I had a CVA Frontier Carbine with a 24" barrel. Nice light well balanced gun. Shot fantastic. Everyone made fun of it until I won 2 events that day. Wish I still had it.
I prefer short rifles for hunting in the brush. And of the five long guns that I have , I have shorten three of then. Short long guns are really handy.I'm thinking about those guns with say 24" barrels or less. Examples might include;
* Traditions Buckskinner Carbine
* T/C PA Hunter Carbine
* T/C White Mtn Carbine
* Lyman Deerstalker
* Others?
I've been shooting a T/C PA Hunter Carbine for years, I can usually hit clay pigeons at 50 yards offhand about 90% of the time. I find it a really handy gun. I recently had a T/C White Mtn Carbine .50 rebored to .54 for round ball shooting any I having a pretty good time learning it.
I'm curious to know who else out there likes these short guns and what your experience with them might have been.
I feel exactly like that about the Smith carbine. They’re not high powered rifles but that big bullet is going to be hard to stop and they’re easy to manage.Since visiting Gettysburg I have acquired a renewed interest in my 1859 Sharps carbine. I bought one of the new heeled bullet molds to try. Making up paper cartridges with it is much easier than the old tie on Christmas tree bullet. Accuracy with this rifle is rather impressive and I have taken it deer hunting a few times. Short, handy and it offers good power with it's 500 grain bullet. What's not to like.
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