What is the best...?
#5
I've used in the past a K98 and an M1 Garand.
I find the side mounted sling on the K98 a bit more difficult to carry through brush.
The aperture sight on the M1 can be difficult to use at dawn and dusk- its hard to see out of in low light.
I used my M1 last year and took a deer with it. its a very sturdy rifle that is VERY reliable. The only other downside to it I can think of is thaty ou NEED to check your zero after stripping it for cleaning, whereas a bolt action needs far less takedown for cleaning and the zero won't move nearly as much.
The military rifle that I would really desire for deer hunting? A sporterized and scoped Swedish M38 Mauser.
I find the side mounted sling on the K98 a bit more difficult to carry through brush.
The aperture sight on the M1 can be difficult to use at dawn and dusk- its hard to see out of in low light.
I used my M1 last year and took a deer with it. its a very sturdy rifle that is VERY reliable. The only other downside to it I can think of is thaty ou NEED to check your zero after stripping it for cleaning, whereas a bolt action needs far less takedown for cleaning and the zero won't move nearly as much.
The military rifle that I would really desire for deer hunting? A sporterized and scoped Swedish M38 Mauser.
#10
You can get an M1 through Civillian Marksmanship Program www.odcmp.com
You need to jump through a few hoops to get it, but inmho its the only way to get a good M1 at a decent price. I paid a shade over $500 for my HRA service grade rifle, its accurate and in great condition- I highly reccomend them. You could go the gunshow/pawn shop route and pay $700-1000+ for an M1 but unless you have the tools to guage the barrel wear, and are knowledgeble about the mechanics of the rifle, its a crapshoot and you could get burned.
BTW: stay away from garands with 'Century" receivers. They are much cheaper than a US model Garand, but they are junk.
You need to jump through a few hoops to get it, but inmho its the only way to get a good M1 at a decent price. I paid a shade over $500 for my HRA service grade rifle, its accurate and in great condition- I highly reccomend them. You could go the gunshow/pawn shop route and pay $700-1000+ for an M1 but unless you have the tools to guage the barrel wear, and are knowledgeble about the mechanics of the rifle, its a crapshoot and you could get burned.
BTW: stay away from garands with 'Century" receivers. They are much cheaper than a US model Garand, but they are junk.



