Only FWIW, and to BS about the Swift some more-- I almost never read any gun rags anymore- going on a decade. When I notice the checkout line at the groc long and wheel or the the magazine rack and scan a few rags. Sure enough sometime back, an article repeated the same reguritated lines of the 30's. Hard on barrels etc-- I think the guy mighta shot a gun for the first time to read the stuff. Reason for revisiting this trivia is it surprises me a rag would repeat this-- as it in effect slows gun sales and that's really all their about.
One feature of the Swift which could stand some focus for those unfamiliar is favorite loads. Note how much variance you see among those recipes. It sez in effect the Swift shoots very well with alot of combinations-- at full throttle or reined back say 100-250 fps. I've never observed anyone posting my old favorite load-- one I believe Page's book put me on to. 4320 under any 50-52 gr'r that the individual barrel liked. Meters very well-- almost all the speed of 4064 but meters much better. One for consideration.
Potential Swift owners-- you only need to learn a couple things to master a Swift. How to clean a barrel efficently which is a preresique for any performance varmint round. Attention to case length as any rd pushed to high pressures will stretch brass. Almost all of my Swift loading was done with a Lee Target Model loader-- now unavailable, but it's main feature was uniforming neck dia per the use of a boring bar. Today that means neck turning-- which will benefit accuracy. From there-- load and enjoy.
The Swift is what- almost 80 yrs old? Still it's one of the best performers. I do believe that sez something.
I wanted a M-70 varmint rifle and those were the two choices. So I went with the new .243 Win. I used it for both position target shooting and woodchucks. To be honest it was a good choice. I don't know what my opinion would have been of the Swift if I had one all these years. I owned a couple of used Swifts since then but never got lucky with a hot shooter in that caliber.
I still have a grudge in a way against Bob Wallack. I really wanted the Swift.
Try 39 grains of Reloader 15 and a 52 grain match bullet in the Swift.
Most rifles handle this load, and it shoots extremely well in several rifles. Velcoity is around 3900 + fps.
The 220 Swift is one of my all time favorite 22 calibers.
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saeed@ emirates.net.ae
www.accuratereloading.com
You are invited to come to Idaho for a coyote calling hunt, late fall or winter. I can put you up,and feed you. Oh yes, you have to shoot my Rem. SA swift. This way you can find out first hand how there is not enough room to do what you want with the rims. In the mean time I will be shooting a rimmless 22/250 or 6mm Rem and killing most of the coyotes. "Call em in close" Pete
That's three shots. I hunt varmints with a single shot rifles out of choice is it's lost on me why someone needs 4 shots. In fact when I load my bolt rifle I only put two shots in them so that the nose of the lead bullet does not get damaged. Feed ramps are more gentle on the soft nose.
Is the Swift hard to load for and make perform? Hahahaha. Stupid question. The one I played with would shoot anything and shoot it under MOA without even trying.
Only time it ever made me mad was the day I shot a pretty red fox with it. When I went to look at the animal I found the exit wound was about the diameter of a cantalope!
It's a vicious rifle. I always called it "The Death Ray." I love Swifts! I would take one over a .243 in a heartbeat.
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A well placed bullet is worth 1,000 ft/lbs of energy.
My second Ruger Varmint owned in the mid seventies was a grasshopper gun. Say what? Back then I had a private range on family land- a bench with all my loading tools at hand. Those were the days...
Anyways I'm shooting one late spring day- not a breath of wind or mirage, the scope an old Redfield 6-18 variable. I used the Lee Target Model loading system and often loaded and shot out of one case- indexing too. Fired a couple five shotters and decided on the Sierra 52 HPBT for my days shooting. My first five out of the same case went around .220- using the 2 oz stage on my Canjar two stage. I could never shoot that well, so my next five I used the main trigger which was around 1 1/2 pounds- and concentrated on holding the gun litely with almost no cheek pressure. Those five-- including the clean bore fouler made .159". The load was 4320, BR 2's outta Norma brass seated to 2.72 or within 10 thou of touching. Figured I could better that, as around half of that 159 was the fouler. As I looked down the scope with the first round on a new bull, I noted a grasshopper two squares left. Why not- one caress and he was history. I loaded the shell and noted two more sitting sunning themselves in the now late afternoon sun. Each hopper vaporized at the let off. I mean- it almost got to the point where I was just head shoot'n them.
Fellow shooters-- I do understand this sounds like one overflowing load of fresh bovine fodder. But so help me-- it went down just as written. I think I finally missed a hopper-- but it jumped the shot.
JFWIW-- my range was 100 yds measured.
[This message has been edited by aladin (edited 05-20-2002).]
The Swift will be a favorite for a long time to come for varminters.
Chuck