versifier
07-23-2010, 02:06 PM
A few years ago I was down to the pawn shop looking for used DVD's and shooting the breeze with my friend who works there. An older woman comes into the shop with a clunky looking ancient Savage bolt action rifle. She said it had been her late husband's "loaner rifle", that none of their kids wanted it, and she just wanted to unload it for some quick cash. It was in .30-30, looked to be 50's vintage, and it came with two mags.
At the time, I was trying to find a cast bullet that my .30-30 Contender Carbine would shoot really well at 100yds. I was trying for MOA, but 2MOA was the best I had been able to achieve and I had already gone through a dozen different moulds. I had owned a Rem788 in .30-30 years back and I was still kicking myself for selling it. The cartridge has always been a favorite of mine, especially for cast bullets. I kept one ear open as I thumbed trhough racks of DVD's.
After allowing as how it wasn't likely to sell anytime soon as it wasn't anyone's idea of an "in demand" deer rifle so the market for it was extremely limited, in a few minutes he had her down to a figure I would have frankly been embarrassed to offer, but I am no salesman. She agreed, said it was just what her son had told her to expect, he gave her cash, and she walked out.
He looks over at me and says "Great. I know I'm going to regret this. I just bought a .30-30 bolt. Know anyone looking for a dinosaur?" He started to get out the logbook to record it. Knowing I had nothing to lose, I dug into my wallet and put down what he had paid her plus his standard $20 fee for an FFL transfer. He said "You've got to be kidding." I said "Well, if you want to, it can sit on your rack gathering dust until we're both senile, and I promise to renew my offer yearly, but that's my top offer. You want to get rid of it now or not?" He hemmed and he hawed for a few minutes, but I had him right over a barrel and he knew it and the rifle came home with me after we finished the paperwork. He's made plenty of money off of me over the years and I send him a lot of business, so both of us were satisfied.
About a month later I got a deal on another Contender Carbine barrel, this one a Custom Shop job in .35Rem. I have yet to find a load that this one won't shoot at least MOA, some half that, so without hesitation I sold my .30-30 barrel at a nice profit to a guy who just had to have it. I think this .35's one of the most accurate Contender barrels I have ever owned, so naturally I dropped everything to start trying all of my different .35cal moulds in it and the Savage moved to the back burner.
Well, with one thing and another, and a move across the state, it sat in my safe for the next several years gathering dust. This January there was four feet of snow on the ground and I wanted an inside project (I do the bulk of my rifle loading mid winter when the range is snowed in and I can only shoot handguns). The .35 had "the load" all worked up and five hundred rounds loaded of its favorite recipe. I had finally finished testing my dozen .30cal moulds in both my deer rifles and had the perfect loads worked up for them with hundreds of rounds loaded for each, so my thoughts returned to the old .30-30. I dug out a few hundred cases and prepped them, then I checked my stash of cast hunting bullets and chose my two favorites to start, a 150gr (45 2.1 design, group buy) and my old reliable Lyman 311041 that drops around 185gr with my hunting alloy (straight WW's).
I finally got to the range with it yesterday afternoon. I set up target at 50yds and tried five different loads with 311041 and IMR4895. The ancient buckhorn sights leave a lot to be desired, but the first shots were barely on the paper so I decided not to mess with the sights (if it ain't broke, don't fix it) and to just use slightly bigger targets. There were five different loads on the ladder I was testing and I had ten rounds of each, enough for two groups apiece. As much as I hate buckhorn sights, I am beginning to like the little rifle. The largest group was just over 2", the smallest about 1.5". Eccept for minor changes in POI as I went up in charge increments, you would think I had ten groups shot with the same load instead of two each with five loads they were so consistant. It's a little early in the testing to tell yet, but it looks like it's accurate enough to warrant the hassle of putting a scope on it for 100yd testing. God alone knows where I will find a mount, so I guess that's my next step after I finish testing both bullets with three powders at 50. I'm sure I can rig something up and I seem to remember having a mount for a m110 somewhere in my parts box. I bet the screw holes will line up.
To be continued....
I have a few thoughts about bolt actions and rimmed cartridges. Although not exactly a marriage made in heaven, some of them work really well. SMLE's have always fascinated me because they were reliable enough to be the Britts' choice for half a century. My old 788 fed just as smoothly and was a real tack driver. This Savage has a personality though. One of the mags has some feeding issues that I will have to work out but the other functions just fine. (I learned the hard way years ago what happens if you don't pay careful attention to those rims when you load the mags or you can really jam things up thoroughly.) This one is a bit sloppy and fumbly to run compared to other bolt guns, and you really have to pay attention to what you're doing when you work the bolt, but I think that after I have fired a few hundred rounds through it I can cycle it without thinking about it and taking my eyes off the target. Smooth feeding it will never be, but it will I think make a decent loaner rifle for me as it had for its last owner.
If nothing else, it will keep me busy for the next month testing everything I have loaded for its preliminary evaluation. I just like having a .30-30 around anyway, and it's nice to have a loaner that won't break my heart if something happens to it in teenage hands. It will do what it was designed to do and no amount of field abuse could make it any uglier. ;)
At the time, I was trying to find a cast bullet that my .30-30 Contender Carbine would shoot really well at 100yds. I was trying for MOA, but 2MOA was the best I had been able to achieve and I had already gone through a dozen different moulds. I had owned a Rem788 in .30-30 years back and I was still kicking myself for selling it. The cartridge has always been a favorite of mine, especially for cast bullets. I kept one ear open as I thumbed trhough racks of DVD's.
After allowing as how it wasn't likely to sell anytime soon as it wasn't anyone's idea of an "in demand" deer rifle so the market for it was extremely limited, in a few minutes he had her down to a figure I would have frankly been embarrassed to offer, but I am no salesman. She agreed, said it was just what her son had told her to expect, he gave her cash, and she walked out.
He looks over at me and says "Great. I know I'm going to regret this. I just bought a .30-30 bolt. Know anyone looking for a dinosaur?" He started to get out the logbook to record it. Knowing I had nothing to lose, I dug into my wallet and put down what he had paid her plus his standard $20 fee for an FFL transfer. He said "You've got to be kidding." I said "Well, if you want to, it can sit on your rack gathering dust until we're both senile, and I promise to renew my offer yearly, but that's my top offer. You want to get rid of it now or not?" He hemmed and he hawed for a few minutes, but I had him right over a barrel and he knew it and the rifle came home with me after we finished the paperwork. He's made plenty of money off of me over the years and I send him a lot of business, so both of us were satisfied.
About a month later I got a deal on another Contender Carbine barrel, this one a Custom Shop job in .35Rem. I have yet to find a load that this one won't shoot at least MOA, some half that, so without hesitation I sold my .30-30 barrel at a nice profit to a guy who just had to have it. I think this .35's one of the most accurate Contender barrels I have ever owned, so naturally I dropped everything to start trying all of my different .35cal moulds in it and the Savage moved to the back burner.
Well, with one thing and another, and a move across the state, it sat in my safe for the next several years gathering dust. This January there was four feet of snow on the ground and I wanted an inside project (I do the bulk of my rifle loading mid winter when the range is snowed in and I can only shoot handguns). The .35 had "the load" all worked up and five hundred rounds loaded of its favorite recipe. I had finally finished testing my dozen .30cal moulds in both my deer rifles and had the perfect loads worked up for them with hundreds of rounds loaded for each, so my thoughts returned to the old .30-30. I dug out a few hundred cases and prepped them, then I checked my stash of cast hunting bullets and chose my two favorites to start, a 150gr (45 2.1 design, group buy) and my old reliable Lyman 311041 that drops around 185gr with my hunting alloy (straight WW's).
I finally got to the range with it yesterday afternoon. I set up target at 50yds and tried five different loads with 311041 and IMR4895. The ancient buckhorn sights leave a lot to be desired, but the first shots were barely on the paper so I decided not to mess with the sights (if it ain't broke, don't fix it) and to just use slightly bigger targets. There were five different loads on the ladder I was testing and I had ten rounds of each, enough for two groups apiece. As much as I hate buckhorn sights, I am beginning to like the little rifle. The largest group was just over 2", the smallest about 1.5". Eccept for minor changes in POI as I went up in charge increments, you would think I had ten groups shot with the same load instead of two each with five loads they were so consistant. It's a little early in the testing to tell yet, but it looks like it's accurate enough to warrant the hassle of putting a scope on it for 100yd testing. God alone knows where I will find a mount, so I guess that's my next step after I finish testing both bullets with three powders at 50. I'm sure I can rig something up and I seem to remember having a mount for a m110 somewhere in my parts box. I bet the screw holes will line up.
To be continued....
I have a few thoughts about bolt actions and rimmed cartridges. Although not exactly a marriage made in heaven, some of them work really well. SMLE's have always fascinated me because they were reliable enough to be the Britts' choice for half a century. My old 788 fed just as smoothly and was a real tack driver. This Savage has a personality though. One of the mags has some feeding issues that I will have to work out but the other functions just fine. (I learned the hard way years ago what happens if you don't pay careful attention to those rims when you load the mags or you can really jam things up thoroughly.) This one is a bit sloppy and fumbly to run compared to other bolt guns, and you really have to pay attention to what you're doing when you work the bolt, but I think that after I have fired a few hundred rounds through it I can cycle it without thinking about it and taking my eyes off the target. Smooth feeding it will never be, but it will I think make a decent loaner rifle for me as it had for its last owner.
If nothing else, it will keep me busy for the next month testing everything I have loaded for its preliminary evaluation. I just like having a .30-30 around anyway, and it's nice to have a loaner that won't break my heart if something happens to it in teenage hands. It will do what it was designed to do and no amount of field abuse could make it any uglier. ;)