"Old Rifles"

Jackal66

FNG
Joined
Jan 3, 2024
Messages
18
My 20 year old Son decided to deer hunt with me this year.
He has a Tikka TX3 .308 & a Howa 1500 .308.
He took the Howa a couple of times but said he needed a quick follow up shot
We went to the safe and got out my Dad's old 742 Woodmaster Remington 30-06.
My Son got his first deer that evening.
My Dad died before my Son was born, and they never saw each other.
I know that Dad would be proud to know that his grandson is taking deer with his old rifle.
That 742 is probably an early 70's model.
 

COJoe

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Nov 22, 2023
Messages
122
Location
Southern Colorado
I was blessed to have gotten my grandfather's 1917 Eddystone in .30-06 a couple years ago. The serial number says it was a 1918 build. At sometime it was sporterized and it has a flip-over 4 x 31 Campco scope made in Japan. My mom and uncle bought it for my grandfather in 1975 and he hunted with it in PA. I believe I found a hairline crack in the barrel, by using oil on it, near the receiver so I'm reluctant to shoot it anymore but maybe one day. I was talking to a co-worker about it one day and that's what led to me getting into elk hunting. My family had nicknamed it the 'Cannon' because it is so heavy at over ten pounds. As a teenager I carried it a few times hunting with my dad for whitetail, man were my arms and shoulders tired afterwards. The bolt action is so smooth though and it does shoot very accurately. The scope adjustments are 1/8" though not 1/4", good to know before you try to get it dialed in.....
 

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Joined
Jun 7, 2023
Messages
349
Location
Wyoming
With two young kids in diapers, I don't have time/money to hunt that often, but I still dream about it. To scratch the itch, I collect oddball guns, particularly older ones, and customize them when needed for future hunting adventures. It's a blast.

Here's two unique .308s shown next to my ultralight Kimber switch-barrel. The bolt-gun is a Remington Mohawk 600 that someone bedded in an unknown fiberglass stock and coated the entire package in an unknown paint. I traded a Glock for it and panicked when I couldn't separate stock and barreled action. Just this morning, I broke it free after leaving it out in the -29 weather. I'm so relieved.

The Savage 99 is one my cousin gave me for a project rifle. It had the ugly wood from the early '70s. The 99E was an odd rendition of this classic: lever safety, rotary mag, but no shell counter. I made the mistake of shooting it, and it's the most accurate 99 I've used. To modernize it without permanently modifying it, I snagged MPI fiberglass stocks and had my local smith bed it. He nailed it.

Someday, I'll take game with these cool old .308s. In the meantime, I'll just have to imagine the adventures we'll go on, maybe even with my kids when they're older.
 

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Floridave

FNG
Joined
Sep 20, 2022
Messages
64
My grandfathers REM 721 built in 1952, though I’ve spun on a different barrel so I can keep using rather than leaving it with a bad barrel in the closet.

This pics from last season.

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Macs69

FNG
Joined
Jul 25, 2014
Messages
12
I feel like the old rifles just have a soul. They've "been there, done that", and feel like they bring a bit of luck to the hunt.
 
Joined
Aug 25, 2020
Messages
75
At present, my only center fire is a 1976 Rem 700 BDL in 30-06 I traded for. I walked by it and the hooded sight caught my eye. I bought it in 2014 and it was brand new- a legitimate safe queen that had just come into the shop that day. It was handled so little that the first time I shouldered it, the fuzz from my shirt got caught in the stock checkering. It still has the original scope, a 3-9x40 weaver with a T-Post reticle. I couldn't get the trigger to break under 6 pounds, so the only modification it has is a timney, and my goodness does that make a world of difference. I've been in the depths of this forum and have considered putting a new scope on it, putting an actual recoil pad on it (instead of the OG plastic pad, which I've still never seen anywhere else), and on and on... but I can't bring myself to change it. It kills. And I love the way it looks. It's not "old", but it's old school. It's hard to put my finger on why I feel so attached to it- it's not my grandpappy's rifle (first generstion big game hunter in a family of fishermen and bird hunters) and it's really not anything super unique- I just like it. I like wood. And old bluing- real bluing.

It sits next to a 1936 Belgian Auto-5 in 12ga, and that one actually was my grandpa's. Killed my first sage grouse with that gun right before a crescent moon-shaped chunk of metal came off the bolt... apparently a common issue with that vintage. It'll get fixed eventually...
 

rabbithuntr

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Apr 13, 2023
Messages
216
I don’t have any older centerfire rifles but all my 22 rifles are older in high school I bought a 10/22 that was made in the seventies from a neighbor lady. When my great uncle died I got a marlin 39 that was made in the fourties I also inherited a single shot bolt action from my granddad that was made in the fourties as well. It’s lightweight and accurate my granddad welded on a zirc for a peep sight that is pretty much dead on.


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Joined
Jun 11, 2022
Messages
62
I have owned a Ruger PC Carbine 9MM Rifle 16.12" 17+1 Black w/Aluminum Free-Float Handguard for six years, definitely one of the most accurate and reliable rifle I have ever owned and shot.
 
Joined
Apr 1, 2020
Messages
52
Location
Oklahoma
I’ve got a 60s era .300 Savage Model 99 that I use half the time when whitetail hunting. Haven’t gotten a good shot opportunity with it in my hands yet. The other half the time I’m carrying a more modern rifle with a suppressor because as of last year my kid has started spending part of each hunting trip in the woods with me.
 

Decker9

WKR
Joined
Apr 10, 2015
Messages
875
Location
BC goat mountains
An interesting family piece here. It’s a single shot .22, Winchester I believe. My grandad built it for my dad in 1952 when he was a wee boy, then re stocked it for him as an older wee boy.

This setup has been through 9 different kids on the family in the past 70+ years.

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Last year my girl turned 10, legal to hunt in Canada (sucks having to wait so long!!)

Grandad, gifted her his old Brno model 5, built in ‘58 iirc. She’s sure turned into a sharp shot with it.

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Formidilosus

Super Moderator
Joined
Oct 22, 2014
Messages
8,264
An interesting family piece here. It’s a single shot .22, Winchester I believe. My grandad built it for my dad in 1952 when he was a wee boy, then re stocked it for him as an older wee boy.

This setup has been through 9 different kids on the family in the past 70+ years.

View attachment 692060View attachment 692061

Last year my girl turned 10, legal to hunt in Canada (sucks having to wait so long!!)

Grandad, gifted her his old Brno model 5, built in ‘58 iirc. She’s sure turned into a sharp shot with it.

View attachment 692059


As esoteric as it may be, this doesn’t happen with synthetic rifles.
 

Honyock

WKR
Joined
Dec 21, 2019
Messages
838
Location
Edmond, OK
An interesting family piece here. It’s a single shot .22, Winchester I believe. My grandad built it for my dad in 1952 when he was a wee boy, then re stocked it for him as an older wee boy.

This setup has been through 9 different kids on the family in the past 70+ years.

View attachment 692060View attachment 692061

Last year my girl turned 10, legal to hunt in Canada (sucks having to wait so long!!)

Grandad, gifted her his old Brno model 5, built in ‘58 iirc. She’s sure turned into a sharp shot with it.

View attachment 692059
I'm going to guess that 22 is your most "valuable" gun. A lot of history in the old hand me down guns. Your kids will fight over it when you're gone.
 
Joined
Apr 22, 2012
Messages
7,418
Location
Chugiak, Alaska
This is the absolute most valuable gun “to me” in my collection. This Marlin model 18 .22 short was handed down from my great great grandfather, to my great grandfather, then to my grandfather, then father, and then to me. It’s not the oldest rifle I own, but it’s the most dear to my heart.
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