Kombi - the clips are helpful and the rifle won't fucntion without them unless you go single shot.
Oh, I know it won't work as a reapter without the clips but I was just wondering if they complicated things or not.
STexhunter. The 160 gn bullet is the military weight for the 6.5x52 Carcano cartridge and that might be why it feeds properly. The rifling is actually a 'gain twist' that stabalizes the bullet well. If you are getting 1-2" at 100 yds, that is pretty decent accuracy, period.
The rifling is "gain twist", Mikey, but only on the original rifles and the cavalry carbines of the same period.
The late '30s and 40s manufacture M38 style carbines have standard rifling.
Old cavalry carbines, not a 91/38, it may hardly stabilise the bullets at all.
I read in an article on Carcanos that they simply cut some length off the barrel and put a front sight when converting the original rifles to carbines.
This of course meant that the rifling did not gain enough twist in the length of bbl left.
But as you say, mate, 1-2" is quite decent and I might add, decent enough for a lot of mil surps in less common chamberings.
We just expect them all to shoot like bench rest rifles!
Incidentally, doesn't 6.5x52 use a #2 shell holder?
My cases certainly fit in it.
What sort of brass are you using, STexhunter?