During WWII a German general visited Switzerland:
"Your country is so small. You have only 500,000 men in your military. What would you do if we were to invade with a million soldiers?"
To which the Swiss general replied: "We would shoot twice and go home."
This is the gun the Swiss military would have been carrying at the time.
Okay, so for those of you not familiar with any gun not featured in C.O.D. here is an example of one of the best bolt action military rifles never used in combat.
The Schmidt Rubin Karabiner 31 (K-31). Manfactured between 1933 - 1958. Mine was made in 1949 based on the date on the stock and the serial number.
It has an adjustable site from 100 yards (meters? prolly) to 1500. Straight pull bolt, about a 3 pound trigger, and insane accuracy for a rifle 63 years old.
Another really cool point about K-31's: you can pick them up for under $300 and out shoot your buddies all day long with iron sights! I have no problem hitting a 16" steel plate at 600 yards with this rifle.
On the other hand, ammo runs about $1 a round unless you load your own (if you need reloading data for K31's, PM me) then you can get it down to factory 223 prices (0.40 - 0.50 per round). They fire a .308 bullet, and some say the 7.5x55 GP11 had a big influence on the modern 308. Not sure if that's true, but at least bullets are easy to come by for reloading.
Anyhow, figured some of the other gun geeks here may appreciate an old beauty like this. (borrowed the dogs' couch for the background)
Full length with bolt open
Bolt closed
Swiss crest found on every K31
And a video I found on the K-31 that shows it in action:
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wia2HjTqnZQ]Swiss K31 7.5x55mm Rifle "Glamor" video - YouTube[/ame]
For those really diggin' the rifle:
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NHTwmTqYKPk]K-31 Bolt Action Swiss Army Rifle in 7.5x55mm - YouTube[/ame]
Anybody else into old guns? I'd like to get a 30-40 Krag someday and more Swiss rifles.
"Your country is so small. You have only 500,000 men in your military. What would you do if we were to invade with a million soldiers?"
To which the Swiss general replied: "We would shoot twice and go home."
This is the gun the Swiss military would have been carrying at the time.
Okay, so for those of you not familiar with any gun not featured in C.O.D. here is an example of one of the best bolt action military rifles never used in combat.
The Schmidt Rubin Karabiner 31 (K-31). Manfactured between 1933 - 1958. Mine was made in 1949 based on the date on the stock and the serial number.
It has an adjustable site from 100 yards (meters? prolly) to 1500. Straight pull bolt, about a 3 pound trigger, and insane accuracy for a rifle 63 years old.
Another really cool point about K-31's: you can pick them up for under $300 and out shoot your buddies all day long with iron sights! I have no problem hitting a 16" steel plate at 600 yards with this rifle.
On the other hand, ammo runs about $1 a round unless you load your own (if you need reloading data for K31's, PM me) then you can get it down to factory 223 prices (0.40 - 0.50 per round). They fire a .308 bullet, and some say the 7.5x55 GP11 had a big influence on the modern 308. Not sure if that's true, but at least bullets are easy to come by for reloading.
Anyhow, figured some of the other gun geeks here may appreciate an old beauty like this. (borrowed the dogs' couch for the background)


Full length with bolt open

Bolt closed

Swiss crest found on every K31

And a video I found on the K-31 that shows it in action:
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wia2HjTqnZQ]Swiss K31 7.5x55mm Rifle "Glamor" video - YouTube[/ame]
For those really diggin' the rifle:
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NHTwmTqYKPk]K-31 Bolt Action Swiss Army Rifle in 7.5x55mm - YouTube[/ame]
Anybody else into old guns? I'd like to get a 30-40 Krag someday and more Swiss rifles.