New NS-522 from Can Am

Ganderite

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A couple years ago a friend bought the NS-322, a sporter version of this heavy barreled rifle. He cleaned the stock with fine steel wool and applied 5 coats of Tung Oil. The rifle looks great and shoot very well. For $350 he got a well-made and good looking rifle.

When CanAm offered the NS-522, a heavy barreled version, for only $250 I could not resist, even though I already own a lot of 22 rifles, including Winchester, Cooey, Remington, Anschutz and Walther.

The trigger breaks at about 4 pounds. I have not yet decided if it has creep, or is a two stage trigger. Probably the latter.

It comes with a pair of well-made 5 shot mags. I think CIL used to market an Anschutz 22 repeater. Maybe those mags fit. But 2 is one more than I usually use. But gopher hunters might want some extras. This rifle has some heft to it. On a bipod I suspect it would make a solid gopher rifle for longer range shooting.

I am pleased with what I see. It has a heavy, but not very long barrel. It is hammer forged, so should last forever. Regular 22s are soft steel and target rifles need new barrels every 50,000 rounds.

I happen to have a broken Anschutz target rifle on my desk and notice that the screw spacings are the same. If I cut an opening for the magazine, I could put the Norinco in an Anschutz stock.

The stock is stained very dark. I intend to give it a buff with some steel wool, then some stain, then a Tung oil finish.
The bolt arrived un-cocked. It had to be cocked in order to install. I just pushed the cocking piece back with a flat screw driver and then turned the bolt handle. Before doing that I stood it on end and squirted some brake cleaner into the bolt. The pad it was sitting on tuned brown as the oil washed out of it. A squirt of G96 to finish, and the bolt is good to go.

I did the same thing to the trigger box.

A single pass of a patch pushed out a god of grease/oil from the barrel.

The inletting of the stock is nice and tight. I will wrap a socket with a piece of sand paper and open up the barrel channel a bit, to make sure the barrel is floating. The action will get a simple bedding job.

The trigger guard is a solid steel piece. Very nice, except the inletting in the stock is much too deep. The guard sits on pillars of two washers around the two action screws. I will tack these washers in place with some epoxy, and then use left-over bedding material to fill in the big cavity under the trigger guard.

I used a set of Weaver rings with ¾” bases to mount a 4-12 scope and look forward to testing the rifle at 100 yards on a calm day with a variety of different types of ammo. Maybe I will shoot it alongside my Walther target rifle, for a comparison.

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Not sold in ontario. Just like sk has pst but if I buy something from alberta I only pay gst.

I was under the impression that the seller has to charge whatever the buyers Province requires....

Pretty sure I get charged HST no matter what Province I order from, but I can check receipts.

Charging sales tax to out-of-province/territory customers

If you are a vendor in one province or territory and you make sales to residents of another province or territory, what sales taxes do you charge them? When you sell and ship or deliver taxable goods and services to out-of-province/territory customers, the sales tax that applies in your customer's province or territory is generally applicable.

When you ship to harmonized sales tax (HST)-participating provinces (Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick, Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia and Ontario), you are required to collect HST in the amount applicable to the province and include it in your GST/HST return. In this case, since you are already registered for GST, you are automatically registered for HST, even if you do not operate in an HST-participating province.

http://www.canadabusiness.ca/eng/page/2651/
 
I was under the impression that the seller has to charge whatever the buyers Province requires....

Pretty sure I get charged HST no matter what Province I order from, but I can check receipts.

http://www.canadabusiness.ca/eng/page/2651/

Interesting. Don't see how a different province will collect sails tax for your province though but maybe hat is different?. My example above. Alberta isn't going to collect pst for Saskatchewan and mail them a check.
 
Interesting. Don't see how a different province will collect sails tax for your province though but maybe hat is different?. My example above. Alberta isn't going to collect pst for Saskatchewan and mail them a check.

That is exactly how it works!

Just looking at my latest purchase from Prairie Gun Traders in SK, and they charged me Ontario HST.
 
HST does indeed get charged to residents of HST provinces as the provincial component has been "harmonized" with the federal so it all gets collected at once. If you live in a PST province it does not get collected by the retailer. If you live in a few places there's no provincial (or territorial) sales tax at all! :)
 
Is this model a Norc copy of another rifle, or is it an "original" design?

I would say is is a design based on the Anchutz, but I doubt any parts are interchangeable, other than the stock, which has the same action screw spacing.

The bolts look very similar, but all the parts are different sizes. the Norinco uses larger parts. But it has the same design layout and features.

The rifle is man-sized. A good solid handful in the stock and a nice heavy barrel. I bedded the action and look forward to testing a variety of ammo in it at 100 yards.

the Norc was shipped to Ontario. I paid GST but no PST.

Anschutz bolt release and safety behind it.
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Norinco bolt release and safety
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