![]() By using the thinner recoil pad, the length-of-pull was not changed when the lace-on pad was added. I replaced it with a new 0.6" thick recoil pad and put another leather lace-on recoil pad on top of it to hide the fact that someone butchered the stock. It had a very old 1" thick rubber recoil pad on it. Evidently someone who owned the newer one in the past had the same problem. I put the leather lace-on recoil pad on the old one because a 270gr bullet at 2,160fps from a 6-1/4lb rifle with a curved steel buttplate was brutal. ![]() Pulling the rear one first to set the double triggers makes the front one a hair trigger. Pulling the front one is just about identical to the single trigger in the older one. The sight returns to its original position with springs and a ball bearing detent. The bolt is rotated up, then pulled back (hitting the peepsight which swings out of the way), the case is ejected, then the bolt is pushed forward (hitting the peepsight which swings out of the way), picking up and chambering the next cartridge. It is a short-stock, takedown model with a swinging Lyman reproduction sight and a single trigger. It is a conventional, full-length stock with a swinging-Lyman (Model 36) peepsight and double-set triggers. ![]() The top one is the new one (for me anyway). ![]() They are both M-1910 models in 9,5x57 MS caliber. Along with my old-old Mannlicher Schoenauer.
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