Great rifles. I was on a pre-64 journey years ago but eventually I only kept two;
- first is a .300 H&H that I saw advertised locally as "an old Winchester, bolt action .300 rifle". Rifle had never had rings or a scope mounted and came with two boxes of Western cartridges. I believe only 8 rounds had been fired. Some dummy had mounted a huge, ugly recoil pad on it but it was/is a sweet rifle to carry and shoot. I replaced the pad with a solid, red, Winchester pad and have never tried to find an original or reproduction one. I don't load it hot but prefer to think of it as a Super .30, which is what the Brits often called the round. The long, 26" barrel just seems to handle better than it should and using Hornady 190 grain bullets and moderate loads, it has accounted for a couple moose and a few deer. I mostly use lighter calibers now but its great to have and to take out once in awhile.
- my second one was found as a .270 with a shortened barrel. I had Ron Smith make a replacement .338 barrel that matched the factory contour, including the rear sight barrel boss and had it chambered in .338-06 RCBS Improved. Its a sweet rifle and shoots well but while it was being built, I found the .300 mentioned above so have never hunted this rifle. I have listed it for sale a number of times but never any takers.
I use mostly Mauser 98 rifles now when using a bolt action but that .300 stands out as special and will stay with me for many more years. The pre-64 rifles are all wonderful rifles and all that I have had shot very well. Thanks for sharing the pics of your rifles Rod. They are classics.