I notice the two position "scope friendly" safety on the left side of the bolt - for a right handed shooter. Was something FN did, and also some Parker Hale done that way. Had read, by Don Heath, as right handed shooter, that he wanted the safety on left side - can operate without altering shooting grip of right hand. My Model 70's and others have safety on right side of bolt - did not ever see an issue for deer or elk hunting to flip safety to fire, then swing thumb around to complete the firing grip. As per Don Heath - apparently is times, at a different level of "playing", where that is enough delay between whether you walk away or are carried away. His opinion might have come from his early formation with Lee Enfield type rifles that he competed / trained with - safety is also on left side of bolt.
I notice the two position "scope friendly" safety on the left side of the bolt - for a right handed shooter. Was something FN did, and also some Parker Hale done that way. Had read, by Don Heath, as right handed shooter, that he wanted the safety on left side - can operate without altering shooting grip of right hand. My Model 70's and others have safety on right side of bolt - did not ever see an issue for deer or elk hunting to flip safety to fire, then swing thumb around to complete the firing grip. As per Don Heath - apparently is times, at a different level of "playing", where that is enough delay between whether you walk away or are carried away. His opinion might have come from his early formation with Lee Enfield type rifles that he competed / trained with - safety is also on left side of bolt.
I notice the two position "scope friendly" safety on the left side of the bolt - for a right handed shooter. Was something FN did, and also some Parker Hale done that way. Had read, by Don Heath, as right handed shooter, that he wanted the safety on left side - can operate without altering shooting grip of right hand. My Model 70's and others have safety on right side of bolt - did not ever see an issue for deer or elk hunting to flip safety to fire, then swing thumb around to complete the firing grip. As per Don Heath - apparently is times, at a different level of "playing", where that is enough delay between whether you walk away or are carried away. His opinion might have come from his early formation with Lee Enfield type rifles that he competed / trained with - safety is also on left side of bolt.
How does one shoot from field positions with their thumb on the right hand side “ barely touching” the stock? Seems impossible
i do not recall in my physical discussions around a lager with Don any particular with the safety. i do remember he added magazines detachable on his 9.3x62 and had sometimes a red dot on it.
Now you have me second guessing whether that was written by Don Heath, by Terry Weiland, by Pierre Van Der Waldt, or by someone else!! I was sure was in an article that Heath wrote about his time doing field testing with student Professional Hunters - to get their licence or not - was about the multiple ways he had witnessed about any kind of action to be screwed up under pressure - but now not finding that article either!!!
And, contrary to that, I do not recall any mention of a safety issue in writings by Finn Aargaard - he seems to be quite okay with the Model 70 Winchesters that he used.
I remember reading the article about the safeties but I think it might have been by Finn Aagaard? Could also have been Don Heath, I’m not that old but I don’t remember and can’t find it haha
I remember the author was concerned about backwards BRNO safeties and liked some guns I thought were a bit unusual because of the safety placement; maybe pushfeed steyrs? It was a fairly large sample of guys taking the PH test
Was aware that his Mauser made a sound when safety was released - so he aimed, pulled trigger, then fired the rifle by flipping the Mauser flag from "up" to "left". "Cajones", man! - big brass ones! He wrote that he had never tried to fire his Mauser like that before - invented the procedure on the spot!!




























