I know in theory that Remington made the #5 in 8mm Lebel. but I've never seen one. But did they make them in 7.62 Russian? Remington made Moisin-Nagants for the Czarist gov't., but did they make rollers? If you have one in Lebel, it should be OK for .30/40, as long as you stick to loads OK for Krags. The roller is probably tougher. Now I can tell my roller story. Serious collectors, grab your hankies. Back in 1954, I dragged home an 1870 Springfield Navy roller in .50-70. It had been cut down to carbine length. But I wanted a shotgun to take pheasant hunting. My grandfather was a machinist & blacksmith of the old school. In 1954, .50-70 brass was non-existant, but you could buy .410s at the local gas station and .410s were within my lawn mowing & paper route budget. So my grandfather, no gunsmith, reamed out the breech end of the barrel and brazed in a piece of pipe, into which I was supposed to stick a .410 shell. The pipe had a longitudinal seam, but what the heck, those were only shotgun shells. The extractor no longer worked, so I was given a home-made screw-together combination cleaning rod and shell extractor and a small hammer to whack out the fired case. After a half dozen shots, the seam let go and the paper cartridge case ruptured. The gas cracked the thumb piece on the block (but I killed the pheasant). Grandfather looked at the broken thumb piece and said the cast metal had crystalized, so he drilled out both sides of the break, inserted a small steek pin and brazed the thumb piece back on the breech block. By that time, I had saved up enough to buy a 20 ga. Mossberg, so we never shot the repaired roller. Probably just as well.
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