I figure with the cost of a new/used Trapper it'd be cheaper to build one
I'll give Ellwodd Epps a call![]()
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Tell it to him. He felt secure at a hair over 250 yards! He was dead wrong.........![]()
IMO anything past 300 yds isn't hunting; it's shooting.
I see no reason for it to get locked, except maybe you do not like being the lonely voice in this thread.Surely it will get locked down.
There you go! Gtrussel can voice his own opinion without the dark cloud of impending lock-down over his head!In a list of twenty random cals,The 30-30 would be the last one picked by me.You can shovel snow with a spoon also.I own four 30-30s all purchased in a moment of weakness.
As H4895 says, it's just not as "manly" as it used to be. You need to be launching a fireball that rivals the Apollo and missing twice as hard to have any chance of bringing home game. Even if you're an 11 year old, shooting at close (I should say normal) range.
Flinch your way to success!![]()
Gosh ding it, I think you were referring to my post and you got your powder's mixed up. I am H4831!
One has to be very careful and not get H4895 when he wants H4831!
Thanks for agreeing.
Yeah right. I wondered about that myself, IIRC, it is about $450 to make one, as it has to be a new bbl blank as it's not legal to shorten an existing bbl to that length.
Cavemen killed deer with spears and wooden arrows... 30-30 will do the job... .30-06, .308 etc will do it better.....
Probably more deer have been killed with a Winchester Model 94 levergun firing the .30-30 WCF cartridge than with any other firearm.
And if we are talking Canadian deer, lets not forgot the good old .303 British
.....................but thats a different 20+ pages of argument![]()
Just to point out some facts. Across northern Canada, a tremendous amout of game was shot in the depression years, pretty well ending at the end of WW2. Moose was the predominate game animal and the 30-30 was the predominate calibre, with virtually all being the Winchester 94. People talk about going into any crossroads store and being able to buy 30-30 ammunition.
The same was true of the rifles. Trading posts in the north would only have 94 30-30s and likely nothing else. The federal government sent 30-30 ammunition to the northern posts and it was distributed to the Natives by the RCMP.
In the boondock area on the fringe of northern settlement in SAskatchewan that I know about, the little general stores carried big game rifles. You could get exactly what you wanted, provided it was a Winchester 94 in 30-30 calibre that you wanted! Bush homesteaders and trappers shot game year around to provide themselves with meat. There were probably more 30-30 calibre rifles than all other calibres combined.
There were probably more 303 Savage around than there were 303 British, because the great numbers of Lee Enfields that flooded the country didn't come until several years after WW2, when hunting had reverted to organized with enforced hunting rules. Thus, the 303 British missed out on the great era of survival hunting.
Just to point out some facts. Across northern Canada, a tremendous amout of game was shot in the depression years, pretty well ending at the end of WW2. Moose was the predominate game animal and the 30-30 was the predominate calibre, with virtually all being the Winchester 94. People talk about going into any crossroads store and being able to buy 30-30 ammunition.
The same was true of the rifles. Trading posts in the north would only have 94 30-30s and likely nothing else. The federal government sent 30-30 ammunition to the northern posts and it was distributed to the Natives by the RCMP.
In the boondock area on the fringe of northern settlement in SAskatchewan that I know about, the little general stores carried big game rifles. You could get exactly what you wanted, provided it was a Winchester 94 in 30-30 calibre that you wanted! Bush homesteaders and trappers shot game year around to provide themselves with meat. There were probably more 30-30 calibre rifles than all other calibres combined.
There were probably more 303 Savage around than there were 303 British, because the great numbers of Lee Enfields that flooded the country didn't come until several years after WW2, when hunting had reverted to organized with enforced hunting rules. Thus, the 303 British missed out on the great era of survival hunting.