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Thread: 8mm & .303 ammo new/surplus observations

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    8mm & .303 ammo new/surplus observations

    More Updates

    8x57:

    RWS E37 Excellent excellent ammo. Seems to be loaded pretty hot. Crazy hard primers like really hard.

    75' Romanian Surplus: Smelly...very smelly. BUT it is very accurate. If you see it buy it. Also, the steel cases and the red sealant gives it that 'cool' look.

    1955 Yugoicon Surplus ( Heavy ball? ) : Hot, accurate, clean. No misfires. I really like this stuff. Had 2 split cases around the neck. Not bad out of 200ish I've fired, but still unnerving. Update: 460(half tinish) round fired. only the two split necks so far. I am done with the Yugo. It was really nice to shoot.

    Igman 198gr SP: Loaded Hot, accurate but smells. Ommited 'clean'. It is 'sooty' I thought that it was the rifle. After firing it in a ce41 K98icon I am fairly certian it is the ammunition. The ejected brass is sooty... only way to describe it.

    Olympic 180gr FMJ : Not loaded as hot(but still excellent) as the 55, Igman or S&B.Accurate,clean, throws a huge muzzle flash.

    Sellier & Bellot 196gr FMJ: Loaded Hot, accurate, clean.

    Sellier & Bellot 196gr SPCE: same as the FMJ



    .303 Britishicon

    89' HXP L1A1 Ball: Very very very nice. At 50m my groupings touch. I've always heard this is the best .303 surplus. It does live up to it's name.

    81' South African R1M3Z : seems to be just as good as the HXP only berdan primed. touching groups @50m. Still wow great great stuff.

    1967 Mk7 Ball ( Pakistani Surplus ): ALL Hangfired. I think because it's cordite and not powder. I fired 64 rounds and every single one had about a .5second hangfire. Nice sharp report when firing, clean almost ZERO smoke, accurate if you compensated for the hangfire.

    95' IVI Soft point: Very nice. Accurate. I zero'd one of my ph5c's with it.

    Sellier & Bellot 180gr FMJ: Accurate and clean. no complaints.

    Olympic FMJ: Same as the 8mm. good and throws a huge muzzle flash.


    Accuracy update:

    8mm: With the Ce41 K98 benched it will consistantly group 2" give or take alittle @ 100m on a good day with good ammo. The S&B and the Romanian tend to hover around that 2" mark. Sometimes less especially with the S&B but usually more. With the K98 benched I've never had a group exceed 4 inches for any of the ammo. The Igman tends to and 55 Yugo tended to hover on the higher side of that range ( usually 3ish") and I didn't have enough of the Olympic to get anything conclusive over time.

    .303: Pretty much the same as the 8mm. With the rifle benched, the HXP and South African was grouping less than 1"( holes touching ) at 50m more often than not. I haven't fired it past 50m yet but I will, no worries there. The sub 1" grouping's at 100m with the S&B was a fluke. Even with the PH5C, I haven't been able to group like that since. So the HXP, South African, and IVI are by far the best .303 I've fired. The HXP also has the lightest recoil. The IVI is extremely loud and has heavy recoil when compared with the rest. The stuff surprised me when I first fired it. The S&B and Olympic are also very good. Which leaves me with that 67' POFicon. It simply cannot be compared to the rest. It goes bang but man, in comparison... It's crap.


    A group observation is that I do get good groupings. However I am not hitting the bullseye when I do this testing. Each type of ammunition does hit the paper in different places. More specifically in the Y axis. For example: S&B 8x57JS FMJ shoots 6-7inches high @ 100m. Same goes for the .303 ( it's different now that the PH5C is installed and allows me to zero )


    When testing new ammunition or comparing them now, I shoot through my CE41 K98 for 8mm, and my 1950 LB No4 mk1*/PH5Cfor the .303

    So if anyone ever wondered...there you go. This has changed some since I first posted, so I hope I am making it better and not worse. Please churp in with your own observations and give me an excuse to get to the range more often
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    Last edited by David1974; 10-08-2008 at 06:02 PM. Reason: added info/changed

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    Smile more input on Surplus ammo

    Greetings,

    I have not posted here in quite some time... My apologies for that.

    I'm a milsurp collector in Alaska with about 90 Milsurps in my collection, and also a member of the "Alaska Machine Gun Association"

    My experience with 8MM & .303 Surplus:

    Turk 8MM, 1944 Vintage-Brass case-154gr "light ball" Works great, quite "hot" near 3,000 fps in my Turk M38's. The most accurate ammo to date in the Turk mausers.. (go figure- turk ammo in turk rifles!) lol Don't think I'd want to use this in an FN49 or Hakim... But I was pleased with it and keep about 1,500 rounds in reserve.- The machine gun guys feel this is too hot and old to use in thier prized possessions

    Greek 8MM, 1940 vintage, brass case- "PCH 1940" on boxes. -- When it fires...lol the accuracy is good. Extremely hard primers. ABout 50% did not fire or were hang fires. Thumbs down on this one. Sadly I have 800 rounds of this stuff

    But it only cost me $50.. sooooo lol

    Romanian 8MM -1979-82 vintage- steel cased, light ball- Excellent stuff, quite accurate on my Yugoicon M48's, FN49, and Hakim, excellent in Belt fed machine guns- 100% sure fire! I have 2,000 rounds in reserve..... (I have a scoped Yugo M48 that will shoot MOA with this stuff all day long)

    Yugoslavian 8mm- 1977 headstamp- Brass case-"SS" Heavy ball- Excellent accuracy and reliability in all rifles and Machine guns we tried it in! Lovely stuff! The currently available "M75" yugo sniper ammo should be even better! I have 800 rounds left. Wish I'd bought more!


    Ecuadorian 8MM, 1954 headstamp, "FN" contract- I had a few hundred rounds of this stuff. I think it it was "SS" heavy ball- was great stuff and quite accurate, but showed signs of being high pressure- difficult to open bolts etc. (I doubt there's much of this around anymore) I found it odd to see 8MM ammo from Ecuador, but I'mm assume it was for machine guns likely MG42 or MG34's that they had.


    -----------

    Pakistani .303 -brass case-MKVII ,1950's vintage- "POFicon" on the 32 rnd boxes- It was acceptable, sure fire, but not so accurate. but hey it went BANG!

    Britishicon .303, Brass case-MKVII,RG (Radway green) 1940's, Cordite- Sure fire ,acceptable accuracy, cane in bandoliers in stripper clips, smelly stuff.... thankfully all gone from my stocks

    South African .303-MKVII,Brass case-1981 date!!!- NON-CORROSIVE!!--- Simply the finest .303 surplus to be had. Very accurate,sure fire... I have 2,000rds of this stuff Squirrelled away. WISH I had MORE!!!! I have 4 Lee-Enfields... they love the stuff!

    ----------
    I've not fired handloads or commercial ammo in my Lee-Enfields, only surplus

    I did try some "Hotshot" brand commercial ammo in my M48 and M38 mausers. While clean and sure fire, the accuracy and power level was not on par with the Military stuff. I'm sure it's loaded to a lower pressure level

    I hope this review helps...
    Last edited by ak_milsurp; 12-07-2007 at 03:18 PM. Reason: spelling

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    I have fired the Pakastan 303 and have EVERY case eject with split necks!! This is out of my #1MkIII (1918 w/ 1953bbl) Accuracy was non existent. I tend to believe that the Packastani ammo is a hit or miss, some lots good , others not so good.
    I have some 45 RG I will shoot in the next week or so.

    Oneshooter
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    Pakistani .303

    Hmmm well the stuff I had was very clean and in it's original packaging. If it's some of the .303 recently available for various sources.. most of that stuff is mixed manufacture.. the cans I saw were loose packed in .30 caliber ammo cans.

    How's the head space or chamber in your rifle? True it could be the ammo. But Every rifle, while supposedly to spec, is unique unto itself. As you mention, it has been rebarrelled. A chamber cast may be a good idea to see if you have erosion, a bulge, etc in the chamber. If it looks good... might indeed be the ammo......


    Ak Milsurp

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    I have gone through 2 boxes of Dominion Arsenal (Canadianicon) Mk7 with no hang or misfires.( GREAT ammo!!!) One box (48 rounds) from 1943 had reloading potential, but the other one (1942) had numerous split "necks".
    I also picked up 2 boxes of (rare?) 1943 Kimberly made South African ammo. One of the boxes had a bit of water damage; I fired 10 rounds, with 2 hangfires. Also, all 10 of the casings had split necks.

    I'm just wondering...I am looking to get into handloading my own .303 ammo. Is it really worth saving this old brass, or will the resizing process render them too thin?
    Many thanks!

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    Thread Starter
    Where do you guys find all this stuff? especailly the .303?

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    LOL... I got lucky with the South African .303. A Local fella needed money and had to sell it off quick. I had no idea what it really was until I got it home. He was shooting it in Vickers MG....

    If I was going to reload, I sure as hell wouldn't be trying to load WW2 era berdan primed brass. Get some new commercial .303 Britishicon ammo and reload or buy unprimed NEW cases.

    The large Wholesalers in the USAicon generally have some .303, but the surplus stuff is usually mixed lot British, Indian, or Pakistani ammo, Last Time I saw it it was like $170 US for 300 rds loose in a .30 cal ammo can.

    The 8MM ammo was accumulated over the last six years,,,, hell 3 years back we were getting Romanian 8mm for less than 6 cents per round!!!!! That year the club bought 75 cases of it!!! (I got 3 of those) Now if you can find it it's about 40-60 cents per round





    The
    Last edited by ak_milsurp; 02-22-2008 at 11:06 PM. Reason: additional info

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    The rifle was arsenal rebarreled in 1953. I shoot factory and reloads(neck sized only) in it with no problems.

    Oneshooter
    Livin in Texas

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    I had a bunch of AUSSIE .303 in the original packaging, beautiful stuff! Except it all hangfires! And the necks all split. I also had some GREEK HXP75, good but the brass was somewhat gummy feeling, and led to hard bolt lift. I couldn't get the brass cleaned up.

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    303 British

    I bought these from buymilsurp.com . There is a 1967 date on the boxes and it says they are corrosive.
    I don't know the manufacturer but I did try 2 rounds and they both were hangfires.
    I fired 60 rounds of the L&B ammo with good accuracy and no problems.

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