On my question of good and bad rifles, the Carcano kept coming up as a bad guy. I had one for 8 years, it was acquired on a mixed trade, the stock had been cut down for a youth, I was lucky to purchase a brand new replacement stock from a source in Shot Gun News and fix it. It was a Model 38 short rifle, 6.5 cal., made by Beretta in 1941, with a fixed rear site. The bore had some minor damage from corrosive ammo being used and not properly cleaned. The trade came with 3 boxes of 1936 vintage Italian army surplus ammo.
You can shoot them single shot, but they are best with a stripper clip that drops out of the bottom after the last shot and makes a clanging noise. I bet that was not good in battle as your opponent could hear that. With the surplus ammo it was an accurate rifle. It also liked Norma brand, and shot low and to the left with German made surplus ammo. The bolt was stiff, which required getting used to it, and I think that would have slowed down the rate of fire in battle. The butt plate seemed narrow, but was not a pressure problem on my shoulder due to the light recoil of the 6.5 round.
When I took it apart to replace the stock, I found the rifle to be well made, seemingly light and compact, yet rugged. I ended up accumulating fired Norma brass and 3 types of clips, brass, blued steel, and zinc coated clips. I wanted to handload but sold the rifle before I got around to it. I sold it as I did not really like the looks of that particular model of Carcano, I would have preferred the longer barreled model 91, but those are hard to find in any kind of decent condition.
I don't understand why there are so many negative comments on these guns, is it because of the looks, or is it something else? The Italian army used them in WW1 and WW2, these rifles saw alot of action, despite the mass surrenderings in North Africa in the photos. The Italian authorities did feel they needed to upgrade the caliber to a .30, and some of them were modified for more hitting power. The 6.5 is not a bad bullet size.
Carcano owners...what bothered you most on those rifles?
Thanks.