You can screw a Bartlein into a Carcano and it will hammer, so accuracy is really a moot point unless you're going for BR level stuff. all feel pretty rough and/or clunky next to the nice "custom" actions. Remington 783 (I think), Ruger American, Mossbergs, etc. If you may have to bet you life on it you best have much better than average ability, an tooling going in. If you have abilitys an tooling yes you can get it cheap an make it work for some tasks. If you can't fully smith a salvage by yourself, buy something else. For if they had, they can tell very quickly what works, what might work for a few tasks, an what can be made to work for a task with a lot of work. All the work was worth it in the long run, but be aware you will not buy a salvage off the rack an have it preform properly w/o a lot of work.Īll those who tell you they work great w/o fixing all the issues they come with, have never ran a stick they had to depend upon for their life. After all the work I'll not part with it as there is no other 338lm I know of that is this lite an will do what it will do. Spend lots of time an muscle polishing everything up an using some after market parts to replace what salvage said they would send but never did. I bought a 338lm LR hunter an had to re-engineer parts of it. One can buy hay before, it goes threw the horse or after, the choice is theirs. So you end up with a cheap feeling rifle that doesn't always function well.yeah sure you can make it work but you are almost certainly going to have to fight the rifle at some point. All of the stuff that Savage markets as being accuracy features are just ways they made the rifles cheap to produce. #243 SAVAGE RIFLE FOR SALE MANUAL#And no longer did Savage need to make bolts and cooking baffles as separate pieces.īasically all of the rifles now cost the same but they are all designed with manual machining in mind. No longer did a journeyman machinists have to toil away with mil and file to create rifles for rifleman. It might have had casting sprew still on the majority of the parts, a weird baffle that moved with the bolt, but it could spin the same bullets of the "better" rifles.Īnd then the CNC machine came and now all of these rifles costs the same. For it was supremely affordable if not clunky. For although it lacked the refinement of the Riflemans Rifle, it was affordable and accurate.Īnd then the Savage 110 came and the unwashed masses rejoiced. Then there was the Remington 700 and the day laborers rejoiced. For it was the culmination of all the great military designs with it's rustic claw extractor, mechanical ejector, and simple adjustable trigger. By ordering this firearm, you certify you are the actual transferee/buyer of the firearm, are of legal age and satisfy all Federal, State and local legal/regulatory requirements to purchase this firearm.First there was the Model 70 and rifleman rejoiced. Firearms refused by the FFL Dealer or which cannot be transferred due to a failed background check will be subject to a 10% restocking fee. Firearms cannot be returned to MidwayUSA please contact the manufacturer for warranty claims. Shipping charges for firearms are calculated separately from other products on your order and will incur a separate Per Order charge. The Supplier determines shipping methods for firearms which ship from a Supplier. If your order does not contain a handgun which ships from MidwayUSA, any shotguns, rifles, actions or receivers shipping from MidwayUSA will ship via UPS Ground. If your order contains a handgun which ships from MidwayUSA, the handgun, and any additional firearms shipping from MidwayUSA on the same order, must ship Second Day Air. All firearms must ship to a valid FFL Dealer and cannot be changed or cancelled after they are placed. You must be 18 to purchase rifles or shotguns and 21 to purchase handguns, actions or receivers.
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