Husqvarna Sporting Rifles #### - ALL MODELS!!!

8x57 is so underrated now a day and with up to date pressure and bullets it is one great all around cartridge!
200gn accubond going somewhere around 2575fps will do the job on everything up here!
Not really man you see the deer are evolving!. There getting tougher and are getting superpowers!. You now need a new state of the art magnum just to take them down!.
 
8x57 is so underrated now a day and with up to date pressure and bullets it is one great all around cartridge!
200gn accubond going somewhere around 2575fps will do the job on everything up here!
There aren't any flies on the Hornady Interlock 195 grain bullets either, and both are available at Intersurplus.
 
8x57 is so underrated now a day and with up to date pressure and bullets it is one great all around cartridge!
200gn accubond going somewhere around 2575fps will do the job on everything up here!
So true, another one that has been a bit neglected lately has been the 7 x 57. 6.5 Creed did it's best to irradicate the 6.5 x 55, and the 9.3 x 62 is gaining traction. Great calibers proven by history.
 
There aren't any flies on the Hornady Interlock 195 grain bullets either, and both are available at Intersurplus.
One and done with the 8x57 195gr interlock at 2570 fps out of a 22 inch barrel at 209 yards. Young bull didn't make it 20 yards before toppling over in seconds. Perfect performance. Lungs were petrified. Bullet found on the offside. No meat damage.
 

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One and done with the 8x57 195gr interlock at 2570 fps out of a 22 inch barrel at 209 yards. Young bull didn't make it 20 yards before toppling over in seconds. Perfect performance. Lungs were petrified. Bullet found on the offside. No meat damage.
The 195 interlock sure is a great bullet for the 8x57. Congrats on the bull and the fine table fare.
 
To troll and get everyone's attention: a cheesy cellphone picture taken under workbench flourescent lights in my basement:

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My friend/gunsmith made that rifle for me as he ventured into stockmaking from scratch about 50 years into his gunsmithing career. It was just fitting drop in stocks prior to that - better late than never, and he quickly got very good at it. The original rifle was a Mannlicher stocked Husky in 30-06, and I already have enough 30-06 rifles including a Husky, my first Husqvarna purchased in the early 1970s. So it's now a .35 Whelan with a one piece Mannlicher stock with nicer lines than it originally had with the original two piece stock in my opinion.

(I was tempted to have it be a .35 Newton, but resisted the temptation as my Husqvarna .358 Norma Magnum Husky is now telling me I'm getting too old and frail to shrug off that level of recoil in rifles that light)

The only thing from that the original rifle that was used was the receiver and action; the stock, barrel, floorplate and triggerguard, buttplate, stock cap, etc were set aside. The bolt was modified to be similar in shape to the Mannlicher-Styre version to replace the original round ball and the foreend cap was fabricated from scratch. A Mauser steel triggerguard/floorplate was used rather than the alloy on the original rifle (thank you Baribel). Mounts are my favorites, Cone-Trol and I sourced a like-now Leopold 3-9 Compact with standard crosshairs, no duplex.

And it shoots (as rifles he builds always do)! The initial load of 4064 and the Barnes 200 gr. TTSX I threw together as soon as I got it home to at least get it sighted in to go hunting, punched out that one inch group at the top of that target while producing 2800 fps. That was off my jacket and a piece of wood; I was in such a hurry I forgot my benchrest bags. I saw that, declared load develop was complete (thankfully, given the price of bullets like Barnes these days), and have been hunting with it ever since.

Anyways... now that I have your attention: I had the rifle back to his place a couple of weeks ago to visit and have him do some fine tuning on the cartridge feeding; mating the Mauser triggerguard/floorplate to the receiver didn't go as perfectly as he planned.

He did get it sorted out in short order, but after doing so and looking at his work back in his hands, my friend/gunsmith just told me he has decided he could build an even nicer resulting rifle if he did the same thing a second time. And I said "I'm in!"

Sooo... does anybody have a spare action laying around i.e. the 4000, 5000, 1600 series like the Husky series and this Mannlicher (which appears to be an identical action) that they're interested in selling at a reasonable price? The same slide side safety?

I don't need the triggerguard/floorplate parts as this one will also be getting a Mauser in replacement that can be blued, rather than the original alloy.

I started looking at the rifles currently offered for sale at Intersurplus - pretty nice prices! But I'd prefer not to buy a fully functional complete rifle and make it completely dysfunctional simply to get just the action from the rifle.

The easiest option is to just give him this rifle to re-stock again as all the metalwork is done. But then I won't have my 35 Whelan to use while he's doing all of that - he takes off for the warmer climates now when winter arrives, so projects get put on hold when he's away from his shop.

Anyways; exploring my alternatives here. Might as well ask at the same time if anyone has one of the leaf sights and ramp front sights kicking around in a parts box as well - he modified the iron sights when he built the rifle in order to be able to use the open sights with the scope removed from the bases.

Anyways; thanks for looking. Some of you may notice that I've been in several Gunputz forums the last two days sourcing parts for him to have a second go at building this rifle.

Time to head out for the evening hunt... elk season is close to closing and I haven't seen much up until now.
 
Anyone know where I may be able to pick up a trigger guard for a 1900? I bought a rifle from Tradex several years ago and it has a crack on one side of the trigger slot, just seeing if the option may exist to replace it. I did try InterSurplus but never had any luck.
 
Anyone know where I may be able to pick up a trigger guard for a 1900? I bought a rifle from Tradex several years ago and it has a crack on one side of the trigger slot, just seeing if the option may exist to replace it. I did try InterSurplus but never had any luck.
Is it steel? If so, it would be nothing to tig weld.
 
no such luck, it is an alloy one.
If the alloy is zinc, that's SOL... sort of. If it's aluminimum...um you could TIG weld it in AC.

If it's zinc, you should be able to braise it. Cambodian Tire sells a Map-Ox kit with numerous sample brazing rods. Not as strong as welding, but should hold. To test if it is zinc, scratch the surface on a part that's not visible and put a drop of strong 10% pickling vinegar or muriatic acid on it. If it fizzes, it's zinc. Wash it off quickly with cold water. When braising, fix it in a vise or clamp, and put a wet cloth over the part not being braised.

EDIT: Muriatic acid is better, especially if the alloy contains both Zinc and luminnimum. To check if it does contain Al or is an alloy with mostly Al, see if it reacts with an alkali, like drano.
 
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Hey guys, recent lover of Swedish rifles here. I recently bought what appears to be a Husqvarna 1600/1640 in .308 Win. that I would like to identify but I am suspicious that it has been modified with a new barrel (good work was done).

- The barrel has no markings of any kind, and it doesn't appear there were ever sights on it.
- The barrel is stepped at the chamber area, whereas most Husqvarnas are tapered from what I can find.
- It has the Nitro stamp under the action, but other than that I can't identify it other then recognizing it's a Husqvarna action.
 

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Hey guys, recent lover of Swedish rifles here. I recently bought what appears to be a Husqvarna 1600/1640 in .308 Win. that I would like to identify but I am suspicious that it has been modified with a new barrel (good work was done).

- The barrel has no markings of any kind, and it doesn't appear there were ever sights on it.
- The barrel is stepped at the chamber area, whereas most Husqvarnas are tapered from what I can find.
- It has the Nitro stamp under the action, but other than that I can't identify it other then recognizing it's a Husqvarna action.
Check under the front scope mount. It should have the Husqvarna Vapenfabriek logo. That would prove it's a HVA rather than a Carl Gustav or other.

The action should be serialized, but that may be covered by the stock. That should narrow down the year of manufacture.

And congrats on becoming another HVA addict.
 
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Check under the front scope mount. It should have the Husqvarna Vapenfabriek logo. That would prove it's a HVA rather than a Carl Gustav or other.

The action should be serialized, but that may be covered by the stock. That should narrow down the year of manufacture.

And congrats on becoming another HVA addict.
I removed the action from the stock and there are no markings anywhere on it or the bolt. I was surprised. Apparently it’s a Husqvarna but it seems .308s are rare from what I can find? I also don’t think this is the original stock because the barrel contour is totally different and has been bedded to fit. Nice rifle either way
 

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Hey all, I’m wondering if anyone knows where I can find a resource for identifying the date of manufacture for a Husqvarna 6.5x55 Mauser with the serial number 681695?
I bought the rifle as a teenager and used it to hunt deer quite successfully for half a dozen seasons. Just got back into shooting after a twenty year hiatus and the old gun still works great. It’s obviously been sporterized but still has the machining to attach a bayonet. Would be interested in knowing more about its history.
 
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Hey guys, recent lover of Swedish rifles here. I recently bought what appears to be a Husqvarna 1600/1640 in .308 Win. that I would like to identify but I am suspicious that it has been modified with a new barrel (good work was done).

- The barrel has no markings of any kind, and it doesn't appear there were ever sights on it.
- The barrel is stepped at the chamber area, whereas most Husqvarnas are tapered from what I can find.
- It has the Nitro stamp under the action, but other than that I can't identify it other then recognizing it's a Husqvarna action.
Your rifle probably started as a 3000 Crown Grade or a 1640 MC and had the barrel replaced, the stock was also worked on, as per the rosewood fore end noses were squared, the round ones were plastic, not rosewood.
There should have the SN electro-penciled under the bolt lever. The serial and proof (NITRO) was initially stamped on the left side of the barrel.
 
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