Schmidt Rubin sights have a cleverly diagonaled slot in which the square top post front is mounted. Windage corrections are made by driving the front sight fore and aft, which also moves it right and left – simple. Swiss ordnance likewise gave the rifleman few choices in sight elevation. Only cardinal 100-meter changes selection from 200 to 1500 meters are possible with no “in between” detents.
To take advantage of the undoubtedly well-planned coincidence of bullet impact and elevation settings, I got out some old “D” -type military silhouette targets with “V’s” and 5’s as high scores. At 300 yards, the top of the front sight was “shoulder width” on the target, very visible and easy to hold for elevation on the horizontal lower edge of the black. Slow fire “V’s” were the order of the day. Seventy-second standing-to-prone rapid fire exercises starting with four rounds in the magazine and reloading with six from that funny tin and cardboard Swiss clip were really fun.
Once I got over trying to lift up on the straight-pull bolt T-handle, I found a smooth rhythm of operation that was as satisfying and fast as any fine turnbolt or semi-auto match rifle. After the first uninterrupted rapid fire string I shot I lay there and watched the timer count off an unused 12 seconds that I hadn’t needed.
The K-31 will shoot but had beautiful closely machined parts clearances that I suspect would suffer if the rifle were taken into the sand or the jungle. So what? The Swiss weren’t going either place. From a tall Swiss hill, the K31 would have been capable of “delivering a large volume of accurate fire” and is said to have figured in Germany’s decision to let the Swiss alone in WWII.
Bottom line: great rifle. Swiss GI 174-grain ball shoots better than my hand-loads and will give you x-ring groups at least out to 500 yards. I’m keeping mine to play with some more.
1903-A3
About fifty years ago in Dallas, there were five shooters who got caught up in the local competition scene and who participated in what was called “military rifle” matches in which any issue military rifle could be used. The course of fire was the national match course and it attracted a wondrous array of WWI and WWII rifles and cartridges. One of the five ordered a Springfield from the Director of Civilian Marksmanship. When it arrived it came into the form of a “U.S. Smith Corona 1903-A3” with a “C” stock, sheet metal hardware and a slick four groove SC-7-43 barrel.
All the five used “the rifle,” which turned out to be a shooter, in those military matches. It was variously owned, sometimes several times and for varying periods, by at least three of the five. Miraculously it avoided being sporterized by one or another of us. Only two of the five are still alive and only one of those still shoots. The old 03-A3, however, has not aged. Indeed, its users over the years have lovingly and meticulously cared for the old rifle inside and out. Its dark American walnut wood has the deep luster and sheen imparted by a few drops of linseed oil rubbed in by hand after each use. Admittedly its forend and butt plate have places where “firm grip” deposits betray the rifle’s past but their piney scent and roughened texture are part of its character.
If a shooter ever had the equivalent of a “Proustian Madeleine” surely this must be it, a sweet memory of things past. Damned old gun shoots! It’ll give you inside x-ring groups with “white box” match all the way to 600 yards right today if you do your part. It shoots 125s, 150s, 168s, 173s, 180s, and 190s. You get the feeling that it would shoot copper doorknobs as well if you had enough of ‘em to work up a load. The sights don’t have enough “in between” elevation graduations to accommodate all of the “non-GI” combinations at all ranges and it’s possible to run out of windage adjustment in challenging conditions, but the peep rear is the right size and distance from the eye and the skinny front post is made to order for the small-bull “A”, “B”, and “C” targets with “V” rings.
The bolt runs slick and there’s enough stock comb to let you maintain a consistent sight picture. More recoil than with an M-1 but just remember that you’re shooting a .30-06 with all the power you’ll ever need. Damned old gun shoots!
SWEDE M96
If the Swedes are to be known for something besides their goofy socialist politics and their beautiful women, I would suggest the combination of the M96 Mauser rifle and the 6.5x55 Swedish cartridge. It was everything the Arisakas I tested could have been and weren’t.
Three Model 96s, one Model 38 short rifle and a CG63 arsenal-built, Olympic-type 300-meter competition rifle, all with trigger pulls in the 4-pound range, were tested using 144-grain full metal jacket boattail Swede FFV bullets made in 1954 for use in Olympic competition. The best accuracy was found at very close to 2600 fps from a 29.1 inch barrel. The worst any of them shot was about 1-1/2 MOA; the best was right at half that. Both open and peep rear sights worked well with the aperture type of course being better by far.
One of the M96 long rifles was a literally unfired “Swedish National Match” with a sturdy M. Soderin receiver-mounted peep with highly repeatable windage and elevation settings. Only the bolt and receiver parts had matching numbers but the rifle obviously had been expertly rebuilt with a new select barrel at the Carl Gustaf Factory, probably in the ‘50s or ‘60s. That gun and the CG63, also with a used but good barrel and Soderin rear sight, will shoot 3/4 MOA. The M96 “National Match” has a flat top post front sight and the CG63 has a hooded front with Anschutz post and globe inserts. Happiness is being confident that no matter how bad your shot is it will come on call!
The Swede military stocks are long and skinny but reasonably good cheek support can be had with a careful “spot weld.” Light recoil and a long sight radius helps also. Care must be taken not to use too much sling tension. The long slender rifle can be bent 3 or 4 minutes left if you use more sling tension than is necessary for a good stable hold.
Light recoil helps in that department too. A National Match M-1 may be “horsed” pretty hard, and must be to keep a good stable position, without causing an impact shift toward 9 o’clock. The CG63 stock lets its barrel float so is also fairly immune to sling tension bending. Don’t do it with the limber long guns like the M96 issue Swedes, though. They don’t tolerate it well.
CONCLUSIONS
Well, it’s taken about five days to generally summarize about five years testing of about a dozen different rifles, all of the above being brought about by a couple of idle questions arising out unbridled curiosity. Somebody said, I forget who, that the Brits built the battle rifles, the Germans built the hunting rifles and the Americans built the target rifles, and then everybody issued them to their troops. I’d have to call that a tempting oversimplification but in the spirit of the thought would add the Swede to the target rifle classification. When you have a cartridge that you can shoot all day long without undue fatigue and which will deliver a 140-grain bullet into an x-ring group at 600 yards under the same conditions that will drift a 174-grain 30 caliber bullet from one edge of the 10 ring to the other, you have a cartridge with a target advantage. After all, as the old Sarge said, “You can’t miss ‘em hard enough to hurt ‘em.”
My favorites overall: the Swedes, the Swiss and the 03-A3 with honorable mention to the No. 4 rifle and the 7.65x53M1909 long rifle. Just don’t make me choose between my 03-A3 and the M96 Swede with the Soderin peep!
Too many hunting cartridges?
No! Still, some are superfluous. Wayne thinks these indispensable.
The Top 20
BY WAYNE VAN ZWOLL
One rifle-maker I know chambers for about eighty cartridges. If reamers were mortgages,