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On 11/2/18 12:57 PM, wrote:
On Fri, 2 Nov 2018 08:10:51 -0400, Keyser Soze wrote:

On 11/1/18 11:09 PM, Tim wrote:

8:31
- show quoted text -
Where you are, you could be shooting one hole groups ... or you could
find another range that reaches out a little farther.
The most I ever wanted to achieve was hitting a rabbit or squirrel in
the head at 50-75 yards and I an not even interested in that anymore.
I still like breaking claybirds on a skeet range and I want to
maintain my "point and shoot" skills with my handguns but beyond that
I am not much of a shooter these days. There is a guy who wants to
trade me a NorChinko M14 and a bunch of money (He says a grand, I say
$1500) for my M1A and I might do it. Either would be sitting in my
safe and he says the M14 shoots as well as I would ever need.
I am just not sure what a pre-ban M1A is worth.
......


Well without looking hard, Cabella’s sells a brand new Remington M1A for $1,699.00 and whatever other charges



Some of the reviews I've looked at recently about current production
Springfield M1A's are giving them "thumbs down" for accuracy. $1700 is a
lot of dinero for a rifle that might or might not do a 1" MOA or better
at 100 yards. Even some cheapo ($800 or so) .308 AR-type rifles can do
that.

How much does an M1A weigh with a reasonably sized mag and a scope?


My guess, with a scope, 10+ pounds but that is not horrible and helps
handle the recoil of a full sized rifle cartridge. It is not like
either of us are humping these things 20 miles a day.
A pound or two one way or the other doesn't mean a lot when you are
just carrying it in from the car.
That was the excuse the army made when they ditched the M14 for the
M16. The weight of the rifle and a few hundred rounds of ammo was
significantly less. They were talking about soldiers carrying it all
day over hill and dale along with everything else they need to
survive.
I do think it is a little ironic that when we had an army that walked
all the way across Europe we used a full sized battle rifle and now
when the use of vehicles is the rule, they needed a smaller rifle. My
dad was one of the first people to point it out to me. He said that
once he waded ashore, he was never in a vehicle again until VE day.


Carrying a 10-pound rifle on a good sling across your back is not
particularly onerous. Patrolling in the jungle with a rifle in your
hands and ready to deploy in sometimes very tight spaces is another matter.

Weight of ammo is a factor...a .223 round weighs about 11 grams. A .308
round weighs more than twice as much, more than 25 grams.
 
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