250 savage

I got on a boat once to work as a cook for herring season and the first thing I found when I claimed a bunk was a P14 303 under the mattress. Left it on the boat after the 2 week season. Wasn't mine to take.

I was told by the engineer however, that the deceased owner of the boat (his father-in-law) had a basket case Savage 99 in 250 at home in pieces in a box. That really piqued my interest, but seeing as I didn't know the man or his family, I thought it was inappropriate to try to negotiate for the parts box. Could have been an interesting project.
 
My uncle still uses a 250 Winchester model 70 and I have seen him shot a pile of deer and yotes with it and this gun does a very fine job on both critters .I think it is a great round for the deer hunter that also hunts varments .not to loud very little recoil ,and a hell of a straight shooter .I have put the bug in his ear that I am next in line for this firearm ,Dutch
 
257 Roberts has advantage of handling a heavier bullet. Some 250-3000 riflings don't stabilize 117gr. bullets well. I prefer 257 to both 250 savage and .243 for that reason. Consider .257 to be a bit light on moose, although I did kill one with it before buying 30-06.
 
I have a 25/06 now for heavier bullets. I'm thinking about getting a 250 savage just for varmints with lighter bullets. This fall/winter I'm going to re barrel my 25/06 with a longer barrel. I've got over 1600 rounds thru it and it's starting to open up my groups
 
Picked up a dandy 99A (finally) from one of the posters above . Grandson whacked his first coyote with it over the holidays - he's left handed so it works well.

He mentioned it was a 'real nice little gun' and I reminded him whose truck it belonged in ��

Well! I don't know that I would have sold you that rifle, had I known you might use it to kill cuddly little yodel dogs!
I'm glad it's working for you; I had it a couple years and it stayed in the safe while I took my other .250's to the ball.
 
I have a mid 50's model 99eg in .250. Been in the family since it was new. Really want to try reloading for it but all the bad press about the 1-14 twist has me holding off.
If anyone has a good place to start as far as reloading goes I'm all ears....
 
I have a mid 50's model 99eg in .250. Been in the family since it was new. Really want to try reloading for it but all the bad press about the 1-14 twist has me holding off.
If anyone has a good place to start as far as reloading goes I'm all ears....

At your press...
 
Well! I don't know that I would have sold you that rifle, had I known you might use it to kill cuddly little yodel dogs!
I'm glad it's working for you; I had it a couple years and it stayed in the safe while I took my other .250's to the ball.

Sorry please don't tell Greenpeace ��

Seriously, very nice little gun, everything you said and some. Put a Leupold VXII, 2X7 on it . Sweet
 
I have a mid 50's model 99eg in .250. Been in the family since it was new. Really want to try reloading for it but all the bad press about the 1-14 twist has me holding off.
If anyone has a good place to start as far as reloading goes I'm all ears....

Personally I'd start with the Sierra 87 . I like Ramshot powders pretty good so I'd probably try Big Game first, then TAC . Guys with more experience probably have better options.
 
I have a mid 50's model 99eg in .250. Been in the family since it was new. Really want to try reloading for it but all the bad press about the 1-14 twist has me holding off.
What are you shooting in it now? Short for weight bullets will work better in a slow twist. RN bullets for example.
 
The old Dominion 100gr KKSP's /IMR 3031would pretty much cloverleaf as well in a 99 I had.Any other 100gr spire pointed bullet was 2" or better with a 1-14" twist.Good enough for hunting.The 87gr Hornadys/IMR 4895 worked fine for deer just stay away from shoulders and go for broadside double lung shots.Harold
 
I managed to get my hands on a mod 77 RSI in the little 25, but haven't done too much with it...........it does seem to be particularly finicky, haven't found a suitable load for it yet.

It's the stainless one in the middle.



It's nice that Ruger is still making these stainless/walnut full-stock rifles. (Prophet still has one FS in .30-06).
The older silver stainless was gorgeous; too bad that they now use that ugly darkgrey-coloured stainless finish on them.
Why not give the customer a choice: 'a work of art vs. drab practicality'
 
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I have a mid 50's model 99eg in .250. Been in the family since it was new. Really want to try reloading for it but all the bad press about the 1-14 twist has me holding off.
If anyone has a good place to start as far as reloading goes I'm all ears....

I have a 1921 1899 in .250 and a 1947 EG and have shot half-MOA groups with both. No secret to reloading, either.
I used Reloder 15 powder, and these bullets: Remington 100-grain Core-Lokt PSP, Sierra 100-grain PSP (NOT the boattail!!!) and Speer 100-grain flat base.
Book max is 36 grains of Reloder 15; I started lower and worked up to 35.5 grains in the 1899 and 35.0 grains in the 99EG.

Lots of people will tell you 87-grainers shoot more accurately but not in my rifles; best I could get was 1.25 inches at 100 yards with 87 Hornadys.

Both my rifles used Leupold 2-7X33 scopes. If your rifle is not drilled and tapped, I know a guy who makes no-drill, no-tap 99 and 1899 bases that use Leupold-style rings. Well worth the $200.00, IMHO.

Don't know if you'll recheck this thread so will PM too.
 
What are you shooting in it now? Short for weight bullets will work better in a slow twist. RN bullets for example.

We've just been shooting factory Remington 100gr's and it really doesn't get out often.

I have a 1921 1899 in .250 and a 1947 EG and have shot half-MOA groups with both. No secret to reloading, either.
I used Reloder 15 powder, and these bullets: Remington 100-grain Core-Lokt PSP, Sierra 100-grain PSP (NOT the boattail!!!) and Speer 100-grain flat base.
Book max is 36 grains of Reloder 15; I started lower and worked up to 35.5 grains in the 1899 and 35.0 grains in the 99EG.

Lots of people will tell you 87-grainers shoot more accurately but not in my rifles; best I could get was 1.25 inches at 100 yards with 87 Hornadys.

Both my rifles used Leupold 2-7X33 scopes. If your rifle is not drilled and tapped, I know a guy who makes no-drill, no-tap 99 and 1899 bases that use Leupold-style rings. Well worth the $200.00, IMHO.

Don't know if you'll recheck this thread so will PM too.

That's good info KC, Thanks. No scope on my .250sav 99 but I have a Nikon 1x4 on my .300sav 99, Guess I should throw one on for load development...
 
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