8MM Mauser
New member
Hey guys I thought I might run a rifle question past the board:
I have a "Sporter" Mauser which is my primary gun for hunting big game. If you remember I was on here a few months ago asking questions about my Simmons scope. However, after shooting over 100 rounds of the same ammo I have figured out this is not likely a scope problem.
Last Sunday I took my rifle out, and because I was going to be re-zeroing I first set-up at 25 yards. I shot a five shot group - about two inches low-left, holes all touching. So i backed out to 50 yards and repeated... a five shot group, about 1 inch low left and a group you could cover with a quarter.
So I am feeling pretty good at this point, expecting that my real problem before was a bad ammo problem (I was shooting reloads - for this test I switched to PPU). So I back it out to 100 yards and shoot another five shot group... No hits on paper. So i shoot another five shot group, adjusting my aim slightly up and to the right... no hits on paper. All 20 shots were with the same ammo, and off of the same lead-sled I kept dragging all over the range.
So i go back to 50 yards... and I shoot a similar group as the first time I shot at 50 yards. (not quite as tight, I was frustrated at this point, but still a solid group right near the bull.)
My question is: How am I getting this much variation from 50 to 100 yards? How can my rifle put up tight groups at 50 and miss paper at 100? Last I checked it was sighted at 100 yards... This is a very OLD gun, it was a Gewehr that was given to the Turks after WWI. It still has the original barrel (or at least the barrel it was imported with - probably 50 years old at best). Is this a problem that results from wear? I have a stock Czech Mauser from 1934 that I can keep on a paper plate at 100 yards with those crappy iron "sites."
This is a very strange problem to me. I am not sure how to proceed. The method described above has always been my sight-in method and it has always worked well. If I can't figure this out by November I will be hunting with a stock VZ24.
Any help is much appreciated.
I have a "Sporter" Mauser which is my primary gun for hunting big game. If you remember I was on here a few months ago asking questions about my Simmons scope. However, after shooting over 100 rounds of the same ammo I have figured out this is not likely a scope problem.
Last Sunday I took my rifle out, and because I was going to be re-zeroing I first set-up at 25 yards. I shot a five shot group - about two inches low-left, holes all touching. So i backed out to 50 yards and repeated... a five shot group, about 1 inch low left and a group you could cover with a quarter.
So I am feeling pretty good at this point, expecting that my real problem before was a bad ammo problem (I was shooting reloads - for this test I switched to PPU). So I back it out to 100 yards and shoot another five shot group... No hits on paper. So i shoot another five shot group, adjusting my aim slightly up and to the right... no hits on paper. All 20 shots were with the same ammo, and off of the same lead-sled I kept dragging all over the range.
So i go back to 50 yards... and I shoot a similar group as the first time I shot at 50 yards. (not quite as tight, I was frustrated at this point, but still a solid group right near the bull.)
My question is: How am I getting this much variation from 50 to 100 yards? How can my rifle put up tight groups at 50 and miss paper at 100? Last I checked it was sighted at 100 yards... This is a very OLD gun, it was a Gewehr that was given to the Turks after WWI. It still has the original barrel (or at least the barrel it was imported with - probably 50 years old at best). Is this a problem that results from wear? I have a stock Czech Mauser from 1934 that I can keep on a paper plate at 100 yards with those crappy iron "sites."
This is a very strange problem to me. I am not sure how to proceed. The method described above has always been my sight-in method and it has always worked well. If I can't figure this out by November I will be hunting with a stock VZ24.
Any help is much appreciated.