1899 Rem-Lee dimensions and questions.
Am back from sand-land. ;)
Had a chance to put 5rds thru the Rem-Lee 2 days before departure last October. Dissapointed for sure. Not on paper (14" square) at 75 yds.:confused:
Greased it, wrapped it, dissembled the bolt (thank you J.Moore for the pics), and put it away.:mad:
Went to a local gunshow the next day and found not 1, but 2!!! Magazines for it. Guy couldn't sell them as he had them marked 6mm Lee-Navy. Now since the one that came with my rifle had been more-than-somewhat battered, I was very happy. I did tell him what they were, but he said 'hell no one else has looked at them in 3 months --- take them'. 2 good looking ones for a total of $140.00 (very cheesy smile). Flew out the next morning...
Am now back, working long hours, in an apartment for another 2 months (tenants on contract in my house), beginning to play with the Rem-Lee (and the Win 1895 7.62 Russies). :clap:
Strangely, the bore on the Rem-Lee is tight. A oiled lead slug comes out .302-.303 across the grooves (high points on the slug). A set of plug guages were used on the bore and a .294 almost entered the muzzle, but did enter the chamber end and barely slide 2/3rds of the way down the muzzle. A .293 did slide all the way thru...
Is anyone else measuring their bores? What do you get?:confused:
I was worried about a round 'drill hole' in the bottom of the barrel about 1" from the receiver until I noticed one on pic 8 of Jmoore's post about 1899s. Anyone know what that is for?
Also about 2" further up the barrel towards the muzzel is a stylized 'JP' (which is joined together), any clue as to who?
Oh and the nut on the front sling swivel takes a 9/32" wrench (preferably a line wrench), to properly undo it. Liquid wrench does assist. :cool:
I've been taking hints from the tome, "Accuriozing the Lee-Enfield" about proper fitting of a similar rifle, and will hopefully soon have some good shooting reports to make. I do plan on shooting paper-patched ammo.
Oh and the rifle is amidst the numbers for the militia (Michigan???) and is still in military trim apparently.
Thanks all,
Sojerguy.
There may be hope yet!!!!
A late night perusal of Myszkowski's book brought out the folllowing idea.
As noted above, I had been 'worried' about the 'drilled' hole in the bottom of my barrel until I saw a similar one in jmoore's pictures.
I had wondered what it was. On re-readig one paragraph about the Michigan Nat'l guard 1899 rfiles, on page 59, the following words leapt out, Remington used some surplus Rolling Block barrels that had been tapped ... for the recoil block that was used with the Rolling Block forearm.
Now if the hole I see in the bottom of my barrel is the same as the Rolling block, then a surplus Rolling Block barrel could possibly be fitted to my rifle!
Has anyone else thought of this?
Are my assumptions correct, as to the tpped hole I see and the barrel?
If so, then there's likely to be several carbine and rifle shooters with firearms that can be brought back to life.
Opinions?
Thoughts?
Worries?
Thanks