What did your #1 weigh all in bearhunter?
It was built on the Tropical Rifle theme and all in with sling, scope/base slightly over 12 pounds if memory serves.
It wasn't a light rifle by any means.
The rifle is in South Africa the last I heard. At first glance, it looks like any other Ruger #1 Tropical other than it has a stainless barrel on a blued receiver. The bbl was the only one available at the time and in my price range. The slow twist rate stopped it from selling but it stabilized anything I wanted to shoot out of it.
If anyone bothered to measure the OD of the barrel they would find it was at least .050 thicker than the standard Ruger offerings.
It wasn't built to be a light rifle by any means. What it did do very well was allow for higher pressures in the old cartridge to be used.
That was a great rifle by anyone's standards that likes single shot rifles. The nose heavy balance allowed for a very steady off hand hold. If the rumor of the rifle being in South Africa is true, I hope the owner appreciates its capabilities.
Over the years I have become more and more recoil shy. I have a frozen shoulder and the pain can be extreme. I don't even shoot trap anymore because of it.
I still have two Ruger #1 rifles. One is in 30-06 and sports a Shepherd scope. The other is in 338-06 and needs a replacement butt stock. The 338-06 also wears a muzzle break to reduce the still substantial recoil. I have a very nice set of wood that came from Macon. I would recommend their products to anyone with the skills and patience to fit their offerings. The wood is bone dry, close grained and highly figured. It will make an outstanding looking rifle. I have allowed the progress of the project to languish because of the substantial felt recoil.
The OP, is a nice young fellow that really likes to experiment with just about any type of firearm he can get his mitts on. I only know him from talking to him at gun shows and through some dealings we have had. I met his father as well. Nice fellow. Anyway, he isn't a heavily constructed young man. He would be considered lighter than medium weight. He has a long neck as well. Recipe for disaster concerning recoil.
I likely should have opted for the 9.3x62 but I didn't have access to a reamer and the action had the proper extractor for the 9.3x74. Not only that but I had a couple of hundred cases in an old cardboard box that came out of the UK in the early seventies. The rifle cried to be chambered for the round.