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I would take the time and money to mount a nice recoil pad, thick as you need, grind to fit, and cut the stock if needed so the LOP is correct after mounting the new recoil pad.
It will be faster to shoulder, and be easier to shoot accurately.
Sorry, but I’ll repeat it, “buy once, cry once”
The RCBS Rock Chucker, Rockchucker 2, JR, JR2, and JR3 all great used presses, they will still be working fine long after you are gone. id check Craigslist, second hand “antique stores” and Marketplace internet gun sites
I can not recommend the RCBS Ammomaster or Partner.
might be a good time...
I broke a RCBS Partner Press.
Resizing rifle brass with “slightly” insufficient lube.
They gave me a new one for free, but still…I would never pay $160 for one
Ive had very good luck finding used RCBS Rock Chucker presses for $100 or less.
Im a believer in using the same manufacture shell...
For fabricating pokers, scratchers, pushers, probers, pickers…. I like to use bicycle spokes.
good high quality steel, in different diameters, and long enough for custom work.
Japanese 7.7mm x 58mm Arisaka Type 99 produced at Nagoya Arsenal.
Looks like late war production, Mum has been defaced, missing its dust cover, never had antiaircraft sight or monopod.
870 upgrades- Paint, not just for duck camouflage, but to keep it from rusting. Remington did something wrong with the later finishes, you just look at them and can see the red rusty dust forming.
My favorite push feed M70 is the year they didn’t call it a “Featherweight”, but a “Lightweight”.(1980’s)
Actually the “Lightweight Carbine“, long action with light 20” barrel.
I never really liked the Schnabel forearm.
If you try to use a 3/16" spruce dowel to clear the case…, it will break inside the bore causing an even worse problem.
Use a brass rod, or wait until you get one!
Depends on the rim thickness of the ammunition you are using, and the rifles original headspace.
A “correctly“ headspace gun might not need a shim for “average” ammunition rim thickness, be loosely headspaced for thin rims, and gall the shims with thick rimmed ammo.
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