How many of you have had or wanted a Gorgeous Vintage Rifle

Do your other still have the metal butt plates. Worthy to check out if they have that barrel harmonics adjustment screw. My two vintage Winchesters, a model 70 and model 54, both have them when using different bullets and loads it is the final fine tuning. Take note of where it is set if you remove the stock,,,and do remember, those Winchesters have a third screw holding the action in the stock.
Pay attention to tension in that screw too.
The other 3 all have the stock metal butt plates. The 300wm is the only one I own that came factory with a rubber recoil pad. It’s the westerner model. They are all bone stock users.
 
I had something go wrong reloading, once just once, It was with my 280 Remington model 700 mountain rifle. I had to beat the bolt open with a piece of wood. The primer turned into a plating on the bolt face. I was safe, the gun undamaged. The model 700 is maybe the strongest rifle action ever made
 
I couldn't care less about "vintage" rifles. The ones I kill with are my concern. Thanks. mtmuley
Funny story, I went to NWT abut 10 years ago on a sheep, moose and caribou hunt. Took my go to rifle, a Rem 700 BDL in 300 RUM. Have been using this same rifle for almost all my hunts sine i purchased it somewhere around 1999. After all the hunters get situated one of guides tells us to grab our rifles and few rounds and we will head to range to check zero. The guide looks to be about 18 yrs old. As we are walking down to the range the guide asks me what my rifle is. I tell him a Rem 700 in 300 RUM. He say "No, what is it made of?. I tell him that its walnut. He kind of shrugs his shoulders and says, "I think my dad has a gun made of that."

After I saw all the other hunters' rifles, I started to figure out why he was confused by a walnut stocked Rem 700 topped with a Leupold scope. All others were custom rifles with German glass. I was the only one that only needed 1 round to verify zero. But they were some awful nice rifles those folks had.
 
I'd like to just take a moment here to recognize that you prefer classic, vintage jeans.

So put that in your 700 & pull the (hopefully updated) trigger.
Had a wizard of a gunsmith touch my Remington triggers. Ain't skeered of them. Leave my jeans out of this. mtmuley
 
Funny story, I went to NWT abut 10 years ago on a sheep, moose and caribou hunt. Took my go to rifle, a Rem 700 BDL in 300 RUM. Have been using this same rifle for almost all my hunts sine i purchased it somewhere around 1999. After all the hunters get situated one of guides tells us to grab our rifles and few rounds and we will head to range to check zero. The guide looks to be about 18 yrs old. As we are walking down to the range the guide asks me what my rifle is. I tell him a Rem 700 in 300 RUM. He say "No, what is it made of?. I tell him that its walnut. He kind of shrugs his shoulders and says, "I think my dad has a gun made of that."

After I saw all the other hunters' rifles, I started to figure out why he was confused by a walnut stocked Rem 700 topped with a Leupold scope. All others were custom rifles with German glass. I was the only one that only needed 1 round to verify zero. But they were some awful nice rifles those folks had.
The most important thing for to bring hunting with me is patience. Same before I was retired. Bring patience to work with me. I always found it to be cheaper in the long run than bringing "rush" with me hunting, working, doing anything anywhere. I have done many things.

I have quite a few hammers, needed them. My favorites are a matched pair of 13 ounce "Stanley Master" hammers. One I bought at a tag sale in 1977. It came in a Stanley Box that said "but War Bonds" it is that WW2 old. Upon close examination it has features that are missing on newer hammers that same size. Ther bell on the front is really true. The claw ends are forged fine not thick and clumsy. The inner edges of the claws are forged sharp. Each one of these features provides a service and these hammers have handles with very defined swells at their ends.

I have a box of various hand planes, one being my fathers. Each one comes from an era when tools were graceful. Using them enhances my patience as patience was used in making them.

I like hunting with rifles that required patience to make them.

Beauty is important too. Before he died my gunsmith and close friend of over thirty years, gave me his knife, which his dad gave him when he was 12, and he also gave me his dad's knife.

It is a pre-WW2 Remington Bullet knife. A folding knife with two blades. It is worth easily over a $1,000. The backs of the blades are rounded. The jigged bone handles are perfectly fitted and the springs are so strong.

He did a work for me over three decades. He made me a Custom 35 Whelen. I passed it on to a young friend.

Jimmy was my gunsmiths name, He also made stocks out of beautiful wood, the kind with so much grain one can get lost or found looking into their patterns.

On this rifle he fully Fiber Glass bedded action and barrel to stabilize the stock for weather changes. He replaced the red plastic safety dot with a solid gold bead. Nice touch. The stock shows lots use but no abuse. He put African Safari iron sights on it and very early Talley removal scope mounts that re-zero to within a 1/4 inch.

The milling on those early Talley mounts with levers was so graceful, like my two hammers. Lately they look clumsy almost unfinished.

On rainy days I hunt with my Sako SS Finn light, that is just fine, but most of the time I hunt with one of two really well-made rifles in which art and function got married.

On either rifle a gentle scraping where my hands hold it would test positive for my DNA. My Safari grade Browning bolt action 30-06 with a French Walnut stock, I bought used 54 years ago. Still has the same Fixed 4X scope on it. Took my desert Ram with it 125 yards.

My deep pre-64 Model 70m in 270 I bought used 45 years ago. 54 plus 45 = 99 years.

Every hunter should have at least one rifle that has stories to tell him, that inspire patience, bring a smile to his face and be a reminder that the hunting experience goes so far beyond merely killing an animal.

MR
 
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