Should You Use a Sporterized Military Rifle for Hunting Season?

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 31 ต.ค. 2023
  • Back in the day, rifles were a huge tool to help put food on the table, Harvest fur from animals, and keep away varmint. Today, less and less Americans are using the rifle for survival in our civilized society here in the U.S.A. Sporterized rifles were used heavily for hunting and survival from the 1970's and back to at least the 1800's. These sporter rifles were seen as a tool. These days, old military rifles are seen as collectible. The history, movies, video games, and other collector sentiment has driven the values way high. So should you use a sporter rifle to hunt deer with? My son used a sporterized Lee Enfield to go deer hunting for his first time. Are they still viable today? Should you restore them back to original configuration? We answer your questions in this video.
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    ⚒️If you want to put a sporter back to original, here's Where to look for parts:
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    Ebay
    Gun Broker
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    All weapons portrayed in this video were handled in a safe manner. Multiple safety precautions were in place before, during and after filming. Seek out weapons familiarization training before handling any weapon. Collectibles and antiques are known as alternative assets in the financial world. We are not financial advisors nor do we give legal financial advice, please talk to your CPA. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. Information contained in the content is based from personal experience, opinion, or available on the internet. Gun enthusiasts should read the owners manual and consult a firearms expert to fully understand the weapon. These historical relics and products commonly available in stores all across the United States. Our videos are for entertainment purposes.

ความคิดเห็น • 49

  • @behindenemylines3361

    “Back in day” when milsurps were cheap, it made sense. Now with the cost of milsurps, it makes no sense, unless it is so f-ed up - then that’s ok.

  • @donwyoming1936

    Americans would go nuts with the hundreds of thousands of sporterized military rifles in Europe. It's amazing how cheap & common they are over the pond. 🤠

  • @daveypenland6527

    I am old school I still hunt with military surplus rifles its what I cut my teeth on back in the 70s and 80s they are still reliable even after all these years

  • @jvleasure

    The people wailing and gnashing their teeth over what my grandpa's generation did to what at the time was cheap surplus junk need to find a new hobby, like Beanie Babies... I'd never sporterize a rifle TODAY, but there is often an art to the old 20s-60s sport jobs. I had an 03 Mk1 with a scope once. Scope and mount appeared in a 1949 hunting magazine. Those by themselves were worth what i paid for it. It was a really well done piece.

  • @behindenemylines3361

    I have bought two sporterized rifles, one was a 1903a3, which I restored. The other was a 30-40 Kraig. It was was sporterized really nice, so I left it along. I am happy with it.

  • @kentsanders7127

    Swords into plowshares and spears into pruning hooks. History remembered but brought forth to peaceful purposes. I guess I'm ok with that.

  • @RandoCalrisiann

    Ive got a great Remington 1903 of some variant that was sportarized by someone who knew what they were doing. It is excellent how it is. Ill just use it as is.

  • @gjprieur7744

    the why is rather simple. After every conflict you have a military force which has disbanded and often has gained possession or the enemy small arms. During a conflict, there is less demand and supply of sporting small arms (this includes ammunition). In business terms, its supply and demand. Moreover, former military members are familiar with their indigenous surplus and captured surplus so that is also a consideration. The victorious forces are often awash with captured weapons that are are not part of their standard issue (again, over supply which drives down price). More importantly, the victorious military force does not want the enemy small arms, so this increases the quantity and to some extent the quality of the small arms chosen for "civilian modification". You also have the question of potential clients who are usually citizens of the victorious nations who have had relatives and friends killed by these small arms, not good optics. In short, that is why the small arms of the vanquished find their way to the armorers benches for modification.

  • @leeeng478

    I have built and sporterized five 98 Mausers. FUN! I rechambered all but one. All 98 mauserr 8x57 to 30-06, 257 Roberts, 7x57, 308 and one I left in the original barrel because it shined like glass. They are all drilled and tapped for scope new glass bedded stocks done by a reputable gunsmith. I did the barrel work, cut and crowned short chambered barrels, which I finished reamed. I intalled new safeties and timney triggers and a either bent the bolts or cut and re welded the bolt handles. 100 million Mausers were made they are not going extinct. I keep and collect quality curios but some guns make for fun projects. The 98 is strong and in my comfort zone. My 7x57 shoots nice 0.73 groups at 100 yards, 20 inch barrel really nice. I found the best way to blue these rifle is to parkerize and paint. I have done three this way. My 257 Roberts I blued at the Susanvile gunsmithe school while taking summer courses. I really like sporterizing rifles it is not a big huge mess like rebuilding a motor or changing a transmission. The rifle parts all fit in one neat drawer. I think a Carcano rebarreled in the original chamber with a twenty inch barrel and a mannlicher stock would be a nice fast brush gun. One thing this guy got wrong is real quality sporterized 98 Mausers go for bank because they are outstanding artistic quality rebuilds.

  • @brendanliamgill99

    There's also in my opinion. 2 versions of sporterizeing theres works of art with beautiful Engraving and custom wood stocks. Then theres the looks like someone left there uncle alone with a 50 pack a beer, a chop saw and a dremmel tool. Art is one thing. A gun thats not even safe to fire because they drilled into the chamber in there attempt to drill and tap a non butchered k98k in 2017. The gunsmith ended up with it and still wanted 600$ because of some "dirty birds"

  • @JeepOutdoors

    Used a sporterized 7.7 arisaka to take a big buck yesterday

  • @beardedrancher

    Beautiful hunting story.

  • @MaxWray111

    If so many hadn't been sporterized, the original ones wouldn't be worth as much as they are now. That being said, I hunted this year with a sporterized Mauser K98 in 7x57. The checkering on the cut down original stock looks amateurish, but the bedding of the action and rebarreling look professionally done. The barrel is also free-floating. It came equipped with a Leupold M8 6X scope from a private seller for 450. And it is definitely more accurate than I am.

  • @trwsandford

    I love the surplus stuff. I’d never sporterize one myself. That said, I’d buy a nice one!

  • @Clean97gti

    I'm kinda on the post-bubba'd part of this equation. One of my milsurps is a Yugo Mauser M98/48. It's a really nice rifle built on a German action with a German bolt. But it's had its Yugo crest ground off with what looks like a carbide burr operated by someone with Parkinson's disease. The bluing is little more than a memory in some spots with some pitting on the barrel. Other markings are still present, but the stock has been cut down, finish stripped down, non-matching wood blocks glued on and poorly shaped to extend length of pull. This one is the one I'm debating simply going full on into the conversion to a sporting rifle. I might leave it in 8mm Mauser although the bore isn't the cleanest thing in the world. It still groups OK, but the rifling has definitely seen better days. So if there was a reason to change it to a more common caliber in the USA, that's a good excuse. Get a decent stock for it and fit it with a rail for optics. It needs far too much work to restore and it's not all that valuable right now. The action is long enough to handle almost anything I'd reasonably expect to shoot, but .308 and 6.5 Creedmoor seem like good bets. Maybe .277 Sig Fury if it catches on as a sporting cartridge...which is funny because you'd think someone would have come up with a .308 necked down to .277 before Sig did it a couple years ago. I don't need the crazy high pressure one.

  • @jasonlemuel5078

    To me Historically yes cause the military rifle during those time is almost the same or not to different from as a civilian hunting rifle in some cases it mostly performs the same and instead spending something new that prices tremendously higher than a "used surplus rifle" that performs relatively the same you don't need to be told which one is more feasible

  • @russwoodward8251

    Yup. I pretty much share your opinions Dan. Thanks for the pics of the Enfield and the video. Cool stuff.

  • @chris.3711

    I have a decent looking Krag that has been sporterized. Yeah, if you're looking for a cheap hunting rifle, it's not the worst idea in the world. But the kicker is that you can buy an intro hunting rifle for cheaper than a sporter gun these days.

  • @behindenemylines3361

    There’s a difference between sporterized vs bubba’d

  • @mistergrendel32

    What’s with the mouth area of one of the deer pictures blacked out?