Sea Skimmer wrote:Cpt_Frank wrote:Sea Skimmer wrote:Ones Austrian and ones French IIRC.
Optimistic is an understatement for the ranges some makers expected.
Well they
could kill up to 2 kilometers
French gun: Lebel or Berthier?
Lebel I belive. Really I'd need to go and check, then I could give you the model. But I dont really feel like sorting through about a hundred rifles to find it. Plus I'm at school.
If it's got a tubular magazine, it's a Lebel. If it has a box magazine that can be loaded via stripper clips, it's a Berthier.
If it's a Lebel and you ever get your hands on some 8mm Lebel ammo,
don't load it into the magazine! Fire it as a single shot only. The pointed bullets can rest against the primer each of the rounds in front of them. This is NOT a good thing. WWI French ammo had a groove in the base of the cartridge case to hold the points of the bullet in the magazine, and keep it off the primer of the round in front. It was a somewhat successful measure, though still far from ideal. Commercial ammo, while rare, can occasionally be found, but it lacks this groove, and is most definitely not safe to load into the tubular magazine of the Lebel. If you load the tubular magazine to its full capacity of 8 rounds, and one of them ignites the primer of another cartridge, you could get a gang fire in the magazine.
Remember, when you go to the range, your fellow shooters may be impressed by an interesting historical rifle. They will not be impressed by flying shrapnel.