Just got a great deal on a new Savage Mk II

mh434

CGN Ultra frequent flyer
Rating - 95.5%
21   1   0
I've been looking for a really good deal (i.e., really cheap) on a bolt-action 22LR for general plinking & local, club-level silhouette shooting, for quite a while. I'm currently of extremely "limited means", so CZ's Annies, etc. were waaaay out of my price range.

While sporting around on the 'net, however, I came across a deal at Barton's Big Country that I thought looked good (the lowest price I've seen in years). It's listed as a "Savage Mk II FXP" .22LR, 10-shot, synthetic stock, no iron sights, with a fitted & boresighted 3-9X40 scope. It's one of those package deals, a non-accutrigger Mk II F model.

Price? $189.99 CDN. How about that, something I could actually afford! Even with shipping and taxes, the all-in price was $232.64.

Anyway, it just arrived, so here's the scoop so far:

First off, it has a slightly tapered barrel (not the heavy varmint barrel), but it's not the iron-sighted really skinny one, either (perfect for hunter-class shooting, where heavy barrels are not permitted). So far, so good.

Second, many have complained that, when new, Savage bolts can be scratchy and rough in vertical travel. This one ain't - smooth as glass, up & down with a fluid "click". No problem there.

Third, out-of-the-box non-Accutirggers are heavy & rough. True - it is heavy (probably 6 lbs or more) and was rough initially, but dry-firing (with a buffer under the tail of the bolt to prevent the firing pin from contacting anything) a few times has already made quite an improvement. As far as the heaviness is concerned, the fix for this is well-known, safe, simple and totally reliable. I'm going to bring mine down to just over 2 lbs., as per hunter-class rules, with the use of some brass shim stock I have laying around. Interestingly, out of the box, there is no creep whatsoever in the trigger, right out of the box. Total trigger travel is about 1 mm., without any mods or tuning.

Fourth, it has the synthetic stock, which doesn't bother me in the least. It feels good, fits me well, and I can do anything I want to it without worrying about messing up a beautiful piece of walnut or anything. I can always replace it with a Boyd's Tactical or other stock down the road, if I wish.

Fifth, the scope. I was completely taken aback by this. I expected a muddy, blurry, flimsy no-name throw-away scope, but this was not the case. In fact, it's a Bushnell 3-9X40 (obviously, a lower level one, of course), and seems clear & bright, edge to edge, at all levels of magnification. Granted, it might not return to 0 for long (it would probably be good for pinking for years, though), but it's certainly fine for now. It's not the immediate-throw-away, suitable only for break-in, that I expected.

Overall, I'm impressed with the quality of the package, and even more at that price point. Considering that an identical rifle, unmodified, was used to win a US hunter-class competition (with an obviously extremely skilled shooter behind the trigger, of course), it could well be a tack driver with the right ammo.

The plan now is to clean it, take it out to the range, and shoot the heck of it with cheap ammo to sight it in & smooth it up. Then I'll do the well-known trigger mod, get some good ammo, and see what it'll really do.;)
 
Savage makes some surprisingly value-packed rifles thats for sure. I just grabbed another 10/22 from Bartons for the same price as wholesale sports - the difference? Bartons had one in stock. Enjoy that rifle and post some pics :)
 
As a follow up to the new rifle purchase, I got to take it out to the range today.

Zeroing the scope was fun, as it turns out the scope bases weren't tight, and after a few rounds the scope started moving around. Okay, snugged them up with an allen wrench, and back at it.

It was a miserable, stormy, classic-west coast winter day, of course (forecast was for sun & calm), with heavy pounding rain and gusty winds. For the sake of consistency, I used Winchester Dynapoint bulk (40 gr.) throughout. Plus, that's what I had.

So, how'd it do? First, the unmodified trigger is, well, awful. That, however, I can fix (and around 100 rounds or so down the pipe, it did improve a little - still has probably 6-7 lbs. pull, though). Other than that, the rifle worked flawlessly. The scope is fine, although not being an AO optic, I wasn't able to focus well at under 50 yds. I cheated, and used my reading glasses - it made the target sharper, but the crosshairs a little blurry. Not too bad, though.

Originally, I was using a rest consisting of a carpet-covered plywood box on a rickety table. Since that wasn't doing the job, I installed my UTG bipod, which improved things, getting the 50-yard groups down to under 2". Finally, I borrowed my buddy's Caldwell "Fire Control" rest, and shot this 10-shot group:

Savagetargetsmall1.jpg
[/IMG]

For reference, here it is with a tape measure:

Savagetargetsmall2.jpg
[/IMG]

Considering the stuff blowing across the range in the wind, and the as-yet cruddy trigger, not too bad at all. Under 3/8" outside-to-outside, 10 shots, bulk ammo, I'm seriously impressed with the accuracy potential of this rifle!!

Once I upgrade to an AO scope & do the trigger mod (down to just over 2 lbs), it should be quite the shooter. Amazing, at this price, too!:D
 
I LOVE this gun! I've since got a Boyd's Tadcticool stock (whew...just squeaked under the wire with that!), a 6-14X40 scope, and did the trigger shim job.

The rifle continues to shoot like a laser. With the trigger job (down to a shade over 2 1/2 lbs., with virtually no creep at all), it's even easier to shoot. I still only have around 300 rounds through it, and every time I shoot it, it seems to group even tighter.

I have yet to mess with different ammo (still using the Winchester DynaPoint bulk) or with the torque on the action screws...I just kinda tweaked 'em so they felt snug, plus 1/4 turn, and left them there. The Tacticool stock gives the gun a much more man-sized feel, a better angle for the pistol grip, and a vastly improved cheek weld for the scope.

As the weather improves and I can get to the range more, I'll be addressing those issues to see if I can tighten the groups up even more.

I can (still) heartily recommend the MkII!!
 
There's a silhouette shoot this Sunday in Nanaimo if your interested in making the drive up. I use a savage to compete with and think its the only one. It groups 1" at 100m with CCI standard and Fiocchi standard. Great rifle
 
I'd like to thank you for posting about it because i went ahead and bought one and my friend bought one as well.

polished the trigger, shortened the spring and shimmed the trigger group for a nice feeling trigger. Shoots great and the scope's not too shabby.

I added a cheek riser to the synthetic stock and will be trying it out tommorow.

the cheek weld without the riser is total garbage.
 
IMHO, the Accutrigger is a lot of hype. Yes, it's considerably lighter than the old Savage trigger but it's nothing to get excited over. My Accutrigger has lots of slop and take up before it breaks and feels very mushy. It's an improvement but a modest one at best.
 
Back
Top Bottom