-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
I looked into a vintage scope but after a while decided to stick with iron sights. I removed the originals and put them away for safe keeping and mounted a set of Redfield Palma sights. Have not shot the gun with them yet but will on my April range date. Going to do some serious ammo testing to see what it will actually do at range. The original Krag is being rebarreled right now. The previous owner had completely neglected the bore and while the gun shot OK it didn't shoot well enough for me to use it in competition. Fortunately, I can rebarrel and use it and then put the original back on to sell it if I ever decide to. I'm not modifying anything else on the gun except to have the trigger polished so it has a smoother letoff.
Keith
-
03-17-2013 07:00 AM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
Shouldn't the cocking piece on a '99 carbine manufactured in 1901 have a knurled end less the knob? Mine does and I am wondering now?
-
-
Legacy Member
The headless cocking piece was used on 99 carbines and 98 rifles from serial # 202000 to # 285000. Any others were likely switched sometime over the years.
-
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
Originally Posted by
andiarisaka
The headless cocking piece was used on 99 carbines and 98 rifles from serial # 202000 to # 285000. Any others were likely switched sometime over the years.
Another lesson learned here,,,thank you so much
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
Beautiful! Love the original rifle. They both look like a lot of fun to shoot too. Very nice pics.
-
Legacy Member
Interesting that the gunsmith added a forward action screw on the sporter. They were standard on Norwegian and Dane Krags but omitted on the US version
-