Re: 1939 Mauser K98 barrel
Posted: Wed Oct 27, 2021 5:49 pm
I would give the barrel a deep clean and see how it shoots after that. A barrel can look quite rough inside but still shoot OK.
Regards
Peter.
Regards
Peter.
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I was looking at a Peter The Great Tula M91 that had been smoothbored and enquired as the whether they could do the same with a Mosin barrel so as to retain the PTG markings on the barrel shank but I didn't win the auction in the end.Sim G wrote: ↑Wed Oct 27, 2021 6:08 pm
Kirk has been a friend of mine for years. Nothing ever leaves his door that he wouldn’t give cabinet space. You’d be surprised how many of the “respected” in the milsurp/collectors field have their work put right by Kirk!
Not the cheapest as some will quickly point out, but you’ll be getting 100% integrity.
Hi mate, yes I do hand-load but I don’t cast bullets anymore. The rifling in my barrel is shot, so bad it almost looks like a smooth bore. Having given it a good clean it’s not very good at all.Alpha1 wrote: ↑Wed Oct 27, 2021 11:31 pm By your replies I am guessing you don,t hand load so the cast bullet route is not going to work for you. If you get it re barreled its going to probably cost you more than you paid for the rifle. If you get it sleeved to preserve the originality its definitely going to cost you more than you paid for it.
The question is what do you use it for and how important is it to you that it is kept as close to original as possible. My self I would slug the bore buy a mould cast a lead bullet size it to the bore hand load some ammo and go shoot it. It would either work or not.
But it does not sound as though that is an option for you.
I know they are now hard to come by, but did you not look down the barrel when you bought it....??steve853 wrote: ↑Thu Oct 28, 2021 5:20 pm The rifling in my barrel is shot, so bad it almost looks like a smooth bore. Having given it a good clean it’s not very good at all.
The rest of the rifle has been looked after brilliantly, and yes, the cost of the re-barrel work is almost as much as I paid for the rifle, but I think it would be worth it
Its your rifle you are obviously keen to shoot it. If you intend to keep it long term I would go for it. A new barrel or a sleeved barrel both will work the sleeved barrel is probably more expensive at the end of the day its really up to you.steve853 wrote: ↑Thu Oct 28, 2021 5:20 pmHi mate, yes I do hand-load but I don’t cast bullets anymore. The rifling in my barrel is shot, so bad it almost looks like a smooth bore. Having given it a good clean it’s not very good at all.Alpha1 wrote: ↑Wed Oct 27, 2021 11:31 pm By your replies I am guessing you don,t hand load so the cast bullet route is not going to work for you. If you get it re barreled its going to probably cost you more than you paid for the rifle. If you get it sleeved to preserve the originality its definitely going to cost you more than you paid for it.
The question is what do you use it for and how important is it to you that it is kept as close to original as possible. My self I would slug the bore buy a mould cast a lead bullet size it to the bore hand load some ammo and go shoot it. It would either work or not.
But it does not sound as though that is an option for you.
The rest of the rifle has been looked after brilliantly, and yes, the cost of the re-barrel work is almost as much as I paid for the rifle, but I think it would be worth it