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BSA (Read 3904 times)
Mal
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Location: Adelaide SOUTH AUSTRALIA
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th
, 2012
Re: BSA
Reply #15 -
Sep 15
th
, 2022 at 1:40am
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Apart from the s/s Sportsman,I have 2 BSA cadets,one in 357 mag,the other .30/222 Wildcat, just sold my MGCGT so I am familiar with the Lucas smoke! Albeit never had any electrical issues with the 69 C ,plenty with a 1976 Rover PB6 V8,the 72 PB6 V8 I had prior was a pearler, a beaut little sedan.My first car was a 51 MGTD,next a 62 Healy Sprite 2 great little pommy cars.
Cheers Mal in au.
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oneatatime
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Location: Rocky Mountains
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th
, 2011
Re: BSA
Reply #16 -
Sep 15
th
, 2022 at 11:51am
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I had a very late MGA coupe. Its chief distinction was that I spent more time under it than in it;-) Thanks to Lucas, its 12 volt system consisted of 2 6-volt batteries, one behind each seat. It also had a self-canceling trafficator.
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gnoahhh
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Location: Gaithersburg, MD
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Re: BSA
Reply #17 -
Sep 15
th
, 2022 at 12:35pm
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At the risk of driving us further into the weeds, the MGA had two 6-volts for weight savings, and weight distribution - because British 12 volt batteries at the time were bigger than what we are familiar with. Of course there was always the starting handle found in the boot - I had several MGA's, including a Twin Cam and a MkII Deluxe and on a dare would start them via the handle. Works a treat, just make sure the emergency brake is set and the transmission's in neutral....
(Actually that long handled crank was for turning the engine over when setting points/timing. But you could start the car with it.)
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Nero
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Re: BSA
Reply #18 -
Sep 15
th
, 2022 at 11:42pm
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The cars from the fifties and sixties were a love affair.
You were one with your car knowing every nut and bolt.
To change the clutch on my MG Varitone you had to remove the radiator, take the engine off its mounts and move it forward and down at the rear to get gearbox clearance from the firewall. As for my three carb Healey that's another story. My new Honda HRV RS all I ever do is fill up the water bottle for the windscreen. No bonding at all.
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gnoahhh
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Re: BSA
Reply #19 -
Sep 16
th
, 2022 at 9:37am
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How true about bonding with the machine. Understanding and thinking about what's happening under the hood has been replaced by machines that think for us, escorting us mindlessly into The Brave New World. Freeing us from one form of bondage but enslaving us in another.
No Varitones in my past. Had a MG ZA Magnette that never got down off the jackstands until someone wanted it worse than I did. Took my Healey tri-carb on my first honeymoon in 1977. 2500 miles of blissful motoring, which sure wasn't a harbinger of what was to come in the marriage itself.
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Fred Boulton
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th
, 2007
Re: BSA
Reply #20 -
Sep 16
th
, 2022 at 11:42am
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A few small martinis; 310. 200Sherwood and 22LR. The ;ower one is acually a Greener, the rest BSA.
Fred
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gnoahhh
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Re: BSA
Reply #21 -
Sep 16
th
, 2022 at 12:21pm
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Happiness is a swell Martini, no matter its form. Those are some dandies.
Mine, .357 Maximum Cadet. Color case hardened receiver, 26" tapered octagon barrel, Parker-Hale sight. Gotta do something about the exaggerated hook on the lever though.
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The only target sights I've seen on BSA Martinis of all stripes have been Parker-Hale's. Was that brand the only one BSA employed at the factory, so to speak, or were there others?
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Fred Boulton
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Re: BSA
Reply #22 -
Sep 17
th
, 2022 at 7:14am
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The top three in the martini picture that I posted all have BSA number 8 sights. Yours has a Parker Hale number seven, Your rifle appears to be a model 12---not a Cadet. The cadet rifle is a model 4b.
Fred
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gnoahhh
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Re: BSA
Reply #23 -
Sep 17
th
, 2022 at 8:14am
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No, it's a Cadet, with P-H 7A sight, replete with Commonwealth of Australia markings and the friendly kangaroo on top of the receiver.
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Nero
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Re: BSA
Reply #24 -
Sep 17
th
, 2022 at 3:55pm
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Those kangaroo's are not that friendly as one of them killed a bloke in Australia last week.
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gnoahhh
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Re: BSA
Reply #25 -
Sep 17
th
, 2022 at 5:07pm
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Oh my. Perhaps a different outcome had he been carrying a Kangaroo Rifle? (What my Dad called them, no matter my rejoinders.)
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Grumpy gumpy
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Location: australia
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th
, 2016
Re: BSA
Reply #26 -
Sep 17
th
, 2022 at 7:10pm
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Dozens of people are put in hospital each year by kangaroos, either through being attacked by them or through vehicular road accidents caused by them. A friend hit one and it came through the windscreen and proceeded to kick the crap out of him, put him in hospital for a couple of weeks, hundred odd stitches and missing teeth, cuts and abrasions etc
Gumpy
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gnoahhh
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Re: BSA
Reply #27 -
Sep 19
th
, 2022 at 9:36am
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Cbashooter pointed out a historical anecdote I wasn't aware of: the .357 Maximum equals the .35-30 Maynard. Case dimensions are identical. Coincidence, or Remington/Ruger didn't think ".35-30 Maynard" would cut it in the modern shooting world? Perhaps Bill Ruger owned a .35-30 Maynard and used his platform to generate a ready supply of good modern brass to feed it with?
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Cbashooter
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, 2018
Re: BSA
Reply #28 -
Sep 19
th
, 2022 at 10:23am
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35-30 base just a bit bigger but it's waaaay cooler to have a Maynard than a maximum!
My former small bore coach used to shoot long range black powder and that's what he called his 357 maximum for a short range load. I always thought it was cool that his barrel was marked 35-30 Maynard
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beltfed
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th
, 2007
Re: BSA
Reply #29 -
Sep 19
th
, 2022 at 10:27am
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One of my BSA Martini's is a Cadet.
It was imported back in the late 1950s
by Klein's Sporting Goods, Chicago.
Mine is one of them which was bored and
chambered to 357 Magnum. Back then, as a kid, I
saw the advertising and drooled over them, but could not
afford the 29.95 mail order price.
I finally found my 357 Cadet at a gun show about 6 years ago. it has about a 12 twist rifling.
I find it shoots very well with the Lyman 357315 round nose bullet over a case of 4227
I did think about rechambering to 357 Maxi,
but find it is just fine a shooter as is 357Mag.
beltfed/arnie
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