Apparently the 760 forestock is sturdier as well. Looking at sling mounts there is a kit to mount the sling swivel on the front of the forestock on the 760 and the recommendation for the 7600 is to mount the swivel on a barrel clamp.
What makes you say its a miss-stamp? If it was made in 1980, it's a 760. The Model 760 was discontinued Dec31/1980 with the introduction of the Model 6 and 7600 but sales continued well into1981 to clean out stock.
The 760 Gamemaster from the 1970's is the best of the bunch in my opinion.
I've had a few 7600's in '06 and a mid 1950's 760 in 300 Savage,
but my current mid 70's 760 Gamemaster in .308 is easily my favourite.
I think it was made in 1974-75 as the serial number is 7,339,### with no prefix.
It's in near mint original condition.
Here it is set up with a Vari-X III 2.5X8.
Yes, the forend rattles a little, but no other rifle allows for faster follow-up shots other than a semi, and they are sure fun to shoot!
Now if could only find one in 35 Whelen in the same original condition.
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Why do you want to switch that? The bbl mount is much sturdier, a better system.I have a barrel band but want to switch to the forend mount like yours.
I have a .308 760 that dates to Oct-1975 based on the barrel date code. The serial number starts with an "A". Any idea when they started placing a letter prefix on the serial number?
Uncle Mikes #ES760 fits 1968 and later and replaces the forearm bolt, but I agree with SuperCub.
when it was assembled is the stamp on the left side of the barrel about an inch in front of the receiver- will be two letters ie: kv on my 35Rem-760 is May/1979.
I may very well have the date all wrong. Help me out here. I can't make out any two letter stamp on either side of the barrel.
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"EA" Oct/1980.
I think they haven't really caught on - people who don't feel the need for a fast follow up shot tend to go with bolts, and people who do tend to think semi auto is the way to go. I have to say - the follow up shots with this are actually stunningly fast, the recoil tends to kick the empty out without you even thinking and bringing it back in line with the target just naturally makes me move the pump forward. I have personally double tapped a deer as it bolted across the road at about 20 yards and the shots were both in the boiler and only about 3 inches apart - so it's both fast and accurate. Faster than i need to be honest.the first shot was fatal and the second shot was just more instinct than anything.
But i think people worry about short stroking, they don't realize how fast it is, it's not known for it's accuracy tho mine with the right ammo was pretty close to an inch, which is more than enough for hunting. These days it's all about half inch groups or rapid follow up and such and pumps just don't get the love they deserve, and they don't have the historic cool factor of a lever. They're a little underrated in my books.
Give us a picture
I can't access it for a few weeks, sorry.
I took off the mag release and it looks normal but is just very short.
What's the difference between the different ones?
#0 trough #4, are there different lengths?