I've had many Pre-64s. I now use the Classic actions and have none of the old ones. While the actions are nice the guns are heavy/clunky. Again its personal preference. As far as price, the fewer available the more the market will bear period.
Spring steel retains its springyness by being hard. The hardness is what keeps the metal low memory.
hard often means brittle. (springs break more often than bending right/compressing?)
The pre 64 Model 70 is known for its less-than-stellar gas handling capabilities! That was one of the reasons Winchester went to the push feed model in 1964, not just to cut manufacturing costs.
Ted
Excellent thread, with a lot of good info from people who obviously know what they are talking about.
Ted, that is very scary to hear of the accident to your friend. I once had a primer blow in a 270 in a Sako, L161, the old model with the third locking lug. That was scary! An explosion in your face, but nothing hit my face. It knocked off the little extractor, springs, etc. It was carelessness on my part, I let the neck stretch too far without trimming, with older brass, but the primer did fit normally tight.
Ted, do you remember me, (Outposts and Bushplanes?)
Rod said:With case failure the mauser action may offer more protection from gas blow back with their flanged bolt sleeves. To improve gas blow back protection on a pre-64 M70 a vent hole can be drilled in the left side of the receivctor.er as there is on the right side. The hole (gas escape port) would be more effective if it could be as forward of the bolt head 3/4" or at least 1/2".
My 1927 M54, 30-06 has a vent hole in the left side. It was like this when I got it as well as the bolt handle turned down for scope use. Most later M54's had the vent hole in the right side, but some of the early models had bolt stop, trigger upgrades and gas vents installed at a later date.
really?
take a spring steel extractor out of a pre-64 and a cast one out of a classic (yes I know a few made it out the door with machined Williams extractors).
bend them both in your fingers, and come back and tell us about 'ridiculous' metallurgy.
You will find the gun-makers understood metals characteristics just fine in the old days, and maybe better than they do now.
Not "may offer more protection", there is no question at all that the Mauser handles escaping gas better than the pre-64 Model 70. Furthermore, it does so without any modifications needing to be made to the action.
As well as the inferior bolt sleeve, the more serious flaw in the design of the Model 70 is that it vents gas along the left lug raceway of the receiver, rather than down into the magazine well. This is just asking for trouble, as escaping gas is directed towards the shooter's face. That is how George got his eye blasted with gas and brass.
Ted
No. Spring steel retains its springyness because it has elasticity. It deforms (bends) without breaking because it has flexibility. Hardness certainly affects elasticity, but you are confusing hardness with elasticity, and coming to an incorrect conclusion that springs are brittle.
Or do you really believe that springs are brittle? And that the springs under your car would be better if they were cast?
Not confusing either... Spring steel becomes such by hardening/heat treating the steel. this makes it harder (or more "Elastic" if this is what you choose to call it) In doing this, it makes the metal more brittle (IE prone to breakage) that it was in its previous state.
This is the trade off...
Speaking of Springs in your car, If you've ever worked as a mechanic, or mantained vehicles, you'd know your more likely to see a broken spring, than a bent, or collapsed one. Why is this? The spring is more likely to shear than bend beyond its "breaking point" Usually it happens in the first 1-3 coils as the metal is often thinner there than in the body of the spring. Having changed more than my share of suspension systems over the years,
You sometimes see collapsed springs on older cars, often because heat has taken the temper out of the spring over the years.
Question about springy Vs Brittle.
Why arent your knives +65 C hardness... Hell, they sure hold an edge, but have one fallback... Brittle. Metalurgy, and different chemical (or elemental) compositions have lended to a better mix of both... Which is why we can cast these action parts that had to be forged 50 years ago...
If you think you need an old style extractor because its "better" Give her... Whatever makes you sleep better at night...
If you think one is magically better than the other because its Forged rather cast, prove it...
You jumped on that bandwagon. You prove it.
Really? Show me on this thread whaere I "Jumped on the bandwagon"
A little springier doesnt make it any better... Spring steel is brittle, Cast steel is quicker to make, and is built to more exact tolerances...
If you think you need an old style extractor because its "better" Give her... Whatever makes you sleep better at night...
If you think one is magically better than the other because its Forged rather cast, prove it...
I could care less... they're both good actions that could potentially spit gas in my face in the event of a casefailure... NO gun is 100% safe.
Funny way of arguing? Sorry, dude, atleast I can explain my assumptions beyone throwing around the word elasticity...
Educate me about metal... Please do...