Southern Mountain RifleI will set my pride aside for a moment and ask,
for the love of God, what does SMR mean?
Southern Mountain RifleI will set my pride aside for a moment and ask,
for the love of God, what does SMR mean?
Thank you, Sir.Southern Mountain Rifle
Thank you much! That’s a 32 kibler, one of the old kits with the 46” barrel and boy she is a good shooter. The horn was a cheap junker I picked up along the road and decided to play around with. I think it turned out OK for my first attempt. It is a small horn so I use it with the 32.Great shooting MedicMike, squirrel hunting with my terrier and two grandsons is my intention this fall. Also can we get a better look at that horn, looks wonderful!
The size and shape if an aiming can have a dramatic effect on group size and location. Most shooters are not aware of that and don’t give it a second thought, to their detriment.Took my .45, cherry stocked SMR to the range today for the first shots, boy, what a great gun. Super fast ignition, no clatches in 30-40 shots, very easy to load . I did need to drift my rear sight a bit, and I did file down the front sight a bit, easy to do. I was shooting a .440 round ball, .012 wonder lubed patch and 45gr FFG. Nice load, little recoil and accurate.
All shots were off the bench. After sighting in at 25, I shot my last 5 shots at 50yds. I used a big black NMLRA 100yard target, and I could not center the front blade very well, first two went low. I then took a 4”x4” piece of white cardboard and stapled that over the black target.
Big difference, next three shots went right in the cardboard! Super gun.
Anyone who is considering one of Kibler SMR should just do it, you won’t be sorry.
“Aim small, miss small” is absolutely correct.The size and shape if an aiming can have a dramatic effect on group size and location. Most shooters are not aware of that and don’t give it a second thought, to their detriment.
Can apply to scoped rifles too.
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