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#1
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Thought some of you guys would get a kick out of this, I love the old Swedish Mauser's. Have had a few and am down to one 1941 Husqvarna short rifle and an Gustaf 1914 all numbers matching mint as new rifles.
Well my 60 year old eyes are just not shooting as well with open iron sights so I had a gunsmith mount a scope on the short rifle to use this fall hunting. Here is my date ![]() Here she is dressed up for the party ![]() ![]() After getting the zeroing worked out at 25, here is what she did at 100 yards. Cheap Pri Partisan Ammo. Not bad for a 60 year old shooting a 74 year old !
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Willy 1986 V20 Old School 1992 V20 1992 150 Yamaha 1997 HydraSport 2250 Vector 2009 17' G3 Outfitter "G Spot" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TDebw...eature=related "I won't be wronged, I won't be insulted and I won't be laid on a hand on. I don't do these things to others and I require the same from them" JW |
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#2
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nice!!! I keep looking at those Spanish Mausers that Samco has that have been rechambered in 308. I;m running out of room in the safe as is, so time to get a bigger safe
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#3
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Yes, Now Willy, your telling on yourself. Nice grouping. What scope is it? I just purchased, a year and a half ago, a Monarch for the A-bolt and have yet to sight it in. Lots of freaking scope choices, too many really. Ballistically challenged shooters like myself should have about two choices to make it easy..
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1996 -19' NV Flats 115 Mercury 4-stroke 1983 -20' Wellcraft Center Console 250 XS |
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#4
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They cost more, but Leupold makes excellent scopes. They are made in the US with the exeption of the glass which, for pretty much all scopes comes from 2 or 3 places in the world. They are absolutely the most durable - the abuse testing they go through is remarkable. All of their scopes, from the lowest to the highest cost, go through the same testing and are the toughest you can find.
My understanding is that Vortex and even Nikon optimize their glass to give the best performance under department store lighting, so if you compare a Leupold, Nightforce or Ziess (Ziess have the best glass of anyone, even very slightly better than Leupold) with a Vortex in Cabela's, you'll like the Vortex. You buy it and get into the field and don't have the high quality scope to compare, so you don't realize you bought an inferior product. You can't go wrong with Leupold - they are one of the very best in the world and stand behind their products. You can offer a good warranty by selling a product that costs almost nothing to make and replacing it freely or make an excellent product that almost never has a problem and really standing behind it like Leupold does. A friend of mine won a Weatherby 300 mag rifle in a drawing and has Spare's problem (gun safe is full) and gave it to me about 5 years ago. I finally stashed enough money away and will put on a Leupold VX-6, 3-18 TMR (tacticle milling reticle - like a mill dot, but with thin hash marks instead of dots that cover too much of the target). It's good for ranging targets of knownmsize and for hold over 2nd shot correction or leading and windage compensation. I could have bought a cheaper scope and been using the rifle, but the Leupold is definitely worth the wait. It's an accurate rifle and the VX-6 will be good for 1000 yard target shots as well as much closer but still long range hunting (if I can ever find time to get back to doing any hunting). My 2 cents worth.
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