I've enjoyed reading Chuck Hawks's website from time to time, but he makes a comment about the Husqvarna HVA action that I think must be wrong in "The Finest Bolt Actions Ever Produced". He says a disadvantage of the Husky is "the lack of an external bolt release. (You remove the bolt by pressing down the receiver mounted pivoting ejector, which protrudes from the edge of the bolt face when the bolt is fully open.)" I believe he's referring to the HVA small ring Mauser action that Husqvarna adopted, in house, in the early 1950s after a few years of relying on FN-made Mauser 98 actions. The HVA action has of course always been well known in Canada, and thanks to Trade Ex we have even more now than were imported initially. Every one I've ever seen or handled has had a small, convenient, bolt release tab protruding from the stock on the left hand side of the action, a welcome change from the much larger one on the original Mauser 98 action. That's one improvement, and Husqvarna's similar change to the safety was another. I remember well when my Dad brought a brand new one home from Williams Lake, the big city if you lived in Alexis Creek, in 1966, the only new firearm he ever bought himself. The Hawks article is here: https://www.chuckhawks.com/finest_bolt_actions.htm My question, has anyone ever seen a Husqvarna rifle that (as he describes it) required you to push down on the ejector, at the edge of the bolt face, to get the bolt out? Or any rifle, come to think of it. Strange. Now I am wondering about the accuracy of everything else on that site.




















































