A Score Sheet from a Swedish Military Rifle Shoot
This sheet was sent to me by my friend in Sweden. His name appears on the sheet, Karl-Erik Hallberg. He is a private citizen and a reservist in the Swedish Army. When I was there in 1975 He had a K-pist (Swedish "K" sub-machine-pistol) and one or two mausers in the house.

The match was fired on 20-May-89. It appears to be a 200m Rifle Match in which 10 shots were fired at two bullseye targets and 5 shots at 2 silhouette targets.

Maximum 10 points per hit, plus a 20 point bonus for hitting both silhouettes. Time limit 90 seconds for the 10 shot string and 45 seconds for the 5 shot string.

There is no indication of the actual size of the targets, especially the rings. [see below]

Note, the impacts are recorded on the targets.

K-E shot a 163 out of 170! This is a Silver Medal Score, whatever that means. It appears as thought the score is recorded wrong in the P1, P2 boxes near the bottom.

The score sheet is set up for Bolt Rifle (gev&aumlr) at 200m, auto karbine AK (AK4 is a 7.62 Nato G3, AK5 is a 5.56 Nato FNC), Kpist (sub-gun) at 100m or pistol at 25m. Here is some info on the AK-5!

The hand written note at the bottom was added recently by him when he sent me the sheet in response to a photo of me and my M96! "Skoj att du skjutar bra Bill" ("Great that you're shooting good Bill")

Other notes that I removed mentioned Rifle at 300m and Biathlon with 10km Ski trip followed by 50m shooting with the K-pist!



Mats Persson provided the following back-up info:

I also read your page about the Swedish military score card.
Here's the size of the targets;
The bullseye target is called "Precisionstavla" (it's the
international 300 m target).
The diameter of the 10-ring is 0,1 m
The diameter of the 5-ring is 0,6 m
The diameter of the 1-ring is 1 m
The 5-ring and inwards is black, rest is white.
The silhouette is called "Tredjedelsfigur"
The size is 0,52 x 0,48 m, the colour is green or brown with a
bright face, background is white.



I'm sure this is not his, but this is what the M1896 Swedish Mauser looks like!

Here is the AK-5.
Here's a Pamphlet from Sweden on Rifle shooting
last modified by Bill Poole on 25-Oct-98, 11-sep-00, ©.
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