shooting .32 Rem FN verus RN in Model 14's: NO!
Posted: Thu Sep 24, 2015 4:48 pm
Guys,
Boy do I wish I had the time to chat - but one thing before I get sucked into another distraction (it's either my dogs, my job, or family stuff as per usual) and it has to do with shooting .32 Remington flat nose rounds out of Model 14's and Model 141's - classic pump rifles.
Don't do it!
OK I had received this warning about not deviating from a regular diet of round nose ammo only via web research a few years ago - never knew anyone local that had background on this round. So anyway, I avoided shooting the very nice flat nose .32 that I sourced from a board member except by single-shot mode only - in other words, I did NOT cycle the rounds into my tube and pump it into the chamber - well that was about a year ago I think.
Until last weekend - well I was all excited about getting 4 of my old Remingtons back together, ready to test fire at the local WMA, including the said Model 14. My Model 81 in .30, another 81 in .300 Savage, my Model 8 in .35 went along for some "product testing" at a basic 50 and 100-yard WMA range.
Besides realizing that just wearing a t-shirt is sorta painful when testing every one of those rifles mentioned above at the same shooting event, I learned several other things.
1. Just because you are curious is not a good reason to test out whether a flat nose .32 round will feed successfully in a Model 14. It will not.
2. The half-hour I spent completely disassembling my Model 14 at the shooting bench in order to clear a live round from the bolt face (it is impossible to shake a round loose unless you do this - I learned the hard way) was NOT a fun way to end the afternoon.
3. On the other hand, I was pleased that the 14 fed all the crazy mixed up factory obsolete and antique ammo I tried to shoot. The early Remington ammo from the teens and the early 20's does a fair bit of hang-fires, but then I didn't pop off many. Who knows. All I do know is, if it is round nosed ammo, it is good to go out of the 14 and DON'T make my mistake and shoot any other bullet profile!
4. Another learned thing: I can actually place all 4 rounds within a 5 inch spread at 50 yards even when I have been beating up my shoulder over several guns and several strong rounds in just a skinny t-shirt. But then I felt like I had been receiving the bad end of the deal in a fight club experience on my shoulder later on.
5. Final observation: I will be replacing a few small parts that failed or were broken anyway, which I would swap out from gun to gun at times - the barrel lock spring from the .30 Rem broke, so I used the one from the .300 Savage; something's up with the way the follower is not sliding up properly in the .300 Savage and making the spring get all hung up and not feed rounds properly, and I really need to spend more time hunting down some decent hard cases for my guns.
Alright that's it for this session - no pics, no nothing sorry - just heed my .32 FN warning in Model 14's and 141's, 'yall!
PS....for shot placement I was not able to get a feel for which round was most consistent for follow up shots, since I only did 10 rounds on average per gun, some more, some less....maybe it seemed to me the .30 Rem/.32 Rem were most consistent due to the lighter recoil, and the .35 and .300 I did more spreading....I also was shooting the big boys late in the game....
thanks for the time to share out, guys!
Adam
Boy do I wish I had the time to chat - but one thing before I get sucked into another distraction (it's either my dogs, my job, or family stuff as per usual) and it has to do with shooting .32 Remington flat nose rounds out of Model 14's and Model 141's - classic pump rifles.
Don't do it!
OK I had received this warning about not deviating from a regular diet of round nose ammo only via web research a few years ago - never knew anyone local that had background on this round. So anyway, I avoided shooting the very nice flat nose .32 that I sourced from a board member except by single-shot mode only - in other words, I did NOT cycle the rounds into my tube and pump it into the chamber - well that was about a year ago I think.
Until last weekend - well I was all excited about getting 4 of my old Remingtons back together, ready to test fire at the local WMA, including the said Model 14. My Model 81 in .30, another 81 in .300 Savage, my Model 8 in .35 went along for some "product testing" at a basic 50 and 100-yard WMA range.
Besides realizing that just wearing a t-shirt is sorta painful when testing every one of those rifles mentioned above at the same shooting event, I learned several other things.
1. Just because you are curious is not a good reason to test out whether a flat nose .32 round will feed successfully in a Model 14. It will not.
2. The half-hour I spent completely disassembling my Model 14 at the shooting bench in order to clear a live round from the bolt face (it is impossible to shake a round loose unless you do this - I learned the hard way) was NOT a fun way to end the afternoon.
3. On the other hand, I was pleased that the 14 fed all the crazy mixed up factory obsolete and antique ammo I tried to shoot. The early Remington ammo from the teens and the early 20's does a fair bit of hang-fires, but then I didn't pop off many. Who knows. All I do know is, if it is round nosed ammo, it is good to go out of the 14 and DON'T make my mistake and shoot any other bullet profile!
4. Another learned thing: I can actually place all 4 rounds within a 5 inch spread at 50 yards even when I have been beating up my shoulder over several guns and several strong rounds in just a skinny t-shirt. But then I felt like I had been receiving the bad end of the deal in a fight club experience on my shoulder later on.
5. Final observation: I will be replacing a few small parts that failed or were broken anyway, which I would swap out from gun to gun at times - the barrel lock spring from the .30 Rem broke, so I used the one from the .300 Savage; something's up with the way the follower is not sliding up properly in the .300 Savage and making the spring get all hung up and not feed rounds properly, and I really need to spend more time hunting down some decent hard cases for my guns.
Alright that's it for this session - no pics, no nothing sorry - just heed my .32 FN warning in Model 14's and 141's, 'yall!
PS....for shot placement I was not able to get a feel for which round was most consistent for follow up shots, since I only did 10 rounds on average per gun, some more, some less....maybe it seemed to me the .30 Rem/.32 Rem were most consistent due to the lighter recoil, and the .35 and .300 I did more spreading....I also was shooting the big boys late in the game....
thanks for the time to share out, guys!
Adam