Re: Help With Shooting with m91/30
The Mosin is not hard to shoot, just different. I instruct it (as well as other surplus military rifles) as a CMP GSM Master Instructor.
Assuming you have a good barrel, they'll shoot quite well. But like I said, a bit different.
The bolt handle is odd compaired to other bolt guns, when you open it, the handle sticks straight up. Plus it sets farther from the rear then most. For any other bolt guns I teach "not to remove the gun from the shoulder when operating the bolt. BUT, I can't reach the bolt to work it without droping the stock from my shoulder.
Like other bolt guns, you don't operate the bolt by the numbers, (1 life, 2 pull back, etc etc) you use "ONE" smooth motion.
If you remember the game you played at kids, where your hands are out flat, palm up, and try to slap the hand of the other guy above you. That's the same motion (almost) you use in operating the bolt, palm up, in one smooth motion, rotate the hand which pulls the bolt back, the continue to roll the palm which pushes the bolt home and down.
This is accompolished by lots of dry fire, working the bolt. I know this is going to sound silly, but the best guy I've seen working the bolt on a mosin was a guy who would watch a vcr tape of All Quiet on the Western Front, over and over again, dry firing at the Germans as they came over the wall.
Start slow keeping it smooth until you get to where you can do it fast in one SMOOTH MOTION.
Loading is also different. Hard to push the five rounds in from the clip. What you want to do is set the clip in the clip guide, push down with your thumb while you pull up on the tip of the first round with your fore finger.
Again practice will make everything quick and smooth. Get 5 dummy rounds and practice loading. Pretty some you'll be almost as fast as loading from a stripper clip in a 1903 Springfield.
I like the mosin for offhand. The long barrel kinds of dampens movement.
Like I said, its learning to work the gun. It'll shoot for you.
Luckily, this can all be done without spending a great deal of money on ammo. Its better accomplished by dry firing.