I was thinking for using it for vintage deer and coyote hunting what do you think.

Thanks for the link! I thought of Hemingway when I saw the word Mannlicher!bulldog1935 wrote:Margaret used one of those on Francis
http://www.duke.edu/~ss57/macomber.pdf
not a very good choice for lions
beautiful rifle - congratulations.
AFAIK, this one was an absolute STEAL at that price:Pete44ru wrote:[Went back this morning to get the stock number and contact the seller only to find it was already gone.]
Yep - That's what usually happens, about 99% of the times a diamond isn't "jumped on" , when found.![]()
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Good point about care in loading the rotary magazine. I have also found that I cannot use neck sizing only die (my thought was to help preserve relatively scarce 6x54 brass). At least in my case, the expansion at the shoulder was just enough to preclude using the rotary magazine, even though the load was modest and the rounds chambered fine, so now full length resize, no problems. Great guns, love to carry them.John in MS wrote:There is NOTHING like one of the original Mannlicher Schoenauer carbines. They are truly made as well as Mercedes would like you to THINK they make their cars!! The machining,
fit, finish, etc. are off-the-charts superb. They also are not at all plentiful, and many have been beat up/butchered, so good specimens at a fair price are not easy to come by.
I've had the pleasure of shooting a 1903 carbine in 6.5x54 (with double-set triggers) and accuracy was excellent using Hornady's 160 gr. RNSP. It also had virtually no recoil... truly amazing. On paper, recoil "should" be about like a .30-30 Win. 94 -- basically same powder charge, essentially same bullet weight/velocity, but it was extremely mild -- like shooting a big .22. I dropped a sprinting wild hog with its ballistic twin, shot through the shoulder, and it fell instantly at the shot -- its chin dug a trench in the dirt. It literally didn't take another volitional step, just skidded to a halt. I still remember seeing the 2-3 foot dust plume kick up behind the hog and thinking "What the...??" as I didn't expect the slow, slender bullet to drop him like that. (About a 150 lb. boar.) Exit wound was small, but the pig didn't like it one little bit -- it expired like it was hit by lightning.
There is one little trick to loading for the original Mannlicher Schoenauers with the rotary
box mag that you need to know, if you will be handloading. The cartridges MUST be loaded
to correct (i.e., full) length or they will NOT feed from the magazine, as the bullet nose is what starts the process of camming the round out of the magazine. Due to the design of the magazine/feed ramp, if the cartridge is too short, you can push till the cows come home, and that round ain't going to exit the magazine. This is not a problem in my (limited) experience, but knowing about it will prevent some head scratching when you establish your cartridge OAL.