Who truly loves the olden, classical, bygone, earliest models of firearms, over recent models. I honestly love the earliest by a long shot, pun intended.
Era in time would be post WW1 to 1990.
Remington Model 30 - and its variants.
Who truly loves the olden, classical, bygone, earliest models of firearms, over recent models. I honestly love the earliest by a long shot, pun intended.
Era in time would be post WW1 to 1990.
The reason many modern day rifles work is because they don’t get worked. Synthetic stocks, good synthetic stocks, have existed since the 70’s. They aren’t new.
Remington got the ball rollin' on synthetic stocks for the masses back in '59 with the Nylon 66. I've had a few over the years & they've not failed me.
That young man that retreated to Alaska took much game and once a moose with this same rimfire rifle.
Too bad he poisoned himself.
Not sure which young man ye be referring to, but many folks in the north regions swore by the 66's for keeping meat in the larder.
Childress as my brain awakens.
"Into the Wild" a true life drama in book and then Hollywood movie.
Here's a an early 50s 721 that now lives with me. The checkered BDL version are few in numbers.
In keeping with the classic rifle theme, I scoped it with a Leupold M8 4x in Weaver R&B.
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Now that's what I'm talking about. The epitome of a classic make, model and cartridge! The 300 H&H Magnum, the first of it's kind, is the essence of the 300 magnums.......there is nothing to dislike about this fabulous combination of rifle and cartridge.
Agreed... the rings on the other hand....
I am also a Blued steel and nice wood character. While I see the virtue in having at least one
stainless/synthetic rifle, I lean heavily to the "Classic" offerings, sans plastic stocks.
Hit the lottery on the one below. Dave.
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Well, they are pretty "classic". Pretty sure the majority of gun owners have had them at one time or another, They were cheap and they worked. - dan
I had many of them, but I wouldn't put them on a rifle today.
Ironically, Ruger rifles are the weaver rings of rifles.




























