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one of us |
I received my new 375H&H last night, and had a little time to look it over. Maybe some of you guys with this same model can answer some questions. Overall, I think it's a great rifle. It's my first HP rifle without a detachable magazine, so this "floorplate" deal is a little strange... 1. Stock is very nice. The catalog didn't show the cheekpiece, so that was a nice surprise. The wood is plain, of course, but still very acceptable. 2. It looks like the sights on this rifle will be of little use. Apparently the stock is designed for scope use, since the only way I can look across the sights is to jam my cheekbone down into the stock. I'm not sure I look forward to that experience with a 375H&H. 3. The magazine follower seems to be a little "unsupportive". If I push down on the rear of the follower, it bounces back up, but if I push down on the front, it tends to stick, feeling like a VERY weak spring is under it. Should I try to extend the magazine spring to give it more tension? 4. Should I be able to strip a round off the magazine slowly? I can chamber a round quickly, but if I try to operate the bolt slowly, the round does not make it fully up under the extractor, and once it clears the magazine, the round is flopping around (push-feed-like) until it is chambered, when the extractor then snaps around it. This may be related to #3, due to the weakness of the front of the follower. 5. It seems that there is a mile of freebore. I have always heard that the best accuracy can be obtained with the ogive within .005-.010 inches of the lands. However, I can chamber a dummy round that is quite a bit longer that what can fit in the magazine. Should I load the 300 gr. Nosler Partions to the cannelure and forget about my expensive Ultra-Micrometer seating die? (My Hodgdon manual specifies case length, but not cartridge OAL.) I'm trying to decide if these conditions warrant returning the rifle, or a few at-home adjustments, or a trip to the $$gunsmith$$ for "tuning"... Thanks in advance, [This message has been edited by rick3foxes (edited 03-05-2002).] [This message has been edited by rick3foxes (edited 03-05-2002).] | ||
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one of us |
Rick3foxes....as you have found out, factory rifles aren't usually ready to go as you buy them.....my suggestion is shoot it for awhile to see what else might not be to your liking. This has several benefits...you get brass for reloading, you get a feel for the rifle and you will know rather than guess what needs to be done. Start looking for a good 'smith and figure on a trigger job, some bedding work, and some "tuning" to make sure it all comes together. Many good 'smiths offer a tune-up that includes the trigger, bedding, recrowning the barrel, etc for about $200. | |||
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One of Us |
my model 70 in .375 suffered from last round pop-up. I had to send it back to get it fixed. :-( Click on rifles for sale. [This message has been edited by 500grains (edited 03-06-2002).] | |||
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Moderator |
Rick, You'll find that normal 375 throating is a bit long, long enough that seating bullets 1/10" or so off the lands is not possible in a M70. They use a box that will only allow for 3.60" or maybe 3.610" so just load your ammo so that it fits the magazine box and you'll be fine. Also, shoot your rifle for a few weeks as is and keep notes on what you find wrong or things that should be adjusted, like the trigger. Then you can get your local gunsmith to remedy all of it's ills in one trip. Hopefully! | |||
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<Don Martin29> |
I have a different suggestion. Send it back now to get the feeding corrected and then when it's fixed you can do the trigger yourself if necessary. There is a site that shows how to do the trigger. No need to spend money on a "smith". | ||
one of us |
Rick, I checked out my "Classic Stainless" 375 last night. I have no problems sighting with open sights or scope, but mine is a straight comb stock (no cheek piece). The follower feels "stronger" at the rear, but did not hang up at the front or the rear. No matter how slow or fast I worked the bolt, I couldn't make it "push-feed" - the rim always slipped under the extractor, usually popped out of the magazine after about 1 1/2" of forward bolt travel, well after the bullet is inside the front ring of receiver. I tested with dummy Spitzer and Hornady RNFMJ. It definitely fed better when working the bolt briskly. I wonder if increasing the magazine spring tension in the front would cure the "push-feed" problem by holding the cartridge a little "tighter"? I had no trouble adjusting the trigger to a clean, 3 1/2 pound break. Took about 15 minutes, but I also noticed that pull was about 1/2 pound "lighter" with the action out of the stock. Good luck with it, I'm sure that once the bugs are corrected, you will like yours as much as I like mine - a LOT! Bill | |||
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<Antonio> |
Don Martin29 Could you please post the link to that site? Antonio | ||
<Don Martin29> |
I can't find it Antonio. Perhaps someone else will help? | ||
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quote: Here you go: www.snipercountry.com./Articles/AdjustingWinTrigger.htm ~Holmes | |||
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one of us |
I tested my new LH M70 .375 over the weekend. My sight's are fine; I got a 2" group at 25 yards off the bench. (I don't pretend to be a great open sight shot.) Gun works fine, other than the brass denting as described in the other thread. I like it. Pertinax | |||
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<Antonio> |
Thanks for the link Holmes and Don Martin Antonio | ||
one of us |
Something I've noticed with my new "Safari Express" LH .375: The hole in the barrel band sling mount is too small for my swivels. Anybody else seen this? Any obvious solution besides drilling it out, or turning down my swivels? (Either of which is ridiculous on a brand new $1K gun!) Pertinax | |||
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one of us |
I'd go out and buy a set of uncle mike's swivels and save the trouble. That's what the winchester's are set up for, at least they worked on the LH safari express I tried them on. | |||
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<lb404> |
on your feeding problem, check to see if when you cycle slowly if the case is being bound by a too sharp leading edge of the extractor. In most cases, a little file work to round the edge a bit will take care of the problem of feeding.With faster cycling the sharp edge doesen't have a chance to stick, hang up on, or bite into the brass! As far as the follower spring tension, have you disassembled the rifle? some times the magazine box will go in improperly and bind the flow of rounds.Sometimes you must bend the box forward a little tot allow better alignment. lb404 lb404 | ||
one of us |
ib404, The problem seems to be exactly where you indicated. There is a definite "CLICK" when the round is pushed up under the extractor (by me with a small object). I'm not sure how much resistance there should be at this point, but there doesn't seem to be anything that could provide that much lift on the cartridges at "feeding time". It may be a moot point now. My dealer just shipped the rifle back to Winchester because the scope can not be adjusted far enough to the right to zero in. We were able to shim the rear base enough (.013")to get the vertical to work. Either the mounting holes are drilled wrong, or the barrel is installed wrong. And I'm leaving for Zim in 60 days... Rick. | |||
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<JMeier> |
I've got the M70 Classic Stainless. It shoots really good but had feeding problems. I turned it over to Brown Precision and now it feeds perfect. I couldn't be happier with it. JMeier | ||
<Don G> |
If you basically like the rifle, but want some minor problems fixed DO NOT SEND IT TO WINCHESTER. You have no control over what they send back. They can send you a different rifle with more problems. Send it to a 'smith you trust (a number of good ones frequent this site), or sell it and start over. By all means shoot it before you do anything. Don | ||
one of us |
OK, as previously posted: "The hole in the barrel band sling mount is too small for my swivels." Response: "I'd go out and buy a set of uncle mike's I've got a 1 1/4" Murray sling (he said he only uses Uncle Mike's swivels) that does not fit the front barrel band. Suggestions? Michael | |||
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one of us |
Get the proper drill bit, put a little cutting oil in the hole, drill it out to fit, touch up with cold blue. I have had to do this before, not on a Win.M70, but no worries. No problem. ------------------ | |||
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<Harry> |
I just had to drill out the hole in the front swivel yesterday. Makes one wonder who had their head up their ------- Wonder why it wouldn't be just as easy to make it right the first time? | ||
<Guesty> |
Hi there guys in the Us . Every bad thing mentioned in this forum about the new model safari express hapend to me with mine , also it was so badly chambered that once fire factory rounds could not be rechambered. I contacted the Winchester agent and the rifle was promptly replaced. The replacement rifle seemed to be of slightly better build with sights being vertical, the bases did not need shimming,the recoil lug was square to the bbl and the bolt was not covered in large machine marks. The problem I have with the replacement is any load within 2 gns of max the fired cases develop a small bulge on opposing sides and are very hard to chamber acurracy is terrible but primers indicate only mild pressure[ no flattening at all] and velocities are not eratic. Has any one else experienced this problem? Regards Guesty | ||
one of us |
Well, the rifle that started this thread is being packed up at Winchester getting ready for its trip back to me. It turned out to be just a small fix at the factory - they replaced the barrel and the action. Let me get my calculator out...... according to my figures, that leaves.... the stock!! I've got 4 rounds of each of 6 different loads at home waiting on its arrival. Then sight-in, then practice..... And I'm leaving in 45 days. If it's not right this time, it may not make the trip. Rick. [This message has been edited by rick3foxes (edited 04-19-2002).] | |||
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one of us |
UPDATE: The rifle has returned from Winchester, and is at the gun shop. I took my scope and Talley mounts over last night so he could boresight it to see if the problem is fixed. He just called to say that the SAME PROBLEM EXISTS with the new rifle. He had to check the serial number twice to convince himself that it wasn't the same gun. It looks like they are drilling the receiver wrong. The scope can't be adjusted far enough to the left to line up with the bore. Vertical seems to line up, as long as you use a .013 shim under the rear base (same as the other gun). There is a difference of about 300 in the serial numbers. Safari - 40 days and counting.... I wish I had bought the CZ now... Rick. My therapist says to relax. What an idiot. | |||
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One of Us |
Geez, after reading this, I'm glad I opted for a Browning Stainless A/Bolt. Roger | |||
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one of us |
In the past 3 years, I've tried two Model 70s. One in .375 H&H and then, later on, one in .458 Win. Mag. I had many of the same types of problems described here with the first one (.375). Sent it back to Winchester. Got a different rifle when returned. It was crap also!! I finally traded it in on a Ruger M77 Magnum in .375 H&H. The Ruger works. I just couldn't leave well enough alone and tried a Model 70 in .458 (the second one) just a few months ago. Same crap. Crooked sights. Secondary recoil lug on the barrel was crooked. Feeding problems. Etc. Good bye number 2! I traded it. Enough is enough. Unless the quality control greatly improves at Winchester (USRA) I will never buy another one. Just my rantings..... | |||
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one of us |
Like I posted before: posted 03-28-2002 08:12 The overall appearance of the gun is nice But if we look a bit closer we see the front sight is a screw on skinny ramp that will not allow the insert to be moved sideways without sticking out to the side So I drag out my old 602,the602 is the forerunner of the current 550 How does it compare? So in overview: If I was Right Handed I would never buy a 70 over a 602 or a 550 the money I would save would buy me a nice scope and leave me with some to have it cleaned up a little. If you are LH however and life is meaningless without a LH mag. Mauser there is no choice. I did seen a 550 the other day it looked very nice nicer than the70 and still only $850 Can.
Regards Martin | |||
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<Cobalt> |
I stopped by our local pawn shop on the way home from work and found two big bore rifles. One was a Remington in .416, wood, blue, half bbl band. The other was a M-70 Classic Super Express in .458. Both guns looked to be new, just no boxes. The Winchester had a box of ammo with three rounds spent. I gave $500 for it and was on my way. After reading this string, there are some things that are different about this rifle. The bbl sling swivel is not a band, but a block I guess soldiered onto the bbl. I removed the stock and found no bbl recoil lug, just the action recoil lug. The sights seem to be on straight and it shoulders like a shotgun with perfect sight alignment. The bolt cycles very smoothly though not as smoothly as my pre '53. The bluing on the bbl is also nice. Inletting and checkering are also very good for a non-custom rifle. It is CRF. Why no second recoil lug? Thanks, Cobalt | ||
<Cobalt> |
Sorry, the pre 64 is a '53 vintage. Guess I should engage my brain before the finger. Cobalt | ||
one of us |
I looked HARD at the Winchester Safari.....but after looking at the CZ side by side with the Winchester....I bought the CZ. Winchester needs to get it's act together. The CZ's are less expensive, and seem to have a better fit and finish. That's too bad. Hope they can correct their deficencies soon. Gary. | |||
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One of Us |
I got one (LH, 375 H&H). Fourteen defects, any one of which would have made me really upset at having paid $1000 for it (I am not counting the pink aluminum follower as a defect). Made in Connecticut. Gun went back to Winchester. They've shipped another. My dealer has it. I'm on vacation and won't get to see it for a week. I have my fingers crossed. If my gunsmith can turn one of these things into a quality rifle for under $300, I guess I've saved some money compared to going the custom route (yes, right-handed posters, Winchester is about the only game in town for U.S. left-handers who want something more powerful than a 338). In retrospect, I think I've done things backwards. Somewhere along the way, I'd like to have a 458 or 460 something or other, and I'd toyed with the idea of getting it built on a Dakota or other pricey action. Thing is, I will probably shoot a 375 ten times for every time I shoot a 458 (bullet, powder costs, recoil, plausible North American hunting scenarios and all that). Even though there is a factory gun alternative (not the best, mind you) in 375 caliber, I would probably be better off sinking $5000+ into something I'll get more use out of and go the cheap route when some manufacturer realizes or imagines there is a huge left handed market out there for 40 or 45 caliber bolt guns. Well, some people can't learn from mistakes without making them. H. C. [This message has been edited by HenryC470 (edited 04-28-2002).] | |||
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one of us |
Just zeroed .375 M70 Safari Express. No feed faults, screws all solid etc. Checkering not the best I've seen, but it'll be better with a little work. Original scope mounts would not allow zero on largeish S&B scope, the vertical adjustment running out of travel. Replacing with low power flashdot from S&B cured this. All in all not a bad rifle. There's not a huge choice on UK market. It seemed to me to be more a question of what was available, rather than order now for 3-5 month wait. Regards Robert | |||
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one of us |
Final update: Last Friday yet another (3rd) rifle showed up from Winchester at my local gun shop. BTW, while I was waiting on a rifle, I went to the gun show at the Fairgrounds in Raleigh. Big mistake! There on the table, was a brand new Safari Express for $799, and I paid $899 for the one that didn't work. Ruined my day. My dealer phoned me as soon as he mounted the scope and tried to boresight it. It has the same problem - No amount of windage adjustment will bring it inline. I told him that I was going to check out the one I saw at the gun show since it was only about 30 miles away. I called to make sure it was still there, and found out that the gun show price was a mistake - it should have been $849. So I took my scope and mounts with me and went to check it out. We mounted it, and with a few clicks, it was dead on! Then he told me that he would honor the gun show price, even though it would cost him $805 to replace it! I shot my 24 or so test loads on Saturday (ouch), and it is now sitting at the gunsmith's shop to get a trigger job and smooth the extractor/ramp/follower "rough edges". With 23 days before we leave, a great load has been lifted from my shoulders... Rick. | |||
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One of Us |
Rick, When you talk to them in Winchester do they acknowledge that the stuff is crap, a great design, but poorly executed. Or do they just go into denial mode. Mike | |||
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one of us |
Never a problem - at least with the fellow I was dealing with. I found out early on, not to waste my time with "Joy". Her job was to get me to leave her alone. For my particular problem, the factory was scrambling, and having some intense meetings, not knowing how many rifles had been made with that alignment problem. The guy I talked to had just bought the same rifle a few months ago with his discount, and had not put a scope on it. So he was a little concerned about it, too. Rick. [This message has been edited by rick3foxes (edited 05-14-2002).] | |||
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<JoeR> |
A well known gun writer (whom I cannot name for reasons soon to be apparant) was giving me advice for my back-up rifle to take to Zim (backing my .416 Rigby) and he strongly advised me to stay away from the Winchester Safari rifles saying they sent him big bore rifles all the time to try out and test, both the factory versions and the big buck Custom Shop beautys'. He said he had yet to see a single one that he would trust on a DG hunt! I ignored him and bought a Safari Express in .375, brand new. I was delighted when it worked great, fed, fed with quick cycling of the bolt, and shot very well.. 1 1/2 " @ 100 yds with most factory ammo. I couldn't wait to tell him and I did so and he said I was very lucky. Then, on about the 100th round through the rifle (all factory) I fired a shot which was an extreme flier and I could not open the bolt, even by hammering on it with a wood block and hammer! I sent it back to Winchester and promptly sold it when they returned it. In my experience, just because you think it works, be very careful with these products if you intend using one for real. | ||
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JoeR, any idea what the problem was? It sounds more like a freak round of ammo than a gun failure. Rick. | |||
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<Don Martin29> |
I feel really bad about this story. At first it seemed that I was going to be wrong about sending the rifle back but now it seems that it's the only way to get satisfaction. What really bothers me is that I like M-70's a lot and the lack of quality seems like a major problem there. I am thinking back to the "disucssion" I had at a gun shop where the clerk told me that the new M-70's were "better in every way" as compared to the old M-70's that I asked about. I feel like printing this out and handing it to him! This is not the first time that something was made wrong. What's disconcerning is the repeating of the error. | ||
one of us |
I use the new M70s for target rifles and like them fine for this purpose. The actions are totally reworked any way so all deficiencies are adressed. Feeding is not a concern in a rifle that is converted to single shot! I have worked with quite a few of the new "controlled feed" M70s in building hunting rifles and I can tell you they are not like the Pre-64s. It takes more than a long extractor to make a controlled round feed action. In post on this and other forums, JBelk has explained how the controlled feed as in the Mauser and in the Pre-64 Win is a system with the contours of the receiver rails being a part of the system. This is not the case in the new M70s. They use a mag box just like the push feeds and the action rails are the same as the push feeds. The cartridge is moved into position by the feed ramp rather than by the rails. So the cartridge is kind of levered over until it pops out from under the rails. Sometimes feeding problems with the new design are maddening in the extreme. It is really too bad that,on top of design deficiencies, Winchester also has some real quality control problems. At least they do seem to be willing to correct the problems (repeatedly!). When I was doing warranty work for Winchester they were always a good company to deal with (compared to Remington for instance) but one shouldn't have had to deal with them so much! Regards, Bill. | |||
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<JoeR> |
Rick3foxes, they told me the rifle was improperly chambered and they repaired it and did not replace it. Bottom line is, when writers such as Ed Matunas, in his Guide to Bigbore Cartriges and Rifles, say to put at least 600 rounds through your rifle before going after dangerous game with it, under all conditions, temperatures and firing positions, they know what they are talking about. Scary thing to me was I had no advanced warning that this rifle was defective, no difficulties in extraction, brass deformity or marring, and then bang, total failure. | ||
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