A exellent testament to 0000 steel wool and lot's of oil. Nice job in your restoration Joe
Thanks
Burt
A exellent testament to 0000 steel wool and lot's of oil. Nice job in your restoration Joe
Thanks
Burt
Nice to see the old rifle getting shot after what i bet was a long hiatus.
You mentioned having a Carcano rifle (nice to see an American not calling it a Mannlicher-Carcano for once BTW).
You could say, that there is a special kinship between your two rifles; Arisaka worked together with Carcano in making rifles for Japanese troops. The Type I Carcano was produced for Japan.
Why is your Carcano rifle special - was it used in Dallas?
Thanks for the kind words, gentlemen!
Thanks, Burt! I will admit that I was scared to death to use any type of steel wool at first. I had no experience with 0000 and I was surprised to see how fine it is. While using the 0000 soaked in CLP, the tiniest bit of pressure made the rust come off so easily. I would wait for things to get "muddy", then wipe away the loose rust with a paper towel and continue. It took no time at all! I was really lucky in that the magazine, bore, bolt, rifling, and just in general any part of the rifle covered/ protected by the wood furniture was in near mint condition. I brought the rifle to a local gun smith before i tried to restore it and he was shocked by how good of condition the internals are in and how strong the rifling is.
Thanks for the kind words, Scout! I'd never call it a Mannlicher-Carcano... to be exact, my rifle is a Carcano Mod. 91/28 Moschetto T.S. (special troop) made by Beretta in Gardone, Italy and assembled at the arsenal in Terni, Italy.
I originally set out to have one rifle from each of the major combatants in WWII. I asked my local gunsmith to keep an eye out for a Carcano rifle for me and one day he called and said he had one for cheap. It was around Valentine's Day, so I asked my gf to buy it for me.
I posted a picture of it online, and an expert said he did not recognize the markings on it... He did additional research and found out that my Carcano was made using pre WWI steel from Krupp in Germany. Since Italy and Germany were on opposing sides during that conflict, the steel was withheld until after the war and then used to make Carcano carbine rifles. The expert said that my rifle is the only one he knows to exist with the "K" for Krupp marking. He asked me for a picture to include in the book he is writing.
Here is a vid of me shooting the Carcano:
Well done Joe. Got to be proud of the work done, plus the fact your were most likely the first to fire it since it was last fired in anger. Knowing it will be around for years to come is great isn't it.
Cheers
Jason
Hi Joe,
Thanks for showing the rifles, you done a great job on the restoration and it looks great now, and shoots well
another fine rifle saved for the future.
dave.
Thanks, Dave!
good restoration Joe. just goes to show what a little bit of effort and care can do. it looks great now! i have an old carcano too. same model and date year as the one that shot JFK. i'm still not sure how to think about that, so usually i just dont.
andrew
Thanks, Andrew! If I could go back and re-do the restoration, I would apply less pressure while scrubbing with the 0000 steel wool and take the whole going even slower. I did alrighty, but there still are a few tiny scratches where I was a little over-zealous.
No need to feel un-easy about your Carcano. As the saying goes: "Guns don't kill people, people kill people." Appreciate your rifle for what it is, a piece of Italian history.
I told you guys about the steel wool, but you juuuust wouldnt listen Always start with an oil-soaked soft rag, then softly with a Brillo Pad/ScotchBrite, then advance from there.
I agree about the other Carcano rifle; indeed no need to feel uneasy, its just a rifle. Its not like its THE rifle, which was used on the 22. november 1963. There is no connection there apart from the rifle being the same model. Just be happy you got it and shoot it once in a while.
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