I have a S&L classic in 6.5 too. I have no safety concerns with it at all. A good push feed is uncomplicated and simple to operate and understand. It's so smooth I have no reason to load it until I’m ready to fire. If there is a delay I apply the safety or eject the round. It has no half cock which is more a blessing than a disadvantage. I detest rifles on half cock. If I miss out on a deer in the bush because of it so be it. As an aside have you seen the price of another barrel for it. You could buy a couple of Tikkas instead.
Out beyond ideas of wrongdoing, and right-doing, there is a field. I will meet you there.
- Rumi
yes I have always been a bush hunter and hunt with a round in the chamber- before I go hunting after cleaning bolt or a new rifle or having trigger done I always check check the trigger let off - no round in bump bump on butt - thump the butt check check yes safe - but I have used half cock for years and likely wont change
Up to page 3 and no more mausers to look at.
I nearly napped off - had to get up in the ceiling space. Now I'm back down I'll post a pic (after coffee)
I had a look in the back of my safes and found a few hiding, unused, unloved…
A reminder of the days when you found bits cheap and cobbled together rifles which ultimately cost a fair bit!
.300 wm on a 1913 Chilean Steyr action
.257 Robert’s ai on a Erfurt 98.
3 modern ones.
Win model 70, 1948 model in .22H.
PH Featherweight, .270 win
J. C Higgins Mod 55, FN commercial action, .270 win.
Spare 1913 action and somewhere around here is a 7x64 LW barrel for it.
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Haha - I like the comment about costs - that's my story writ large!
Here is another "original sporting rifle". This one an unusual Model B pattern, built as a 7x57 but at some stage of its hard life rebarrelled to 303. Still missing its bolt but I'll get one eventually.
Here ya go Brian.A Pomgolian knockoff of Heer Mauser's 98 design.Built in a factory in Birmingham in '55.The Brumbys had the sence to chamber it in Paul's excellent 7mil cartridge.No need to reinvent the wheel so kept the safety on the cocking piece.Even tipped their hat to its Germanic roots by shoving a Schnabel on the fore end.The scoreboard with the Hun was two-nil so decided to give it the very English name of Viscount.But then played dirty pool and renamed the cal 275 Rigby to help sell it to the tweeded gentry.Paul would have been right miffed.Maybe the marketing wide boys could do a number on the 6.5 Cred and rerelease it as the 250 Holland and Holland.Sell fourty to the dozen.Oh and the Brumby engineers ground the extractor claw to jump onto a chambered case head
Got a candidate too, but not as tidy as Bluebaiter222
7x57 BSA Viscount by chance too...
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Here is my Parker & Hale .22-250, 1960s vintage. Metal work has been refinished by me in parkerizing and the wood work sanded back and oiled.
Thanks guys, you've made an old Dinosaur very happy! What a wonderful day this has turned out to be! I'm going for a nap now, to dream of mountains and rivers, bush and campsites, good mates and many happy hunting trips. Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz......
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