(My) Ultimate one-rifle-to-rule-them-all

9.3mauser

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This started as a mental exercise a few years ago, during the dark nights of winter. The "one rifle" concept has been beat to death, but I began thinking about the ideal rifle/cartridge combination. Also, I had been reading about the mountain men, and started speculating about what they would carry if they had access to modern firearms. Alternatively, if I could time-travel back, but take a modern rifle with me, what would it be?

The first problem was to narrow down the caliber. It would need to shoot flat for the plains and mountains, yet still be capable of cleanly dealing with heavier game, like moose, elk and bison. It would need to be capable of dealing with grizzlies, because, well, we all know what happened to Hugh Glass.

I love the 9.3x62, and I have a very good one, and its certainly capable of dealing the animals on the heavier/tougher end. Calling it flat shooting, however, might lead others to suspect that you're full of sh!t! I wouldn't use it anywhere where I wasn't confident of getting to within 250 yds, or at the most 300.

On the other hand, I also happen to have a very nice little 7x57. It certainly fills the flat shooting requirement. It runs a close race with the .270, and I doubt there is any practical difference in performance on game. This is also why I discounted the slightly larger 7mm's, like the .280 or 7x64. The jump in performance is so slight that there's little point owning one if you already have a good 7x57.

What really disqualifies the 7mm and the .270 is their suitability for the largest game. Taking it out of the fantasy realm, if you want to hunt bison most places with a season have minimum caliber requirements and these two don't come up to snuff.

That leaves the .30's, the .338's, and maybe the .35's. I wanted to stay away from belted magnums for a couple of reasons, one being magazine capacity. I wanted the full 5-round capacity without messing around with extended drop magazines. Using a standard case the .35 Whelen suffers the same shortcomings as the 9.3mm. and the .338 is so close to a .30 with the same case capacity, that I could never see the point.

So through process of elimination, I settled on the boring, ubiquitous .30/06. Original, I know...

I had also read J.D. Jones' book, the name of which escapes me at the moment, but he also used a .30/06 and shot every game species in North America with it. He settled on two bullet weights, a 165 gr and a 200 gr. I think that makes sense. The 165 is flat shooting and can handle anything up to elk; then the 200's can take over and still be decently flat-shooting.

Caliber settled, it was time to design the rifle. There were only two real contenders for the action design, the pre '64 Model 70 and the Mauser 98. I've been a Mauser fan since I first started reading about rifles, so that part was easy. The best Mauser 98 actions, in my opinion, were the pre-war commercial sporters, and the Mauser Werke made a special one expressly for the .30/06. A donor rifle fell into my hands through one of the gun auctions.
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This particular rifle had had a hard life. The bore had been neglected, and the stock repaired, so that eased my conscience about stripping down a vintage collectible sporter for the action. Then I had to acquire all the little bits and pieces.

The stock came from Prophet River, a medium grade of NZ walnut.

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The new barrel was a Shilen blank, picked up from a fellow nutter

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Now you need to acquire an after market trigger.

Intersurplus had some lovely double set triggers at a very reasonable price. They may still have some. They also had some very nicely engraved triggerguard/floorplate/magwell sets.

Are you going to D+T the rifle for bases?

Can you do the work yourself?
 
Putting it all together:

I found inspiration for the look I wanted in Jack O'Connor's Book of the Rifle:

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Realistically, there was now way I was ever going to own this particular rifle, since it now resides in a museum, and there were some changes I wanted to make anyway.

What I liked, was the reasonable barrel length of 22". I also wanted iron sights, not so much for a back-up, but because I just prefer open sights in some circumstances. I wanted a peep at the back, but I didn't like the huge lyman clamped on the side of it. Firstly, it limits your scope mount choice to some sort of side mount. Secondly, I knew from experience that I tend to smash my knuckle on the corner of them when running the bolt rapidly. So I needed some sort of detachable sight that would clamp onto the scope base, and it would also require quick detachable mounts of some variety. There are two options, XS sights, and the neat little Talley peep. I'm still not 100% sure which I'm going to use, but I'm leaning towards the XS.

The front sight on O'Connor's rifle appears to be a Redfield. I managed to track down something similar.

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This is also a Redfield, but it has the band rather than just being sweated to the top of the barrel.

The problem occurred to me of where to keep this auxiliary peep. Keeping it loose in a pocket just invites loss, so it needed to be kept with the rifle. The solution was a trap buttplate, also provided by a gunnutter.
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I meant to better document the building process. I would normally work on it a couple of hours a night, and it was progressing so slowly that I kept putting off taking pictures. I'm looking for a new project now, and I'll try to document the stock carving process from layout to completion.

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The checkering pattern is modified from a Dale Goens pattern found in Monty Kennedy's book. I have to say, checkering was hell. I wasn't happy with the way my first attempt turned out, so I shaved it all off. This set me back a few months because I had to set it all aside and regain my composure. Shaving the checkering off without sanding the whole stock gave it an "inlet" appearance, which I rather like, but dread doing it again.

Anyway, checkering and finishing is done, all that's left is bluing and the final fixing of the front sight. It's just press fit on there now, so I can play around and get the backsight sorted out.

The swivels are stuck in the mail. I was sending them to get a couple of buggered up screw heads welded, and CP went on strike a couple of hours later.

I'm looking to upgrade the scope too.

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It looks pretty neat with a clean barrel too...

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Nicely done! I must admit, I’m jealous hahahaha
I don’t have enough self confidence to attempt shaping my own stock, never mind checkering as well.
 
Great work! The 30-06 is boring but like you I really think it is the best one rifle situation out there, I own 4 30-06 and like them all lol! My latest one is a husky 1640 20” barrel and I decided that 190gn Speer impact would be the best overall bullet for up her so I bought a few boxes and now that is what she is fed!
 
Nice work!!!
One of my GO TO rifle is my Remington m1917 that I got for a steal a couples years back.
I topped it of with a Riton 1-8x24 to shave weight.
It bring to the solder lire a glove for me.
I set on Shooting 208g hornady with Superformance powder.
 

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Beautiful rifle!
I've always been a fan of the 06.
People say its boring but it's ability to load every bullet for every situation is what keeps it interesting for me.
I just finished loading 110gr vmax for practice shooting and some 165gr partitions for hunting.
Last week it was 125gr ballistic tips, 130gr hot cores and 150 sierra round nose for a freind.
The 06 will never die!
 
The book to which you were referring is "One Man, One Rifle, One Land". It's one of those books you can grab off the shelf at any time, flip it open and find a cool chapter to read. Great fun.

I'm loving this thread; I like gun-puttering, but this is so far beyond my abilities (and my courage!) that it might as well be a work of science fiction. Impressive and beautiful work, looking forward to seeing more. :)
 
The checkering pattern is modified from a Dale Goens pattern found in Monty Kennedy's book. I have to say, checkering was hell. I wasn't happy with the way my first attempt turned out, so I shaved it all off. This set me back a few months because I had to set it all aside and regain my composure. Shaving the checkering off without sanding the whole stock gave it an "inlet" appearance, which I rather like, but dread doing it again.

Anyway, checkering and finishing is done, all that's left is bluing and the final fixing of the front sight. It's just press fit on there now, so I can play around and get the backsight sorted out.

The swivels are stuck in the mail. I was sending them to get a couple of buggered up screw heads welded, and CP went on strike a couple of hours later.

I'm looking to upgrade the scope too.

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It looks pretty neat with a clean barrel too...

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Your mettle is some thing man , not appreciated by most of us.
...skwerl
 
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