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I haven't personally checked mine, but according to Richard Hobbs, the M38 is standard twist. Which,BTW, makes sense because the barrel is really too short for a gain twist rifling.
The kinda accurate one actually has a fairly decent bore, no pits and sharp rifling. The other two not so much! Your experience with the 92 and Trapdoor is not unusual, but a lttle atrange when you consider that they were both made for and used exclusively with lead bullets, back in the day.
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06-29-2016 10:41 PM
# ADS
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I have a lot of Carcanos and most have mint bores , I had no trouble finding them when looking for good bores . Yes , with the deep rifling used on Carcanos , an undersized bullet can go down the bore "off-centered " . I have found the M-41's to usually be the best shooters , and the easiest to get to shoot well of the 6.5's . The combination of the "odd-ball" bore size , lack of a good modern bullet , deep rifling and gain twist make the 6.5's a fight to get to shoot really well . The 7.35's on the other hand seem to work well with little effort . There is nothing wrong with the design of the rifle , as I have several that have been rebarreled in other calibers [ 6mm ,.358 , 32 Win ] , and they shoot just as well as any other modern hunting rifle .
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Originally Posted by
bob4wd
Which,BTW, makes sense because the barrel is really too short for a gain twist rifling.
Obviously not as S&W uses gain twist in their 460 revolvers.

Originally Posted by
bob q
I have a lot of Carcanos and most have mint bores , I had no trouble finding them when looking for good bores .
Good for you, but that certainly has not been my experience.

Originally Posted by
bob q
I have several that have been rebarreled in other calibers [ 6mm ,.358 , 32 Win ] , and they shoot just as well as any other modern hunting rifle .
Those would be interesting to see.
How bout posting some photo's of your ''custom chambered'' Carcano's for us to see. Are repeaters or single shots? Through in a couple of the bolt face/extractor of the 32 Winchester conversion too while your at it. Be interesting to see how that one was done.

Originally Posted by
bob q
lack of a good modern bullet
What about the Hornady and PRVI offerings? Haven't been able to get hold of any PRVI yet but the Hornady's have certainly given my 6.5mm Carcano's a new lease on life.
Last edited by vintage hunter; 06-30-2016 at 04:48 PM.
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They are all repeaters . Two work with the en=bloc clips and one has a 5-shot removable box mag . They are all chambered in wildcat cartridges , since they would not be clear to some , I just listed the calibers . The .268 Hornady bullet has some major issues , it was designed by someone who did not understand how the rifle worked , did not know there are
---------- Post added at 04:39 PM ---------- Previous post was at 04:31 PM ----------
are three different Carcano bore sizes , did not have enough examples to work with . The bullet was made too large dia , that caused the jacket to tear in some rifles with tight lands , then the jacket was thickened to stop that, which caused it to stick in some rifles , over pressuring some rifles , blowing out cases . It is dangerous in 14 of my rifles , does not work well in about 30 , and is workable in 4 . It is not the best shooting bullet in any . For pig hunting the .358 Carcano is a favorite , 250 grain bullet , 3x9 scope . It was killed over 2 tons of pigs so far .
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Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
bob q
I have a lot of Carcanos and most have mint bores ,

Originally Posted by
bob q
The .268 Hornady bullet has some major issues , it was designed by someone who did not understand how the rifle worked , did not know there are
---------- Post added at 04:39 PM ---------- Previous post was at 04:31 PM ----------
are three different Carcano bore sizes , did not have enough examples to work with . The bullet was made too large dia , that caused the jacket to tear in some rifles with tight lands , then the jacket was thickened to stop that, which caused it to stick in some rifles , over pressuring some rifles , blowing out cases . It is dangerous in 14 of my rifles , does not work well in about 30 , and is workable in 4
Well bob, all I'm gonna say to that at this point is I reckon it's better to have two with so-so bores that they work in rather than 44 with mostly mint bores that they don't.
Last edited by vintage hunter; 07-01-2016 at 12:13 AM.
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Well some people just have a different opinion of what is " working well" , or have fired enough rounds through guns to see a pattern . After about 4000 rounds through 48 Carcanos, I saw the problems . I only had real problems in less than half the rifles . It is tight lands that cause the problems , worn bores will be less prone to have them . The Hornady bullet itself is ok , just not for Carcanos . It shoots great in my Type -30's and early Type -38 Arisakas .
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Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
bob q
After about 4000 rounds through 48 Carcanos, I saw the problems .
Only 4000? You learn quick grasshopper......
Last edited by vintage hunter; 07-01-2016 at 03:04 PM.
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While I was trying to add to the discussion , using years of shooting tests , all you have is a smart mouth comment ?
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Originally Posted by
bob q
all you have is a smart mouth comment ?
I can be brutally honest and say what's really on my mind if you prefer......
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Contributing Member
You know I think Hornady took on board what was the go with the Carcano rifles as they do have a packet for Carcano's only packet in .268" RN 160gn, sometimes issues are not quite obvious to us and require further investigation good luck hope it sorts for you
Last edited by CINDERS; 07-21-2016 at 09:16 PM.
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