Range Report: M1 Garand

I took the Garand out to the AR15.com shoot at the Casa Grande public range Saturday. I only brought 40 rounds for it (I’d purchased two boxes of Korean Milsurp, not three). It fed and functioned flawlessly, and I was able to score repeated hits on one of my 9×11″ swingers at 100 yards, offhand. Now I need to load some ammo and shoot it on paper to see what kind of accuracy it can actually give me, but it works, and works well.

Oh, if you get a chance to shoot an FN P90 submachine gun? DO IT! Damn, that’s fun!

Expensive. But fun.

This is Why You Must Be Very, VERY Careful When You Reload

This used to be a Marlin Guide Gun in .45-70, before it KABOOOOOOM!ed

My guess is either the wrong powder, or a double-charge. I lean towards the double-charge. Smokeless powders don’t take up much room in cases designed for blackpowder. There is no evidence of a plugged barrel.

The shooter suffered relatively minor injuries to his left (supporting) arm from metal fragments. He’s OK.

And damned lucky.

Another New Cartridge

There have been a number of new cartridges introduced recently, some say in an effort to boost lagging firearms sales because the new cartridges don’t do anything all that much better than the old ones. Maybe, maybe not, but one thing I believe is that cartridge development by the manufacturers generally follows the work of successful wildcatters – people who develop new rounds just for the fun of it.

I’ve been seriously considering getting a Thompson/Center Contender rifle barrel in the wildcat Tactical Twenty caliber, which is a .223 Remington cartridge necked down to .204″. There are (or at least there were) no commercial firearms barreled for a .204″ projectile, but there are several bullet makers producing bullets of this size – which means there’s a market for them. There are bullets available ranging in weight from 30 to 50 grains.

The wildcat Twenties include the .20 Squirrel, the .20 Ackley Hornet, the .20 Ackley Bee, the .20 Vartag, the .20 Vartag Turbo, the .20 Slammer, the .20 TNT, the Tactical Twenty, the .20 Terminator, the .20 PPC and the .20 BR.

The wildcatters have been having a field day.

At least one manufacturer has taken notice.

As I said, the Tactical Twenty is based on the .223 Remington case, and it pushes a 33-grain Hornady V-Max bullet out of a 26″ barrel at over 4200fps with reportedly excellent accuracy. This piqued my interest, but custom barrels and custom dies and all the other toys that go along with them tend to be on the expensive side, and I don’t have a lot of spare change laying around.

Well, Ruger has now introduced another new cartridge: The 204 Ruger. This is a .20 caliber based on the obsolescent .222 Remington Magnum case. According to Ruger:

When compared directly with either the 22-250 Remington or the 220 Swift, the 204 RUGER offers higher muzzle velocity and flatter trajectory. Because the 204 RUGER cartridge achieves a higher velocity with less propellant than either the 22-250 Remington or the 220 Swift, this new cartridge does not compromise barrel life. The 204 RUGER also offers lower recoil and muzzle report than comparable high-velocity, sub-caliber ammunition. Its conventional case shape avoids feeding problems and increased rearward bolt thrust associated with short and super short magnum cartridges.

You know, I’ve always wanted a Ruger #1.

Something like this:

Gotta start saving my pennies.

Reloader’s Alert!

If you reload, especially if you reload military rifle calibers (.223, .308, .30-06 & such) then you might want to look at Widener’s, specifically their military surplus pulldown powder. “Pulldown” powder is powder recovered from unfired surplus ammunition. They are apparently having a sale on WCC-844 (equivalent to Hodgdon H335) and WC-846 (equivalent to Hodgdon BL(C)-2). They’re selling both for $49 per 8lb. keg, plus freight and hazmat charges. I just bought one of each, and it worked out to $8.25/lb. Considerably better than the $20/lb. plus tax that I pay for the commercial versions here in town. I’ve seen the same powder elsewhere at $64 per 8lb. keg.

Oh, and that nice group I shot with the Enfield? The powder was WCC-844.

Get it while you can.

Back from the Range

Just one picture, a 5-shot 100 yard group from the Enfield, off sandbags. Remember, this is open sights, where the front bead is the diameter of the black bull at that range:

No one is more surprised than I am.

Of course, I wasn’t able to duplicate that group, but I’m blaming that on the wind. Yeah, that’s the ticket!

My 1917 Enfield

Just a few pictures as a test.

The Redfield rear sight.

The front sight.

Close-up of the receiver. Winchester, baby!

There’s supposed to be a screw-in aperture for the rear sight which didn’t come with the rifle. I’m trying to locate one. As it is, the rear sight is about equal to a No. 4 Enfield’s “battle sight.” I miked it at about 0.15″ Not quite big enough to drive a truck through, but…