On Fri, 20 Jan 2012 01:43:12 +0000 (UTC), Galen Hekhuis
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ghek...@earthlink.net> wrote:
#If you encapsulated what I know about firearms and put it in an ant's
#head, it would probably roll around like a BB in a boxcar. Still, I
#remain a bit amazed at the "hit man" who can just open a briefcase,
#take out and screw a rifle and scope together, then make this super
#accurate shot, often at quite some distance, killing the target. Even
#I know that just a tiny bit of dirt under the scope mount can make
#quite a difference at a distance, but you never see them wiping down
#or blowing off surfaces, they just put the thing together and go make
#the shot. On the other hand, I know that military snipers don't get
#to "sight-in" their rifles as often as they'd like, and I'm pretty
#sure they take their weapons apart and put them back together and they
#make incredible shots (to me, anyway) all the time. So is taking a
#rifle out of a briefcase just some more Hollywood hype or is there
#some truth to it?
There are a couple rifles out there that might..might be able to do
this..cant remember the model..but it was a removable/switchable barrel
Mauser.
But..in the grand scheme of things for shots of any range...no...its
highly unlikely one can screw in a barrel and have it hit the exact spot
the scope is sighted in for.
Most "sniper rifles" not only dont have removable barrels,but when the
gun is reassembled..its not recommened to remove it from the stock
without resighting in. A good sniper rifle comes apart with a mallet
after the screws have been pulled.
I have one removable barreled custom firearm..an Arisaka with a .243
barrel ..that will shoot into a 5/8" group somwhere in a 6" circle if
the barrel is reattached without sighting back in. Somewhere..in the 6"
circle at 100 meters.
Which really isnt very handy unless one sights it back in..then it will
plunk em nicely into a 5/8 group that matches the cross hairs.
I dont know who did it..gun show swap and trade in the 1980s.
It would be easier to do a Savage this way, with their locking ring
barrels.
Gunner