- Location
- Blaster land, Okanagan BC
As someone who started with a sporter enfield and then moved to a Savage Axis, I have to disagree. The Savage is much better to run optics on, its far lighter (my rifle with a full mag, sling, 1 piece rail, optic, rings is 8lbs 3.5oz) and the trigger is easier to make decent (as in stock form, both suck for their own reasons). One problem I did have was I couldn't move the scope that came with the rifle far enough back for me, but a 1-piece rail fixed that issue. It also shoots sub-MOA with handloads.
Long story short, scoping either a Mosin or an Enfield doesn't work well with their military stocks, which are designed for use with iron sights. They tend to have very poor cheek welds with an optic due to that. Some people are good with iron sights, Others are good without a decent cheek weld, I am neither of those things though so for me, going to a Savage Axis was a notable step up.
Agree with you on the pros with the savage, it’s just more modern of a rifle. That said I’d still take my sported LB no.4 or a mosin that shot well with commercial hunting rounds, that is totally based on personal preference and not which is a better rifle for hunting. I love hiking around the bush with a piece of Canadian history, filling the freezer with it last year was such a nostalgic thing for me.
I have a rail and optic on my Enfield and I found it dead easy to mount and while it’s not a true cheek weld it works well for me, but what works for me won’t work for all. I also don’t mind irons out to 100y so hunting with a mosin would be fine provided is was accurately shooting, one of these days I’d like to still hunt with my scoped svt40. Talk about heavy, I would hate to carry it through the bush for long periods of time, not so bad without the rail and scope but with it all...





















































