The original action lever shape chewed the knuckles off your shooting hand with heavy 45-70 loads that were perfectly safe in the chamber. That lever should be reshaped.
A scout-style scope mount should be an option if not standard equipment, and a rubber pad placed on the butt; Kick-Eze or Decelerator for heavy-kicking cartridges.
Now for the fun part.....what calibers would sell, and not conflict with the elegant #1???
My votes are as follows:
the new .17 Rimfire Mag
the .22 Long Rifle
the .221 Fireball (.222 as alternate choice)
the .260 Remington
the .30-30 (.300 Savage as alternate)
the .45-70
the .475 Linebaugh / .480 Ruger (naturally)
I'd love to see it chambered in .250 Savage and .358 Winchester or .35 Remington, but I have doubts whether they would sell.
What do you think???????
[This message has been edited by BigIron (edited 01-15-2002).]
[This message has been edited by BigIron (edited 01-15-2002).]
CAL
Regards PC
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I am quite fond of the Swede and am in process of mounting a scope on a bolt gun in that chambering ;-) It is currently popular enough that it might sell; good suggestion.
The 8x57 is a great and truly underappreciated cartridge that originally came housed in some very fine rifles, both military and sporter. I doubt it would sell well enough to interest a mass manufacturer, though I'd love to be proven wrong about that.
I was perusing an old handloader's Digest last night. One article is about a Ruger #1 the author had rebarreled to 8x57 improved. It's his "all around rifle".
BigIron
Considering how many rifles were made in that calibre I am surprised that old milsurp rifles are not more popular in the US.
I have modern sporter in 8x57 and it has proved itself time and again.
Does anyone have a picture of a Ruger No3 they could post? I have never seen one.
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Regards
Richard
Regards PC
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I like carbines in shorter rounds
George
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Shoot straight, shoot often, but by all means, use enough gun!
While I really like the Ruger SS that #3 had the worst features. The bbl band, stock, butt and lever were all wrong !
Instead how about a #1 with a lighter barrel. I don't know why they have that cannon bbl anyway. Another thing the Ruger SS needs is a decent cheekpiece that will reduce recoil.
It is item number 2242416
This rifle has all of the strength as the Number 1. I met a guy in Houston in 1990 that built a Ruger No. 3 in a 510 Wells. You can build just about anything on that frame.
I like the No. 1 lever better. I think with heavy recoil, that rebound lever would slam back pretty hard into your middle finger.
-Catter
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Shoot the largest caliber you can shoot well, and practice , practice, practice.
[This message has been edited by Wildcatter (edited 01-16-2002).]
I think there is still room for a plainer, lesser cost version of the #1, whether it is called #3, #4 or whatever. I can definitely do without the barrel band, slightly curved butt, funky lever shape, and stock comb height for iron sights vs. scope.
GeorgeS,
The #3 action is essentially the same as the #1, that is, bull-strong. No backthrust issues. I like the 17 Mach IV & 454 Casull as possibilities.
If I were having a custom #3 built by a 'smith, I'd be sorely tempted to have it done in .348 Winchester.
221 Firball
260 Remington
308 Winchester
8x57 Mauser
9.3x 64
375 H&H
450 Marlin
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"Use A Big Enough Gun!"
Rick
I wish Ruger would make a lighter version.
I agree on the weight issue. A good buddy has a #1B worked over by Mark Penrod - 24" Hart tube in .284 Winch, trigger job, nice personalized grip cap, NP3 finish on the metal, beautiful rework of the safety.
The barrel matches the contour of the factory 30-06 tube, and it is too heavy a gun for a mild cartridge, though great in about every other respect.
The new Winnie & Remmie short mags would be nice choices for a #1 or #3. I like the .35 Whelen, too.