Don't know why that has to be re-hashed over and over.
---------- Post added at 01:27 PM ---------- Previous post was at 01:27 PM ----------
I'm working on it, I'd like to get one of the Philippino returns.
You can probably get away with shooting it in one of the Philippine returns and just boiling soapy water to clean...like in the beginning though, probably be OK.
"...cleaning correctly and there's no problem..." There isn't. Mind you, that doesn't mean doing that isn't a pain in the posterior. Especially to use less than stellar ammo.
"...Everyone needs an M1 Garand!..." Yep. There's just something about an M1 Rifle that no other battle rifle has. I think it's the perfect balance.
Just out of curiosity, has anyone ever just changed the primers in this type of ammo. From what I am reading (besides the corrosive issue) it the primers that are the problem. It would be interserting to chronograph the original and then using modern primers and the same powder in the same casing reduced load.
I have not, as powder ages it degrades though and you'll see some different results that original. Depends too how the ammo was stored. I just did it so all cartridges would light uniformly.