Treatment for a slightly crippled 1905 Ross
Greetings all. I've been sulking in the shadows here and studying for a while but now I'm the proud new owner of a slightly bubba'd 1905 Ross rifle in .303 British. After examination and remote test firing I've discovered a few problems I'd like your opinions on as to solutions.
Firstly, here's the gun.
[IMG]http://i247.photobucket.com/albums/g...ssRifle004.jpg[/IMG]
[IMG]http://i247.photobucket.com/albums/g...ssRifle007.jpg[/IMG]
I've got/can get other pics as needed. The bore is in very good condition, no pitting or frosting but I believe the rifle has both an enlarged chamber and excessive headspace.
Fired brass.
[IMG]http://i247.photobucket.com/albums/g...ssRifle001.jpg[/IMG]
[IMG]http://i247.photobucket.com/albums/g...ssRifle002.jpg[/IMG]
https://www.milsurps.com/images/impo...Rifle003-1.jpg
As the pics show the case dimensions have changed rather dramatically in my opinion and the primer is slightly backed out. After finally running down my headspace gauges I confirmed it is excessive, the bolt readily closed on both the "field" and "no-go" gauges.
So here's the question(s)...what are my options for this rifle? I'm in love with the straight pull action and want to shoot the gun, but am leary of doing so any more in it's present condition. The gun has already been altered so I'm not messing up a piece of history, just trying to put one back in service.
I've read here that parts are virtually non-existant so finding a new factory barrel is out of the question. As I said earlier the bore on this on is very nice...do I have room to have the barrel set back and a new chamber cut on the existing one? This is my preferred solution.
If not what are my options on re-barreling the rifle? Stick with the .303 or a wildcat based on that case? Maybe a .30-40 Krag? I'd really like your opinions and any information you care to share on this rifle.
Thanks,
Rob