Unlikely, it's a bolt-action: there's nowhere for the recoil to go except into the gun and into your shoulder. Could be the ammo. Or it could be that after tens of thousands of rounds of 12-gauge over the years, my shoulder is hammered flat and recoil just doesn't bother me.LaCroix wrote:It probably had some issues, as it was well worn.
I could reliably shoot out the bullseye with my 1911 at 10-20 yards. When I switched to 9mm, my groupings were awful. There was zero consistency to my shooting. It turns out that my grip, stance, and trigger pull were garbage and I had to completely relearn how to shoot at the age of 23 because everything I was doing and was taught was wrong. The moral of the story is that some guns are extremely forgiving to novice shooter, some are not.I can reliably hit a playing card at 200m with only a diopter on my Enfield, so it's not my technique. Nor the size - my brothers and I are all your size - but it's an example of what I'm talking about. This gun leaves a bruise with every shot (no kidding, my brother actually started putting a folded towel under the stock to dampen it without modifying it - and it even hurt at the first shot, when we weren't expecting it and tensing up), and once you know that, you just can't shoot it comfortably, anymore. This particular weapon is something unfit for defense by that criterium alone.
I'm not saying this is your issue, but the Mosin's I've shot kick less than my Dad's .270 Winchester. They aren't fun to shoot, but I don't find them punishing at all. The Enfield has like 1/3 the muzzle velocity. Never shot one, but it likely kicks less than an AR-15.
The Mosin having large recoil isn't why I wouldn't use it for self-defense. It's because it's a big heavy motherfucker and bolt actions aren't for CQB. Battle Rifles are awesome, but really don't have a place for defense. An SKS would be a better bet in that situation if you had to sling a rifle caliber.