-
Legacy Member
Collecting and shooting Milsurps on the cheap
Well reading another thread, it was pointed out that younger collectors have a hard time getting into collecting at the moment due to cost. The intent of this post is to let people who are interested in getting into collecting (but not limited to), know how to do so for relatively cheap prices as not everyone has 2-4k kicking around to buy a K98k
. I will apologize that this list primarily deals with Canada
, as that is where I am, and where my experience is so it might not match up with your specific country. A caution this a long read, my intent wasn't to make this long a post, but it just happened that way (more like a article).
To start I am a young collector, and I was fortunate enough to have a well paying job for a while which let me experiment and discover what I liked and didn't like. Unfortunately for me that cost a fair bit of coin to gain this knowledge. I have been collecting for 5 years at this point and it is a blast, but since I am now attending college, I have been forced to be much more careful with my money and how I spend it.
For most new shooters, the two biggest costs are the rifle, and the ammo for the rifle. Many don't realize that just because a gun costs 300$ doesn't mean that you can find ammo for that gun (Carcanos, Lebel-Berthiers etc.). A excellent way to start collecting at the moment is to acquire Soviet
surplus firearms, which at the moment are common on the market. For me I started with a SKS quickly followed by a Mosin Nagant 91/30. The greatest advantage these rifles have is the cost and availability of ammo, at the moment in Canada 7.62x54r costs 250$ for 1000 (plus taxes) and about the same for 1200-1440rds of 7.62x39.
Now Soviet firearms are interesting but not everyone wants to collect them, which is 100% understandable everyone has there interests, and they definitely aren't the most 'refined' rifles. The premise of this post however is based on the availability of 7.62x54r and 7.62x39.
One of the things you must know about 7.62x54r and 7.62x39 is that they are both approximately .310-.312 diameter bullets, or actually 7.7 diameter bullets (not a true 7.62 which is a .308 diameter bullet). This means that these bullets are too big for a .30 caliber rifle (30-06, 7.62x51 etc.), but are suitable for many different milsurp rifles.
With these two cases you can make up some very accurate rounds for cheap for the following calibers, .303 British
, 7.7x58 Japanese, and 7.65x53 Mauser. There maybe more calibers, but these are just the ones I will touch on.
To make this ammo for cheap you must buy a reloading kit, and the dies and shell holders for the proper caliber, the brass for the caliber, and primers, along with a bullet puller. This will likely run you somewhere in the 300-600$ range. However by doing this you will save yourself a significant amount of money in the long run (this set up will pay itself off in about 555rds, after that it is pure savings) and often make better quality ammo than the factory ammo.
To make this ammo, you must pull the 7.62x54r or the 7.62x39. You prime and size your brass of chosen caliber (.303, 7.7 Jap, 7.65x53 Mauser), and then if using the 7.62x39 do a straight case dump (when I pulled the 7.62x39 it was approximately 24grns for the batch I was dealing with so that is what I set my powder measure to) and seat the 7.62x39 bullet, this makes a decent plinking round with no kick for 100m. If your pulling the 7.62x54r reduce the powder by 15-25% depending on the case (for my .303 I tend to go to about 37grns when the pulled ammo holds 44grns which is about a 17% drop in powder charge). You then just seat the bullet at the proper length. Doing this costs about 38cents a shot for pulled 7.62x54r and about 27cents a shot for pulled 7.62x39. Considering for most these calibers factory ammo costs at least 1.25$ (7.7 Jap tends to cost 2.50$ a shot!) you will save money very quickly.
The other major advantage is the pulled bullets are flat based so they perform exceptionally well in these rifles (approximately 150grns for the pulled 7.62x54r bullets and 120grns for the pulled 7.62x39 bullets). For my P14 in .303 British I can likely shoot about a inch group with the pulled 7.62x54r vs the 3 inches with the factory boat-tail ammo.
Now to get to the rifles. I will recommend the rifles based on price and caliber.
For .303 British, my number one recommendation is a P14. These are very interesting rifles which have neat history and have excellent iron sights (a very effective aperture sight). They also have the advantage of having a regular chamber which leads to longer brass life which keeps shooting costs down. In Canada these rifles can be found in the 300-500$ range, just this year I acquired my personal rifle with a mint bore and original volley sights for 350$. Other rifles in this caliber which would be good to look at are - a sporterized Ross which has a good chamber (not enlarged) that would be around 200-400$. The main reason I put this on the list is because of the fact it has a 'normal chamber' instead of a Enfield style chamber.
- a No. 4 Mk. 1(*, or Mk. 2) Lee Enfield which currently runs about 350-650$ these have 'Enfield' chambers which is very hard on brass if you full length resize. There are many tricks used to reload for these specific rifles to increase brass life, but overall your brass won't last as long as a P14 or a Ross (provided the Rosses chamber hasn't been enlarged).
- No. 1 Mk. 3* Lee Enfield, approximately 350-550$ see the note above about the Enfield chamber.
There are of course more .303 British rifles out there but I am just focusing on ones that are cheaper to acquire.
For 7.7x58 Japanese there is only one option, the Arisaka
Type 99. These rifles have tons of history and several main variations. The largest advantage these rifles have is the bores are all pretty much VG+ as all but the 'last ditch' variants have chromelined bores, which protected them over the years (along with the fact ammo was all but impossible to find until recently). One of these will run you anywhere from 350$-1000$. Biggest issue in Canada is these aren't that available as not nearly as many came into Canada as did the States.
And finally for 7.65x53 my number one recommendation is a Argentine M1909 Mauser. Based on the M98 action, it is very strong. They were also very well made firearms. These can be found in poor shape to EXC+ condition. At the moment one of these rifles will run you about 350-1000$ in Canada, shooter grade likely about 450-500$. Other options for the 7.65x53 is - 1891 Argentine Mauser, approximately 550-750$
- Peruvian
Mausers (basically the same as the Argentine variants, should be about similar prices)
- Belgium
Mausers (1889, etc.) these are very uncommon/rare and price wise they are all over the map
- Turkish
Mausers pre-1930 (approximately) which haven't been converted to 8mm Mauser. Very rare and likely expensive but you never know what you will run into, sometimes for very cheap.
This about sums it up. These calibers can be made for cheap, and it gives you a variety of options for action types. I wish it to be noted that the three top choices (i.e. number one pick for each caliber) are very strong actions, that do have a fair bit of room for safety (all of those actions the P14, Type 99, and M98 Mauser, can and have been used to make magnum caliber chambered rifles). Do your research before reloading with surplus ammo (or any reloading for that matter), sometimes you don't get the chance to make the same mistake twice. Have fun collecting and shooting, as if you aren't having fun you need a new hobby.
Information
|
Warning: This is a relatively older thread This discussion is older than 360 days. Some information contained in it may no longer be current. |
|
-
The Following 7 Members Say Thank You to Eaglelord17 For This Useful Post:
-
09-22-2015 09:26 PM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
-
Legacy Member
Thanks for the taking the time to put all that information together, Eaglelord - very kind of you!
I agree with you about Soviet
rifles being a great starting point for new MilSurp shooters - the guns are solidly built, accurate, and even in this part of the world you can get a really nice one and still see useful change out of $500.
It'll interesting to note the differences in availability of military surplus rifles and ammunition in different areas, too.
I don't want to hijack your excellent thread so early in the proceedings, but personally, I'd advise a new shooter to stay away from "Weird"* calibres like 7.7mm Arisaka
, or 7.65mm Mauser.
I've always suggested people go with .303, 6.5x55 Swedish
, 7.62x51/308, or 7.62x54R calibre guns until they're more established in the pursuit. Because those are the most common Service Rifle calibres, they're the ones where there's the most expertise available for (ie other people who load the cartridges, have guns chambered in them, etc) - things which are important to a new shooter.
*"Weird" being any calibre you can't generally readily obtain from pretty much any gunshop.
-
Thank You to Colonel Enfield For This Useful Post:
-
-
Contributing Member
The hardest part of getting a milsurps is finding a really good shooter and know what your looking at, as I have said previously whilst a pretty stock is nice its the workings of the weapon that are of prime importance as I have seen real dogged out stocks on Mk III's and 4's but they could really group because the owners took the time to look beneath the skin. And this is where as experienced members of a club help the tyro's of the world get into the sport with a rifle that will give them the results down the range and not a Ferrari with a VW motor under the bonnet.
Nothing more will kill off a persons enthusiasm than a rifle that groups in the meters, and in my meager 42 years shooting and hunting I have seen some unscrupulous people rip new members off because they needed to clear a spot in their collection of a clunker. I have witnessed these young people with the passion get back at 600m and just throw money down the range and hit nothing because they believed the sales pitch "Oh yeah she shoots real dandy like".
I do not know what Dandy shoots like as I need a practical demonstration by the owner and myself shooting the rifle it works, looks are secondary, time and patience are needed to encourage the young shooters to utilize the knowledge base in a club that way they will not become digruntled members and leave because they blame themselves for missing due to poor technique rather than the rifle being useless or shot out.
Last edited by CINDERS; 09-23-2015 at 08:00 AM.
-
The Following 3 Members Say Thank You to CINDERS For This Useful Post:
-
Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
Colonel Enfield
I don't want to hijack your excellent thread so early in the proceedings, but personally, I'd advise a new shooter to stay away from "Weird"* calibres like 7.7mm
Arisaka
, or 7.65mm Mauser.
I've always suggested people go with .303, 6.5x55
Swedish
, 7.62x51/308, or 7.62x54R calibre guns until they're more established in the pursuit. Because those are the most common Service Rifle calibres, they're the ones where there's the most expertise available for (ie other people who load the cartridges, have guns chambered in them, etc) - things which are important to a new shooter.
*
"Weird" being any calibre you can't generally readily obtain from pretty much any gunshop.
I 100% understand what you are saying in regards to common calibers, but the advantage of the 7.7x58 and the 7.65x53 is that once you have the brass and dies it is no harder to reload than a standard 7.62x51 and 7.62x63 (30-06). It is even easier to reload than the .303 British
. It also gives some variety in options for actions (M91 Mauser actions, M98 Mauser actions, Type 99 action etc.) so it gives a bit more variety than just using a Mosin Nagant (not a bad thing, but personally I like to shoot at least two different rifles at the range per day I shoot).
Right now in Canada
, both those types of brass are available for the same price as any other full rifle caliber (70-80$ for 100 pieces), which if you get 10 reloads out of each piece comes to about 7-8cents a shot.
The biggest goal of this article is to let people know how to shoot these rifles cheaply. If your shooting 6.5x55 in Canada your looking at 1.25$ a round at the moment, and even if you reload it is only slightly cheaper (100 bullets costing 40$, this applies to virtually every caliber except .223 and .308). Besides at about 27-38cents a shot, your shooting centerfire for cheaper than virtually anyone else (except maybe some cast lead shooters), and most definitely are shooting jacketed bullets for cheaper than anyone else, unless they are using this technique. It is actually cheaper make and fire the whole round than it is to just buy the bullet itself. You will pay for your reloading gear in 555rds of .303 British or 218rds of 7.7 Japanese (just looking at if your buying factory ammo).
Personally the first caliber I ever reloaded for was a 7.7x58 Japanese, and other than one mistake that required me to dump and deprime 50 cases (seated the primers too deep accidentally on my first try) I have never had a issue.
Unfortunately I only have a 100m range to play around with in my area, so I haven't been able to stretch it out farther, but they preform excellently in this area (better than I can) so there is no reason I can see it won't do good at longer ranges (certainly grouping better than the factory ammo I have used).
-
-
Legacy Member
I think this discussion perfectly demonstrates the difference between countries regarding ammunition/gun availability 
Ammo in Australia
costs a fortune. Factory, reloading components, doesn't matter, it still costs the sort of money that would make our friends in the US keel over with an attack of the vapours.
My observation is centrefire ammo for the "mainstream" calibres I mentioned earlier is about $1.50/rnd, with deals available from time to time when someone imports a container-load of a specific calibre (or range thereof).
While I appreciate where you're coming from with regards to ease of reloading for some of the odd cartridges, in this part of the world the guns themselves are so uncommonly encountered as to make it a moot point. For example, I don't think I've ever even seen a rifle chambered for 7.65x53mm Mauser, except for a scant handful of Turkish
Mauser rifles on display in museums, captured during the Gallipoli Campaign.
Back in the '80s and '90s someone imported vast quantities of Swedish
Mausers into Australia - so many they're easily the second most commonly encountered Milsurp rifle here after the various .303s. Something similar is happening at the moment with the Swiss
Schmidt-Rubin rifles; someone has imported a heap of them, they're on the market for reasonable prices, and they've suddenly become very popular whereas perhaps five years ago only serious military rifle enthusiasts would have even heard of them, much less own one.
I know there's a few Carcanos floating around for next to nothing at the moment; a friend grabbed one a year or two back for that reason but discovered the ammo and reloading components were so hard to get in his area that he's now stuck with a spectacularly average rifle that's a huge pain in the neck to feed, not cheap to run, and not especially accurate either.
I must stress that all this doesn't make your advice bad in any way - just illustrates the different experiences people are going to have in different areas.
-
The Following 3 Members Say Thank You to Colonel Enfield For This Useful Post:
-
Legacy Member
-
The Following 2 Members Say Thank You to Eaglelord17 For This Useful Post:
-
Contributing Member
-
-
Legacy Member
the other milsurp that is common and cheap where i am is the .310 martini cadet. every gunshop that carries second hand rifles in my region has at least one still in original form.
brass isn't stupidly priced (all ammunition is comparatively expensive in Australia
), with cast bullets i think it would be fairly cheap to reload.
i loved using a martini action when i last tried it, i like the way they look, but i have no idea what i'd use a .310 cadet for personally.
-
-
Contributing Member
-
-
Legacy Member
-