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    Best 44 Mag Lever Gun?

    I have two Marlins, an M1894 in .44 mag and a M444 with a custom 1in24 twist Douglas barrel. The .444 is a tack driver with 300 grain cast bullets, the M1894 has the factory Ballard tube, with the 1in48 twist, which I had cut back to 18.5 inches so I could mount the front sight behind the front...
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    Seattle Pistol Permit

    Aside from the OP's question, I want to point out Washington State has a long history of "shall issue" licenses to carry a concealed pistol. It was already a longstanding tradition when I moved here in 1977 and I gather it got started back in the 1930s when the Federal government clamped down...
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    A 6.5mm Arisaka Rifle from Iwo Jima

    During the Vietnam war, I saw a GI in class A uniform walking around the terminal at SFO with a "trophy" SKS slung over his shoulder. I thought it was a little odd at the time, but as I recall, this was before the onset of heavy duty airport security checks. Also before the Army prohibited the...
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    My Cimarron trigger pull is too light!

    H: 2-1/2 lbs letoff on a pistol is about right, IMO. Your problem is the creep, it seems. No sense sending it back to Cimarron, their legal staff probably considers the creep to be normal, the sign of a safe trigger. To correct it, you need to carefully reduce the engagement surfaces...
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    1907 savage .32 sear needed

    If drawings are available, you might be able to fabricate a sear. I note that restorers of old cars are forced to make parts that are simply no longer available. For a sear, the part would need to be heat treated or at least case hardened, an additional complication. - CW
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    ArmorAll and TruOil

    Woodstock's method is similar to mine, except I use TruOil without the Armorall added. Yes, it takes longer, but the results are the same. Two coats of TruOil, with about 2 days drying for each coat, followed by smoothing with 000 steel wool and a final coat of gunstock wax, does the trick...
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    Have sent my colt back to colt 3 times :(

    Boosted: In my experience, the problem of empty cases coming straight back to the shooter is usually caused by an extractor that is not profiled correctly. Reference Kuhnhausen's book, or see the link below, for details including line drawings, but factory extractors are usually not shaped...
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    How many coats of Formby's Tung Oil

    The finishing touch is wax, I suggest, after the last coat of Tung oil. I like Birchwood Casey's gunstock wax, but any good furniture paste wax made with Carnuba is OK. - CW
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    60 vs. 90 degree bolt lift

    Sleazy: I suggest Federal primers, they seem to have softer cups. - CW
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    The things you find...(range brass)

    I too scrounge brass at my local rifle range. Every Fall, we get an influx of shooters whose only purpose is to sight in their rifles in prep for the deer and elk seasons. Hereabouts (Western Washington), they almost universally shoot either .270 or .30-06. Or at least that's the kind of...
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    1st .45 ACP load

    .452 will work just fine in .45 acp autoloaders. fyi, many M1911 pattern pistols do best with 200 grainers. You might try some of the old standard H&G 68 style, 200 grain lead semiwadcutters. With so much happening in these pistols at the instant of firing, some believe its best accuracy-wise...
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    Reloading the 9mm 124 gr HP rainier

    Can't comment on the Accurate powder charge, I don't use that brand. The 9mm P is a high pressure round that typically does best with slower powders like WSF or Bluedot. As for OAL, 1.16 seems a bit long. The best bet is to load the longest length that will still fit easily in the chamber of...
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    RCBS RC Supreme or Lyman Crusher II?

    Ditto Big Jake's comment about the Rockchucker and its ability to take the LocknLoad system. I can't imagine going back to laboriously adjusting my dies every time I used them. - CW
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    One book you could recommend to a noob reloader

    Ditto on the Lyman no 49 for data. Richard Lee's book is another good source for the basics of reloading. All the other manuals are specific to a particular make of bullets or powders. In that respect, they are useful only to a degree. Personally, I rely on my trusty Lyman no 46, Ken Waters'...
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    Reloading Bench Ideas

    I designed my own bench, customized to my ergonomics and the space I had to work with. I started with the principle that is should be very sturdy. That has payed off over and over again. The stresses you put on the bench when sizing or reforming brass, for example, are substantial and will...
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    New to reloading

    G: Yes, you will need a case trimmer for your rifle cases. Pistol rounds normally don't need trimming, but rifle cases usually do. If you don't already have one, get a Lyman reloading manual, which provides maximum and trim-to case lengths for the cartridges you load. Interestingly, if you...
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    What's the secret to buying powder?

    Every small time reloader needs a local retail source for powder and primers. Because of hazmat and shipping costs, you just can't beat your local gun shop on price. The trick is to find one that keeps a good supply in these times of chronic shortages, caused by hoarding and wartime demand for...
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    Need help with case issues

    N: Factory loads are about as hot as you can safely get, since buyers want maximum velocity and range. Reloaders, on the other hand, are generally striving for accuracy and will avoid maximum loads on those grounds. Primer signs are one indication of pressure, the other is your...
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    4200 Elite 6-24x50 scope length

    Old Gringo: Here you go, check the dimensions exactly: http://www.straightshooters.com/bushnell/elite420062440ruler.html
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    Finnish Mosin or K31

    cmdio: Congrats on your K31. You won't regret it. The reason the butt stocks on most K31s are chewed up, I believe, is from carrying them in the M1944 rucksack, which neatly positions the rifle straight up and down the spine, cradled inside the ruck, with the butt sticking out the bottom...
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