
http://looserounds.com/2015/01/30/the-m ... 14-legend/
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Don't suppose you have a spare SVD hanging around do you ?snayperskaya wrote:More accurate than M14 in the right hands Tovarisch![]()
http://looserounds.com/2015/01/30/the-m ... 14-legend/
I don't sorry, only got the one Russian Lady......dirtbag wrote:Don't suppose you have a spare SVD hanging around do you ?snayperskaya wrote:More accurate than M14 in the right hands Tovarisch![]()
http://looserounds.com/2015/01/30/the-m ... 14-legend/
The trick with the M14 to maintain accuracy once it is achieved is not to remove the action from the stock. Unless the weapon gets soaked in water there is no need to pull it out anyway. For amount of shooting the average civilian shooter does, the rifle can be cleaned sitting in the stock. Once a year pull it out, strip it down, and clean it nicely. Then shoot it so it settles back into the stock. That's what I have always done with the various M1As I've owned over the years.DaveB wrote:What you don't see reported upon is how much time the unit armorers spend maintaining the M14s for use as designated marksman's rifles. M14s and their copies/clones etc have a reputation for requiring work to achieve and maintain accuracy. The method of attaching the action to the stock means that shimming and the like is often required. If you are prepared to do a lot of shooting and adjusting to get there, they can be accurate, but I have to agree that for that kind of money there are a lot better choices out there for true long-range shooting.
Very nice!!dirtbag wrote:Hi I thought id close this thread with a happy ending.
Like in most shooting "which rifle" dilemna's, the best solution .
Is to buy both...
SVD with the wood and PSO (Military)
M14 with macmillan knock off stock, Leupold mark 4 M1 16x , dated 1990.
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