Gun Porn Wednesday

Ben Lamb

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Aug 6, 2010
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Location
Cedar, MI
Taking the next 10-14 days off to go chase speed goats, elk & deer from one border of the state to the other.

Pronghorn come first, and so does this:

Pre-64 (1959 manufacture) Winchester Model 70 Featherweight. It's factory original except the recoil pad and front site (which popped off on a rocky slope when I dropped it a few years ago). Scope is a Leupold VX2 3x9. This rifle drives tacks. It loves 165s, and I just found a load for 180's that it dumps into about a .5 inch group at 100 yards. This rifle was a gift from an old fly-fishing friend who had it gifted to him by an old Pronghorn hunter. Neither of them had children who wanted the rifle.
 

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Sounds like the perfect tool for the one rifle guy. I can respect that.
 
I would assume so, clearly long action.

I think Winchester introduced their "short" action in the late 70's, not sure on date... All Pre-64s M70s were "long" action, from 375H&H to 308. The action was designed around the '06 length cartridges, and either modified for the long mags such as 300 & 375 H&H with a notch cut in the rear bridge, or a spacer and bolt stop for the short rounds. The action is about 1/8 in shorter than the current long action M70s, so one can bubba a new long action stock onto the old pre-64 action.

You have great friends Ben, and nice taste in rifles.
 
I think Winchester introduced their "short" action in the late 70's, not sure on date... All Pre-64s M70s were "long" action, from 375H&H to 308. The action was designed around the '06 length cartridges, and either modified for the long mags such as 300 & 375 H&H with a notch cut in the rear bridge, or a spacer and bolt stop for the short rounds. The action is about 1/8 in shorter than the current long action M70s, so one can bubba a new long action stock onto the old pre-64 action.

Not sure if they changed the action length, but Winchester did chamber the pre '64 for both .243 and .308. I could have sworn that they had a short action variant that was released in the mid 50's to run these two... Anyone?

Do we have a Gun Guru?
 
Love those Winchester classic action featherweights. That stock looks a little different from mine. Seems like most I have seen ( definitely post 64 ) have this type of stock style. Any idea what year they switched?

Your classic winchester is in amazing shape, best of luck on your hunts!
 

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ERSS, they went from cut checkering to pressed in 64, along with eliminating the claw extractor and few other handcrafted touches. Winchester wanted to compete with the Remington 700 & the only way they could think of was to reduce the quality of materials and eliminate skilled labor. :)

Not sure when they went back to the classic design, with the new stock (Schnable forend, cut checkering ,etc).
 
To stay in theme a mod 70 fwt 270 wsm
270wsm.jpg

a 61 ,od 70 fwt 270 win
pre64m70.jpg
 
Good looking rigs. I'll play the Mod 70 game. Son carries the featherweight 7x57 that I did at his age and mine is a Pre-64 264 Westerner.

IMG_3775_Small.jpg
 
A model 70 in 7mm Mauser is one of those quintessential game guns. Fantastic combo,

Love seeing all the Winchesters!
 
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