Hagler.450Ex
AH senior member
If I remember correctly, the Carcano has a gain twist bore. Supposedly lowering the pressure.
You may want to check that.
Indeed, but they went to constant twist in 41'. This one is a 42'.
If I remember correctly, the Carcano has a gain twist bore. Supposedly lowering the pressure.
You may want to check that.
I have all ways been told the lack of accuracy on the Italians was trying to use the wrong sized bullets.View attachment 715967
Just funnin' with ya a little. . .
An interesting rifle! A little strange but definitely interesting.
Cheers! Bob F.![]()
A lot of import companies did a lot of strange and not nessary safe things in the 50 and 60So, more digging. It seems that a company converted some to the MS round in the 1920's and brought them to the U.S.....these were to make use of the apparent abundance of MS ammunition at the time, so intentionally meant to use the .264 bullet.
It seems the same happened in the 1960's, which this one is, due to its 1942 date, although the company that did them, I don't know.
So, apparently, it was a widely acceptable thing to use the .264 MS ammunition in the Carcano's .268 bore.
How accurate it will be, is yet to be seen. Although I've seen good reports during my search.
I'd like to know the company that did these.
So they say.Guess accurate enough for Lee Harvey Oswald to use, good enough for hunting ?
“”
Lee Harvey Oswald assassinated President Kennedy using a 6.5×52mm Italian Mannlicher-Carcano M91/38 bolt-action rifle””
.
And what with Winchester ammo surplus that was loaded for the cia? If I remember rightGuess accurate enough for Lee Harvey Oswald to use, good enough for hunting ?
“”
Lee Harvey Oswald assassinated President Kennedy using a 6.5×52mm Italian Mannlicher-Carcano M91/38 bolt-action rifle””
.
I hope I don’t add to the confusion: I shoot .264 PPU 156gr in my 1903 6.5x54 carbine. And they are very accurate.I got dies, and will try the .264's. because they are the only ones close to 160 grains.
The Hornady's in .268 I'll try second, and only if the .264's are acting odd.
Some said they experienced increased pressure with the .268's in the Carcanos.
It's a confusing mess.
Sometimes it is just the fun of discovering a new toy that catches your eye. You will have fin learning what the little carbine likes and doesn't. Since you are looking to have it as a truck/boat gun if the .264's don't work out accuracy wise and it needs .268 which aren't the the easiest to find. You could resize .270 bullets or just shoot gas checked cast bullets. Following along on your learning experience.
@Hagler.450ExSo late the other night I was looking at what different sites had for sale and came across something a bit odd. After reading the description I figured "why not?" I ordered it because it's quite strange. It's a Carcano that has been refinished, rechambered for 6.5x54MS, British proofs, with a nice bore. I've never seen or even heard of such a thing. It was just an impulse buy, but if anyone has any idea how or why a Carcano was done this way with British proofs, I'd love to know.
I thought, if nothing else, it would be a good boat gun for the river, for when I get my boat....I don't know....I'm making up excuses for an impulse buy....but it's such a cute little thing....
View attachment 715956
@Hagler.450Ex
I don't know about a boat gun, might make a good boat paddle.
Unless it was rebarreled with a true 264 barrel you will be lucky to hit a bucket at 25yards.
The Carano has a .268 bore with gain twist rifling so loading a 264 projectile and sending it down the bore will be akin to throwing a sausage down a hallway. It may touch the side sometimes as it rattles up the bore.
Hopefully the British put a .264 barrel on it.
Then you need a special clip to get it to feed otherwise it's a great single shot.
Remember the words caveat emptor. Buyer beware. All that glitters ain't gold.
Bob
I wonder if the clip could be 3d printed now?@Hagler.450Ex
I don't know about a boat gun, might make a good boat paddle.
Unless it was rebarreled with a true 264 barrel you will be lucky to hit a bucket at 25yards.
The Carano has a .268 bore with gain twist rifling so loading a 264 projectile and sending it down the bore will be akin to throwing a sausage down a hallway. It may touch the side sometimes as it rattles up the bore.
Hopefully the British put a .264 barrel on it.
Then you need a special clip to get it to feed otherwise it's a great single shot.
Remember the words caveat emptor. Buyer beware. All that glitters ain't gold.
Bob
Carcano clips are on Gunbroker for about $10 a piece.I wonder if the clip could be 3d printed now?
@Hagler.450ExSame bore. All they had to do was the chamber.
I think there is a lot of confusion here, and a bit of unknowns, but let's go with this:
The Schönauer rifles were chambered in .264. The Carcanos in .268.
Hornady makes specific .268 bullets, so hand loading can solve the problem. But here's the thing: In this case, we do NOT know if the rifle had a new barrel installed when it was re-chambered. At .264 bullet in a .268 would have accuracy issues... but a .268 bullet in a .264 barrel would be, shall we say, "exciting".
With this in mind, I would probably have the chamber cast, and would certainly have the barrel slugged before I did anything.
Carcano clips are on Gunbroker for about $10 a piece.
I have a couple hundred of the Hornady Carcano 160gr RN bullets that I’d sell. They measure at .2665”- .267” with my digital calipers.
@Hagler.450ExSo, more digging. It seems that a company converted some to the MS round in the 1920's and brought them to the U.S.....these were to make use of the apparent abundance of MS ammunition at the time, so intentionally meant to use the .264 bullet.
It seems the same happened in the 1960's, which this one is, due to its 1942 date, although the company that did them, I don't know.
So, apparently, it was a widely acceptable thing to use the .264 MS ammunition in the Carcano's .268 bore.
How accurate it will be, is yet to be seen. Although I've seen good reports during my search.
I'd like to know the company that did these.