Savage/Stevens bolt action 30-30 rifles?

Why not?

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For the life of me, I cannot understand why anyone would want one of these rifles? More than that, why would someone pay $300+ for a used one, when there are so many better choices out there for the same or very little more brand new?

For instance, why would you pay $300, used, for a 340 in 30-30, when you can buy a Stevens 200, new, in any caliber you want for $350.

And, yes, I have owned a 340, a 30-30, and shot two more, a 222 and a 225. :)

Fire away, my brothers!

Ted
 
Some folks must be aware of this as there seems to be no shortage of Savage/Stevens bolt action 30-30 rifles in the EE.

If the Savage/Stevens 30-30 rifles were a $200 rifle, they would make more sense, but I wouldn't cough $300 for one.

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The 340 seems to be shorter and lighter. For a bush gun it works well. And yes I have a 340 C that I was trying to sell. Too many people wanted me to give it away. So I sanded and refinished the stock with a nice stain, put a fixed power scope on it. I now have a gun that is good to 150 yards.

And I can load it with pointy bullets too!

I wasn't aware the stevens/savages came in 30/30. I just checked their site. The savage line does not offer any rifle in 30-30 win. And I can't find any 30/30 savages in the EE.

SuperCub please confirm your statements are fact or withdraw them.
 
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The 340 seems to be shorter and lighter. For a bush gun it works well. And yes I have a 340 C that I was trying to sell. Too many people wanted me to give it away. So I sanded and refinished the stock with a nice stain, put a fixed power scope on it. I now have a gun that is good to 150 yards.

And I can load it with pointy bullets too!

I wasn't aware the stevens/savages came in 30/30. I just checked their site. The savage line does not offer any rifle in 30-30 win. And I can't find any 30/30 savages in the EE.

SuperCub please confirm your statements are fact or withdraw them.

His statements are fact. The 340 series rifles came under the Savage and Stevens line. I, too, would consider paying $200 for one, but not $300. I can get a nice Marlin for that money.
 
I wasn't aware the stevens/savages came in 30/30. I just checked their site. The savage line does not offer any rifle in 30-30 win. And I can't find any 30/30 savages in the EE.

SuperCub please confirm your statements are fact or withdraw them.
We're talking used guns here, not current production.

tbrwlf please confirm your assumptions are fact or withdraw them. ;) :)

.
 
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For the life of me, I cannot understand why anyone would want one of these rifles? More than that, why would someone pay $300+ for a used one, when there are so many better choices out there for the same or very little more brand new?

For instance, why would you pay $300, used, for a 340 in 30-30, when you can buy a Stevens 200, new, in any caliber you want for $350.

And, yes, I have owned a 340, a 30-30, and shot two more, a 222 and a 225. :)

Fire away, my brothers!

Ted

Well Ted, the first 30-06 I owned looked just like those 340s. I think mine was a model 20, or maybe 1920. I had shot an older brothers Remington 30 Express a considerable amount before this, and I thought the Savage was the smallest, cheapest looking 30-06 I had ever seen. It so strongly resembled a brothers 22 Savage. But a still older brother had the Savage 30-06, wanted to get rid of it, so he told me that was what I needed and got $40 for it from me.
I shot a moose or two with it, before I was able to get my money out of it.
 
Most of the ones I've seen on the E.E. aren't much to look at but there was a nice one recently that sold pretty quick and had some nice wood.

Can't remember the price.
 
One reason, Ted, is that some folks really, really want a .30-30 bolt rifle, not something newer or flatter-shooting. Myself, I'd rather have back the 340 I sold than to have a brand new cheap rifle in any other chambering. I am a huge .30-30 fan myself. And they may want to own a classic rifle, which, though homely, the .340 is.
I'd go close to 300 for a very good example with a decent scope. Unscoped, yup, about 200 bucks.
To go a little further into your original question about why anyone would want one?

.30-30 cartridge: Excellent balance of killing power and recoil, ammo cheap and available, easy to reload, pointy bullets available as components or ammo, easy on the shoulder, historic cartridge well proven.....

Rifle: greater range than bow or spear. Easy to learn to use.

Savage 340: Plain but serviceable. Mine was MOA accurate with handloads (using a 3-9X32 scope). Detachable mag for those who like them, myself included. Inexpensive when new, still generally cheap, though often overpriced IN THE EE.

As I said, I wish I had kept mine, happy though I am with the Marlin 336 I traded it towards.
 
I think it would be a good starter rifle for a kid. Hack the stock off to fit and load some pointy bullets.
 
As I said, I wish I had kept mine, happy though I am with the Marlin 336 I traded it towards.

I think that's what it generally comes down to. I've kicked around the idea of buying one a couple times, but a Marlin is faster shooting, easier to scope, and will always have a better resale value.

But I may try a 340 someday. I don't think they are ugly at all. They look serviceable, and to me, only serviceable rifles are interesting . . . ;)
 
Well Ted, the first 30-06 I owned looked just like those 340s. I think mine was a model 20, or maybe 1920.

I think what you had there was either a model 40 (uncheckered) or a model 45 (checkered). They were only made in 30-06, 30-30, 250 Sav and 300 Sav. The 340's only came in one of those calibers (30-30).;)
 
Well Ted we quite often disagree on things but you hit the nail right on the head with the Sav-Stevens bolt gun. I heard how wonderfull they were a few yrs back, what with beong able to use pointy bullets an all. I got a chance to aquire one of those fine machines & so I did.
Yes you can use pointy bullets in the 30-30 :):):):)
But you have to seat them so damm'd deep to go thru the mag the bullet is already tappering inside the case by the time it gets seated :mad::mad::mad:
The actions are rough, sticky, course, unfinished the only smooth spot on the rifle is the butt stock.
& accuracy proved no hell either....course some-one will jump in with a 2" group at a thousand yards or so, other people always get mini fraction groups while the rest of us are always wondering why we got such crappy guns :cool:

Yet all aside they would make a good first timer deer rifle, if they were priced right.

& the Model 340 ain't much better.
Bud showd me one day how well his .223 shot groups at 100yds.
Yes very nice...all would have hit a small pizza sized target :rolleyes:
 
One reason, Ted, is that some folks really, really want a .30-30 bolt rifle, not something newer or flatter-shooting. Myself, I'd rather have back the 340 I sold than to have a brand new cheap rifle in any other chambering. I am a huge .30-30 fan myself. And they may want to own a classic rifle, which, though homely, the .340 is.
I'd go close to 300 for a very good example with a decent scope. Unscoped, yup, about 200 bucks.
To go a little further into your original question about why anyone would want one?

.30-30 cartridge: Excellent balance of killing power and recoil, ammo cheap and available, easy to reload, pointy bullets available as components or ammo, easy on the shoulder, historic cartridge well proven.....

Rifle: greater range than bow or spear. Easy to learn to use.

Savage 340: Plain but serviceable. Mine was MOA accurate with handloads (using a 3-9X32 scope). Detachable mag for those who like them, myself included. Inexpensive when new, still generally cheap, though often overpriced IN THE EE.

As I said, I wish I had kept mine, happy though I am with the Marlin 336 I traded it towards.

Well said...I've owned a couple, and thought they were a good, solid rifle.
 
Well Ted we quite often disagree on things but you hit the nail right on the head with the Sav-Stevens bolt gun. I heard how wonderfull they were a few yrs back, what with beong able to use pointy bullets an all. I got a chance to aquire one of those fine machines & so I did.
Yes you can use pointy bullets in the 30-30 :):):):)
But you have to seat them so damm'd deep to go thru the mag the bullet is already tappering inside the case by the time it gets seated :mad::mad::mad:
The actions are rough, sticky, course, unfinished the only smooth spot on the rifle is the butt stock.
& accuracy proved no hell either....course some-one will jump in with a 2" group at a thousand yards or so, other people always get mini fraction groups while the rest of us are always wondering why we got such crappy guns :cool:

Yet all aside they would make a good first timer deer rifle, if they were priced right.

& the Model 340 ain't much better.
Bud showd me one day how well his .223 shot groups at 100yds.
Yes very nice...all would have hit a small pizza sized target :rolleyes:

I was unaware that the 340 came in .223??? Because I thought the bolt and action liked rimmed cartridges. (222,30-30,)
Was your friends gun scoped? Using ammo the gun liked? Is he visually impaired? Cause my 340 can group .90" using my lead sled and a burris scope. (3-9x40) ..............of course it will only do this with one type of ammo, EVERYTHING else I have fed it using factory ammo shot 2" or more.
 
Bolt rilfe in .30-30 Win...

I had a Rem 788 bolt rifle in .30-30 Win once.

Now there's a .30-30 bolt worth having..... ;) :cool:

2007-10-27_091302_1aCoffee.gif

NAA.
 
I was unaware that the 340 came in .223??? Because I thought the bolt and action liked rimmed cartridges. (222,30-30,)
Was your friends gun scoped? Using ammo the gun liked? Is he visually impaired? Cause my 340 can group .90" using my lead sled and a burris scope. (3-9x40) ..............of course it will only do this with one type of ammo, EVERYTHING else I have fed it using factory ammo shot 2" or more.

didn't come in 223, they were chambered for 225 I beleive, its rimmed

I have a stevens 325 which is the same as the savage 340, I bought it on a whim but it was cheap and just needed a good cleaning. But if they are selling at $300 now I may have to look at selling it :D
 
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