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Bulgarian M95, Budapest 1909 8x50r, with questions
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12-24-2017 09:50 PM
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Can't help you on the N but love these old M95s. Mine are all 8 X 56 R later conversations. Still holding out for an original.
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To be honest 8x50r is a pretty hard round to duplicate and for that reason the 8x56r rifles are much more practical. I am going to be test shooting this one today, but I suspect I shall have some horrible results (as I have with all my other M95s) as no one makes a 240-250grn flatbased round nose bullet anymore.
Originals pop up occasionally, and they tend not to sell very well because of the caliber. I never intended to get a collection of 8x50r firearms but I am currently sitting on 3 Bulgarian M95s in 8x50r and one Italian
capture carbine in 8x50r (can't say specifically what type of carbine it was originally as it was rebuilt by Italy post-WWI). I hope to grow that at some point, but it is more or less a waiting game as there isn't that many on the market.
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Well fired 12rds though it today. Destroyed two clays at 100m once I figured out where to aim, might actually be some accuracy potential in the rifle.
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Originally Posted by
Eaglelord17
To be honest 8x50r is a pretty hard round to duplicate and for that reason the 8x56r rifles are much more practical. I am going to be test shooting this one today, but I suspect I shall have some horrible results (as I have with all my other M95s) as no one makes a 240-250grn flatbased round nose bullet anymore.
Originals pop up occasionally, and they tend not to sell very well because of the caliber. I never intended to get a collection of 8x50r firearms but I am currently sitting on 3 Bulgarian M95s in 8x50r and one
Italian
capture carbine in 8x50r (can't say specifically what type of carbine it was originally as it was rebuilt by Italy post-WWI). I hope to grow that at some point, but it is more or less a waiting game as there isn't that many on the market.
I reform 7.62x54R brass, pretty easy job.
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When I have done it I have used 8x56r cut down and resized. The problem isn't the brass but getting a loading which works well for accuracy as it is difficult to find anything close to the original bullet, unless you cast.
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The original bullet works quite well , shot as factory ammo or as reloads . The Hornady .329 does not seem to work well . A long time ago [ when companies made bullet for old military rifles that would work ] Speer made a .323 225 hollow based round nose bullet , they work the best of any modern bullet . They can still be found on online auctions . A cast bullet made large enough to fill the up to .334 grooves tend to get deformed so bad by the deep rifling they do not shoot well . But my accuracy standards may be different . I go by 2 inch or smaller average of 5-shot groups at 100 yards , shooting 5 only and counting them all .
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That Speer bullet sounds exactly like what I need, unfortunately being in Canada
you tend not to see as much variety in bullets as you do down South, and you need to have someone do a proper importation for them. Currently I have some 235grn round nose soft points I have tried in two rifles and haven't worked. It seemed to do ok with this one, however I wasn't shooting paper rather watching impacts in the snow and adjusting on to clays that way.
Just got in some 225grn .323 spitzer boattail bullets pulled from 8x63 surplus, I might play a bit with those but who knows if the rifles will actually shoot it.
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Considering the original intent of the rifle, an IPSC type target at 200 may be as much accuracy as can be had.
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I am sure with a properly loaded round (i.e. the original loading) it would be accurate on a man sized target at least out to 600m, that being said one of the bigger flaws with the M95 was the light weight barrel which heated up very quickly.
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