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Originally Posted by
read6737
If we had hung a white flag on the bayonet when helping the yanks in the war of independence then there would be no usa now.
Good reply, and might not be a Wisconsin either where I live,
Ray
Last edited by rayg; 12-27-2011 at 07:36 PM.
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12-27-2011 07:33 PM
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I plan to shoot it.
Stacking the guns in a tent fashion has always seemed odd to me, I'd be afraid to have my gun out of reach.
---------- Post added at 08:14 PM ---------- Previous post was at 08:12 PM ----------

Originally Posted by
rayg
Good reply, and might not be a Wisconsin either where I live,

Ray
I'm from Wis too, did you sell an MAS 36 to me yesterday?
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Originally Posted by
technova
I plan to shoot it.
Stacking the guns in a tent fashion has always seemed odd to me, I'd be afraid to have my gun out of reach.
[/Drill sergeant mode on/]
"This is my rifle.......This is my gun.......This is for shooting.......This is for fun......"
Now.......run around the company area screaming that at the top of your lungs.......
(The devil made me do it!)
AZB
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Attachment 29364Attachment 29365Attachment 29366Attachment 29364Attachment 29365Attachment 29366
here are some pics of the stack rod.
I was also curious abotu the small holes in the bayonet and recepticle. I thought that you would line them up and insert something in the hoel to reduce the rattling of the bayonet. After spending some Google time I found that some trainees got two rifles stuck together
by the bayonet and recepticle. The hole was added to later models so you could poke something in there to depress the release.
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Originally Posted by
Patrick Chadwick
I wonder if those stacking hooks were ever actually used in the field? I suspect they were about as useful as the non-functional buttons on the cuffs of men's jackets - a kind of fossil justified only by the famous "we've always done it like that".
This picture is from an earlier time, but they are French
troops stacking their rifles.
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Yes, but those are Lebel rifles, not MAS36.
My question was specifically, did they still do that with the MAS36?

Patrick
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Originally Posted by
Milsurp Collector
I guess stacking in a tent fashion makes sense when there are alot of people around, it keeps the muzzle pointed up.
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why don't you get married? Anyway, just finished shooting the 49/56 and it beats my M14
and FAL. Very robust construction, not willowy.
Read6737, this is a Peugeot, not a Renault!
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I have never shot a 49/56. I have heard that they are really good.
But I do collect Renault's though,
I have 3, 5 Gordini Turbos,
One is the last Cleveland cabriolet on the road in the UK
, (now in France
) out of about 100 ever made.
There is one more Cleveland non Turbo cabriolet in Spain I think.
As yet I haven't found a Peugeot worth keeping. Although my
work van is a Peugeot Expert, and my wife's little car is a 106
fitted with an auto bow and a 1.6L multiple point injection petrol engine, that might be worth keeping as they did not make many in this configuration, now 15 yes old with 50K on the clock.
Last edited by read6737; 01-21-2012 at 04:58 AM.
Tikka T3 Tac. Enfields No1mk3*, No4mk1 T, No4mk1*T, M.H. 577/450s. K31. MAS 36s. Mausers G98s, 1908, M48, BSA 222 (Mauser action) .22 match arms. black powder. 1873 11mm. Webley 455 MKI.MKIVs,MKVI. Spanish .44,10.35s,OP 455s
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