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one of us |
Are you sure it was a 416 Rigby and not 416 Remington? A Rigby seems a little large for the action. Anything is possible, I guess, but I think you'd have to do a lot of chopping to get it to fit. - Dan | |||
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One of Us |
Winchester has been prototyping the model 70 in 416 rigby. They use the 375 H&H action and cut it open front and back, open the ejection port and move the bolt stop back. Apparently it fits. I think they should just build a production magnum mauser action. I am not too fond of model 70's. | |||
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one of us |
I agree with that, 500grains. All this cutting fore and aft makes me nervous. - Dan | |||
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Moderator |
Jens, They also offered that rifle in .470 Capstick, so I don't see a problem with the .416 Rigby. My own .470 Capstick is on a LH M-70 converted from .375. George ------------------ | |||
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one of us |
The left hand Model 70 in .416 Rigby is only offered in the Winchester Custom Shop African Express. I can offer a little insight into the Custom Shop rifles and a bit of personal opinion. They are not worth the price. I have two of them, a LH stainless .375 H&H and a LH .30-06. Now, I�m not saying they are bad rifles, actually they are very nice, just not worth what Winchester charges. As to the Rigby chambering in the Model 70, I�d heed what the previous posters have said. They have moved the bolt stop so far back that the bolt is almost out of the action when opened. I would be wary of new left hand Winchester actions in all lengths. They were having many quality control problems with their new plant when I was waiting for my rifles, the Custom Shop manager told me that she had to reject many of the actions she was getting. The Model 70 custom African Express in .416 Rigby has a retail price of $4,435, although I have no idea what the price will be in Sweden. It will take a year to build it. Maybe 9 months if you are lucky. The wood will be nice, not great, but nice. It SHOULD function properly, but there is no guarantee of that. My .375 was an excellent rifle in all respects when delivered, the .30-06 was far less than perfect and had to be sent back twice to correct problems with feeding and extraction. Now I have no personal experience with this next discussion, just personal opinion. If you are considering spending that much on a .416 Rigby then you would be FAR better off to consider the Dakota Model 76 African Grade. According to Dakota the rifle is built on their �.416 Rigby Long Magnum� action. If you order one then Dakota claims that it will take three months to build, that is one fourth the time it will take to get a Winchester. The Dakota African retails for $4,995. That is $560 more than the Winchester, or about 13% more if you want to look at it that way. You will get FAR more than a 13% better rifle. I have heard that the stocks on the Dakota rifles produce more felt recoil but have no personal experience on that. Other than that, most everyone has very good things to say about the rifles. Dakota currently has a left hand Model 76 African in .416 Rigby in stock, price is $4,995. See http://www.dakotaarms.com/inventory.htm More personal opinion � I think Dakota charges too much for their wood, but then I don�t know all that much about good stock making. You can get the left handed barreled action for $2,950 or the action only for $2,500. Buying a barreled action would leave you $2,045 to stock the rifle yourself. I think for a heavy recoiling rifle like this a stock made specifically to fit you is superior to their standard stock style. I spent close to $5,000 on my two Winchesters, and both of them wear McMillan fiberglass stocks. My Winchesters are both stainless steel and Dakota does not make a stainless action. But were I to do it over, I would have bought two Dakota actions, had a good barrel maker barrel them, and bought the McMillan stocks myself. The whole process would have taken half the time it took the get the Winchesters and I believe that I would have gotten far better rifles for the same price. | |||
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<jthessen> |
Thanks All for the insight ! The reason I am asking is that I have a Win LT lefthand on the way (Thanks to Harry) for about $600. But in 7mm Rem mag. I have asked my gunsmith to check it before its sent to me , so I hope that he will be able to check for feeding/extraction, smooth bolt travel,bedding, trigger. Dan George 500 grains
The dilemma I am in, is that I have a cz 550 in 416 rigby (RH of course) and dies and a lot of brass/bullets so I am not very keen on switching to 404 (although brass tends to be a bit cheaper, bullets are not very plentiful, and quite pricey compared to 416�s
//Jens [This message has been edited by jthessen (edited 12-21-2001).] | ||
Moderator |
"George Sorry I am quite rusty on the specs on 470 chapstick, but is the cartridge as long as the 416 rigby ( max 3.720)" Jens, The case is a .375H&H necked up and all body taper is removed. George ------------------ | |||
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<jthessen> |
George, Thanks ! Is Your bolt stop moved or shortened? //Jens | ||
One of Us |
I agree with 500grains, CZ should put out a left-handed Mauser! In my heart, I have to kick something when I look at a $500 RH Mauser in .404 or .416 Rigby on one hand and LH custom Winchesters and Dakotas for what might as well be 10 times the price on the other hand. I gave up on getting the Dakota with its all-around betterness and 5-round magazine capacity, and I ordered a non-custom Classic Safari Express Winchester LH in .375 for $900. I figure my gunsmith can do whatever slicking up is needed, and for $200 to $400, he'll upgrade it to .416 Remington, I'm told. $500 for a right handed Mauser and $5000 for a left handed quasi-pre-64 model 70. I need to kick something. H. C. [This message has been edited by HenryC470 (edited 12-22-2001).] | |||
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<jthessen> |
H.C I certaily don�t want a weak rifle, so if the nessesary modifications severly weakens the M70 , I will go for the 404. I have even asked around regarding a lefthand conversion of the cz without success, and if WR was to do it the price of a Dakota would be close I guess. Have You notised the gun locater at winchesters web site, not available on the LH 375, hmmmm When will they produce this rifle? Beretta Mato shold be availabe in LH but NO. Oh well life sucks & then you die. //Jens | ||
one of us |
Jens, Charles Daly (in another thread here somewhere) has stated that they will be coming out with a LH Mauser and stainless (I don't know about the two together). I'll believe it when I see it, but as my brother and my three shooting partners are all handicapped (I mean left handed, LOL) there is a lot of interest around here. - Dan | |||
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Moderator |
Dan, Zastava (the maker of the rifles sold by Charles Daly DEFINITELY makes LH Mauser-style actions. Whether Charles Daly will import will depend upon how much demand they perceive to be out there. Do as I do, and e-mail them asking them to import LH rifles!!! ------------------ | |||
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One of Us |
jthessen: When I spoke to Winchester on the phone, they said they were scheduled to start a production run of LH .375 caliber M-70's in December 2001. My dealer's distributor lists this rifle as "hard to find". Dealer told me he'd place the order after the first of the year, since distributors like to sell down their inventories to avoid paying tax on them. H.C. | |||
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<jthessen> |
Dan, Excellent news , but I agree on see&believe. Would it be available in magnum lenght? Yep, sure is handicapped in the gun world (maybe also in a wider sence, but no need to expand on that one) George, H.C A Lh 98 priced like a cz550, would also sell quite well I think. Thanks again for the input. //Jens
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Moderator |
Jens, My bolt stop has not been altered; since the .470 Capstick case is the same length as the .375H&H, there was no need to move it. I've not heard about CZ producing a LH rifle; the Charles Daly rifles are Zastava (Yugoslavia) products. I think the Zastavas are our best hope for real LH Mausers! George ------------------ | |||
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<jthessen> |
George, Sorry I thought is was cz, anyway while searching the web I found a comment like the zastava plant being bombed, I have no idea if this could be true, i certainly hope its false info. What is the weight of Your .470 Capstick? //Jens | ||
Moderator |
Jens, NATO bombed the Zastava plant, but didn't destroy the entire factory. The rifles are being sold in Europe as I write this (one of the members of this site in the U.K. was writing about his Zastava a few weeks ago). You may want to check with your local importers; or, since Sweden is a member of the EU, you may be able to pick one up in another EU nation and bring it home yourself. My .470 Capstick weighs 10.75lbs. with a couple of recoil reducers in the butt. It is as light as it could be while still being controllable. Unbraked, it generates 74ft.-lbs. of recoil, but from the off-hand position, it does not hurt in the least. George ------------------ | |||
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one of us |
quote: Oh brother, do I ever empathise with that! Ya know, there IS a rifle that is readily available in left hand actions, blued particularly but stainless is not too hard to come by either. Aftermarket accessories are everywhere. One size scope base fits all actions, no need of special screw hoel spacing for long magnum receivers. Prices for all models usually range only about $20 over the right handed versions. The basic action has a 3.7" magazine box. You can take one with a magnum bolt face and make it anything from a 7mm Mag. to a .416 Rem. Mag simply by rebarreling with no other changes. (He cautiously beckons the reader closer, then looking furtively right and left he whispers, "It's the Remington Model 700".) Oh, the shame of it all! That Remington would make things so EASY and yet are so scorned by the intelligentsia. (Cracking open another brew, he laments, "it's enough to drive a fellow to drink!") | |||
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Moderator |
Jim, I don't think the Rem. 700 fits Jens' requirements. It's not CRF. George ------------------ | |||
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<jthessen> |
George, I sure will look into the Zatavas. Jim, //Jens | ||
one of us |
George, I didn't know which emoticon to use to indicate a tongue in cheek post. It does drive me nuts to know that I can get a used LH Remington in 7mm Mag for about $350 at a gun show, and about $420 later have an accurized, Pac-Nor barreled .375 H&H, .416 Rem. Mag, .458 Lott, whatever thumper one wants. Just don't mention to anyone here that you have a push feed DGR, you might get sent to the penalty box. But to get a CRF in anything longer than the "short magnum" family, such as a .300 Win. Mag., it will take many, many dollars or what seems to be an Act of Congress to get Winchester to make more .375 length LH actions. On another note, I forget where I saw it, but here is a link to a company producing (or soon to produce) CRF actions with features from the Mauser 98 and Model 70 combined. Perhaps this is a moot point if Winchester actually produces some LH .375's this month. They've been "scheduled" to be produced since about March of 1999 so I've gotten a little jaded at Winchester's predictions. HOWEVER, I actually saw a new, left hand Model 70 LT sporter in .300 Win. Mag. a couple of weeks ago. The shop had 3 new LH M70 LT's so maybe we will actually see the .375's soon. FWIW, I took my overpriced custom shop .375 out this weekend and shot two 3 shot groups of .4" and .78" and a 5 shot group of .65", so maybe it ain't so bad after all. | |||
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Moderator |
Jim, I use for tongue-in-cheek posts. As for push-feed DGRs, they work for some people but not for others. The 'classic' DGR bolt-actions are Mauser '98s and Winchester M-70s or variants thereof (e.g., Dakota, Brno, CZ, etc.). That's just the way it is. I have a LH Sako .375H&H which was the rifle I took for my first safari in 1991. Although it is a push-feed, the Sako extractor helps prevent double-feeds. It shoots beautifully, too. This is the only push-feed I'd trust on a DG hunt. When I went on my first buffalo hunt in '97, I got a LH M-70 and never looked back. The CRF is quite reassuring. It shoots as well as yours does. Since then, I've acquired a LH M-70 CRF in .270, plus three more LH Express-actioned M-70s: a 7mmSTW sporter, a .470 Capstick, and a Custom Sporting Sharpshooter built by H-S Precision. Now, I was always a Remington 700 fan, and I own eight of them. They are a great platform upon which to build a real tack driver. However, I find myself reaching for the M-70s more and more. In order, I'd have to say the M-70s are my favorites, followed by the Sako AVs, then the Remington 700s (although I love my Weatherby and Savage rifles, too). George ------------------ | |||
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<jthessen> |
Jim Thanks for the link, seems almost too good to be true. Sorry for not being able to get the irony. //Jens | ||
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