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A tale of four carbines

Posted: Fri Jun 26, 2020 3:12 pm
by Mac66
I've been doing my annual sight in of my guns at my hunting property range and have done all the ARs and AKs and other "battle" rifles. I'm now down to my more traditional style non hunting rifles. I kinda like the more traditional rifles in that they are generally lower profile and more discrete, kind of 'sleepers' if you will.

So this is what I have....

Top to bottom: Kel Tec SU (Sport Utility) 16, Saiga Sporter, Ruger Mini 30, M1 Carbine

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The SU16 is my latest addition to the group and it quickly becoming my favorite. It is light weight 4.5lbs unloaded (just over 5 with the scope), 223/556 caliber, and takes AR mags. It is also the most accurate of the 4 rifles shown. It folds in half and holds 2 10 round which came with it or one 30 round mag in the stock. The forearm also folds out into a bipod which is cool but about worthless and It has a piston gas system. They make them in 4 versions with different length barrels, different stocks etc. Mine is the B model which has a light 16" barrel.

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The Saiga Sporter in 7.62x39 is a Russian built AK. When they first came out they weren't very popular (thus cheap) since they were awkward, heavy, clumsy. Kind of a bastardized AK with a long extended mushy trigger and conventional plastic sporter stock. I cut holes in the forearm for ventilation. I bought the X39, one in 308 and a Saiga 12. I converted the 308 and 12 to pistol grip versions but kept the x39 as a sporter. It came with a couple 10 round mags which are easily converted to 15 rounders by cutting the follower legs off by an inch. It it also fairly easy to convert to take AK mags by installing a feed ramp/bullet guide. This one is the most accurate of my AKs though the trigger is horrible and the sights suck. It is also fairly heavy at 6.8 lbs unloaded. It does have a scope rail on the side but you need a mount to go with it. I have several mounts but I've not found one that I liked that sits low enough. It has a 16" bbl but the OAL is longer than the rest because the receiver is so long. I do have a trigger kit for it in case I ever want to convert it but I have no intention to at this point. It is really just a fun blaster and is worth a helluva lot more now than what I paid for it.

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I have the Mini 30 because I took a police tactical course in the early 1980s with an issued Mini 14. I liked the Mini a lot but had no real use for one though they were fairly inexpensive and quite popular back in the day. When the Mini 30 "Ranch Rifle" came out I bought one to use as a brush gun for hunting. This was a long time before hi-cap mags for 30s became available. I killed three deer with it over the years and my son killed one with it but was never impressed with the 7.62x39 on deer. Despite what people say It is nowhere near as good as the 30-30 so I retired it from hunting. It was never my primary hunting rifle anyway so no big loss. It is however a handy carbine. Mine has a 20" bbl and has a Tech Sight rear sight I put on it after taking off the scope I used for hunting. The Tech Sight really changes it into a viable service type rifle. It shoots 4 moa which is service rifle accurate. The negative with the 30 is that hi-cap mags weren't available for a long time and they are quite expensive. I do have a couple after market hi-cap mags that work sometimes but they are finicky. The positive is that I have a lot of x39 ammo stashed away and mine will shoot steel case and brass case ammo just fine and it's always been reliable. It is the heaviest of the 4 at 7.1 lbs unloaded with the sling. I don't really use it for anything these days. I take it out and shoot it to confirm it's zero once year. My old eyes have trouble seeing the sights these days so I will probably put a scope back on it for next year. It uses proprietary rings but I bought a set when I bought the rifle.

The M1 Carbine is an historic and iconic rifle. Mine is a Winchester made in October of 1944. Not sure if it ever saw combat. The guy I bought it from about 20 years ago had it in a Choate folder. I'm not sure he knew what he had and I got it at a pretty good price. It has all matching and correct numbers/codes which means it was arsenal rebuilt after the war. It came with an original sling, oiler, two original magazines and a stock mag pouch dated 1943 but he didn't have or keep the original stock. I replaced the folder with a surplus stock. I've since added 5 or 6 Korean 15 round mags. I confess that I just shot it for the first time recently. I've been hesitant to shoot it.

This carbine weighs 6lbs unloaded w/sling and has a 20" bbl. There are better rifles and cartridges available to use for self defense but it would do in a pinch. I do have some soft point ammo for it. I could always put it back in the Choate folder if needed. I keep it because the value will just keep going up.

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Shooting them...

The SU16 has mild recoil but no flash hider. It does have a cross bolt safety located behind the trigger. It is easy to manipulate and if you've ever shot a pump action shotgun or a 22 rifle you have used this safety before. Not much of a learning process. Yeah, it ain't an AR but so what? The mag release is pretty much AR however. I've been playing with a red dot and a 3-9x scope for longer ranges. Recently shot it at 150 out to 200 yards using 62 gr Wolf steel case ammo. Shooting prone w/o a sling using my elbows as a rest I was able to put 6 rounds on a steel silhouette at 200 yards. I did just order a sling from Kel tec the only kit available for it.

6 out of 10 hits on this target isn't outstanding but considering how I was shooting it's ok. I was getting tired, the sun was in my eyes, I'm old, blah, blah, blah, yadda, yadda. ;)

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The Saiga is heavy and awkward, but man can it shoot. Very little recoil but big muzzle flash out of 16" bbl. The sporter didn't come with a flash hider/compensator. The sights are typical AK, i.e. rudimentary and my old eyes can't see the front sight very well anymore but it shoots pretty well. It's also fun to shoot. I would have no problem defending myself with it. Going to start looking for a scope mount for it to really wring it out.

Off a table with my elbows as a rest...
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Off hand @ 25 yards. Yeah, it shoots to the left. I forgot to bring my AK sight pusher.
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I had forgotten how much fun the MIni 30 is to shoot. Again, very mild recoil due to the weight and gas system. I was shooting steel cased Wolf ammo. I have 2 aftermarket 30 round mags, a 15 rounders and three factory 5 rounders. All worked fine. Shooting off a table using my elbows as a rest it give suitable accuracy through I was vertically stringing my shots due to breathing. Going to put the scope back on it. Again, I would have no issue defending myself with it.

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What can you say about the 30 Carbine? I confess I had been hesitant in shooting mine because I was afraid it wouldn't work and I'd be disappointed. My fears were allayed when I ran mag after mag through it using both original GI mags and Korean ones. Very little recoil and a fun little gun to shoot. It was quite accurate off the table using my elbows.

Off the bench
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Off hand

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So what are they good for?

Well all four have appreciated in value over what I paid for them, in some cases 2-4X more so there's that. I don't think any of them is a good as an AR for self defense but all could serve that function well. Considering how unlikely one is going to use a pistol, let alone a rifle for self defense it is kind of a moot point. If I lived in a state where the AR/AK are banned (I don't) any of these would be a good choice.

The Mini 30 was my favorite until I got the SU16 but only because the SU takes AR mags. The SU16 at between $400-500 retail (if you can find one) is the most economical choice and uses AR mags.

You can't buy a Saiga Sporter anymore and even if you find one (most have been converted to AK mode) they command huge prices. The Mini 14/30 is readily available for around $700+. I have a friend (former Marine recon) who has about 10 Mini 14s, most of them with folding stocks set up as survival rifles. I may have to try and talk him out of one. Like I need another rifle... :roll:

There are some commercial (Plainfield & Auto Ordinance come to mind) M1 Carbines available but they are quite expensive as are surplus ones. You might be able to find an old commercial M1 carbine (Universal, Iver Johnson among others made them) but finding one that works is the challenge.

BTW, the white tags on the guns is how I keep track of them. I put the make, model, serial #, when it was made and/or aquired on one side. The last time I sighted it in on the other.

Re: A tale of four carbines

Posted: Fri Jun 26, 2020 6:48 pm
by David
Excellent write up and pics. If I ever get up your way we're definitely going to have to go shooting together!

Re: A tale of four carbines

Posted: Sun Jun 28, 2020 8:13 pm
by Bob
There is a lot of love for Mini 30's if you have a good stock of Ruger mags.

All very nice examples of how to not be tactical - but effective. I'd actually love a Mini-14 if they were not that expensive. At $550 - they couldn't keep them on the shelves. At $750....get an AR. Don't understand how they do business.

Re: A tale of four carbines

Posted: Mon Jun 29, 2020 8:10 am
by Mac66
Bob wrote: Sun Jun 28, 2020 8:13 pm There is a lot of love for Mini 30's if you have a good stock of Ruger mags.

All very nice examples of how to not be tactical - but effective. I'd actually love a Mini-14 if they were not that expensive. At $550 - they couldn't keep them on the shelves. At $750....get an AR. Don't understand how they do business.
I agree about the Mini 14/30. I guess they are about the only option available in the AR banned states except for the SU16 which are cheaper but hard to find. Minis are certainly more robust than the SU.

I think I paid $325/dealer price for my 30 back in the day. That was long before 20 round mags were available and I still have trouble coughing up $30-40 ea for factory mags. Because of that I've never really taken it seriously for self defense, it was a intended and used as a back up hunting rifle.

The SU16 is all plastic and it ugly as sin but has some advantages. It is very light, reasonably priced, uses 223/556 ammo, takes AR mags, has an integral rail on the top for scope mounting, is piston operated. It folds in half for easy storage and discrete carry and has a folding bipod front handguards. The bipod is pretty much useless as it changes point of impact when deployed. Otherwise it is reasonably accurate. Probably wouldn't take it to war but for light duty, self defense, etc it would do fine.

It's too bad they stopped importing the Saiga as a sporter. It too is ugly as sin, is heavy and unwieldy but it is well made (for an AK), reliable, accurate and can be converted to take AK mags. Even if they did still import them they would be cost prohibitive, compared to an AR these days.

Modern M1 carbines are crazy expensive offered by Auto Ordinance and I think Inland, maybe Plainfield. The cartridge is anemic and expensive compared to 223/556 & 7.62x39

Re: A tale of four carbines

Posted: Mon Jun 29, 2020 8:31 am
by tom mac
Modern M1 carbines are crazy expensive offered by Auto Ordinance and I think Inland, maybe Plainfield. The cartridge is anemic and expensive

But easy to reload as like a straight walled pistol round. 14cents per

BTW, good story.... enjoyed the carbines

Re: A tale of four carbines

Posted: Mon Jun 29, 2020 12:04 pm
by Mac66
tom mac wrote: Mon Jun 29, 2020 8:31 am Modern M1 carbines are crazy expensive offered by Auto Ordinance and I think Inland, maybe Plainfield. The cartridge is anemic and expensive

But easy to reload as like a straight walled pistol round. 14cents per

BTW, good story.... enjoyed the carbines
I've collecting m1 carb ammo for a couple years a little at a time which is one of the reasons I hadn't shot it before. Last fall one of the online vendors had a good deal on Federal power shok SPs that had been sold to Israel and then repatriated as surplus. Federal was also offering a $5/box rebate for Power Shok ammo at the time and it qualified. I bought 500 rounds. It remains the cheapest 30 carb ammo I've ever found. I've been meaning to reload 30 carb but haven't picked up any dies yet. I have brass, bullets, primers and powder...guess I'd better get on the stick.

Re: A tale of four carbines

Posted: Mon Jun 29, 2020 1:07 pm
by JDH
When you were hunting deer with the Mini did you stay with the 123 grain bullets? With the 123s I never got full penetration. Once I stepped up to the 150 PSP loads full penetration with a exit wound large enough to leave a track-able blood trail.

Re: A tale of four carbines

Posted: Mon Jun 29, 2020 2:01 pm
by Mac66
JDH wrote: Mon Jun 29, 2020 1:07 pm When you were hunting deer with the Mini did you stay with the 123 grain bullets? With the 123s I never got full penetration. Once I stepped up to the 150 PSP loads full penetration with a exit wound large enough to leave a track-able blood trail.
Yeah, I had trouble with the 123 gr bullets. Same issue with penetration. I had several instances where they broke up on the front shoulder. There weren't many other options available at the time. I did try some heavier Wolf soft points (154 gr?) but I never shot a deer with one. I suppose I should try your loads but I have so many other deer rifles in better calibers that I don't need to use it anymore. On the other hand it would be nice to know it would reliably kill deer

Re: A tale of four carbines

Posted: Mon Jun 29, 2020 2:22 pm
by aerynsun
Mac66 wrote: Mon Jun 29, 2020 8:10 am
Modern M1 carbines are crazy expensive offered by Auto Ordinance and I think Inland, maybe Plainfield. The cartridge is anemic and expensive compared to 223/556 & 7.62x39
I love the M1 action.

You are correct that the prices are crazy vs what is available in modern ARs. When you look at the parts of a M1 vs a AR you have to wonder why the M1 is so expensive.

The 30 carbine round is a very good round for a truck gun. But not as good as 223/556 & 7.62x39.

The 30 carbine was designed as an officer's rifle and non front line troops. In spite of that many front line troops liked them.

If there was a modern M1 with a synthetic stock and 30 carbine ammo at prices equal to 5.56; I'd buy one.

Re: A tale of four carbines

Posted: Mon Jun 29, 2020 5:04 pm
by Mac66
aerynsun wrote: Mon Jun 29, 2020 2:22 pm
Mac66 wrote: Mon Jun 29, 2020 8:10 am
Modern M1 carbines are crazy expensive offered by Auto Ordinance and I think Inland, maybe Plainfield. The cartridge is anemic and expensive compared to 223/556 & 7.62x39
I love the M1 action.

You are correct that the prices are crazy vs what is available in modern ARs. When you look at the parts of a M1 vs a AR you have to wonder why the M1 is so expensive.

The 30 carbine round is a very good round for a truck gun. But not as good as 223/556 & 7.62x39.

The 30 carbine was designed as an officer's rifle and non front line troops. In spite of that many front line troops liked them.

If there was a modern M1 with a synthetic stock and 30 carbine ammo at prices equal to 5.56; I'd buy one.
I'd guess that the M1 is more expensive because it's harder/more time consuming to machine steel than aluminum. Everybody's making AR parts so there's lots of competition, very few are making carbine parts.

A Mini 14 in 300BO is about as close as you can get to a M1 Carbine these days. And even though they are $750 that is still about half the price of a modern made M1 Carbine.

And I just looked, Fulton Armory, Inland and Auto Ordinance are all making M1 Carbs. MSRP of the FA starts around $1700, Inland around $1100 and AO around $900.