Wow, what a find
You will learn far more at the casting, loading, and shooting bench than you ever will at a computer bench.
Yeah, it totally caught me by surprise. Makes my head hurt, LOL.
I have a 1413 downstairs but it was opened long ago......
You will learn far more at the casting, loading, and shooting bench than you ever will at a computer bench.
I have a Super Match 54 from the late 50's, once upon a time it was the only rifle I had. Back in the late 90's when I made my "triumphant" return to smallbore that bad boy would still make one hole with the scope at 100 yards with that wonderful Lapua gold box that was around then. That 54 was purchased new in the late 50's, a shooter shot his whole career with it and then it became a club rifle sometime in the 80's when I started using it. I got to purchase it in the 90's when the club dissolved. That rifle must have a billion rounds through it and it still shoots. I don't think Anschutz rifles ever give up.
That rifle find is sweet! I can't shoot it being a lefty, but I can still envy the find. I have a lefty BSA Int'l Mk II(my avatar) with all of Al Freeland's goodies that had not seen the light of day since the fifties judging by all the club and competition paperwork in the case.
BSA's are awesome, I got a MkIII a year or so ago. Have not made the time to shoot it yet but I know they hammer.
BTW I have a lefty thumbhole stock this 1613 would bolt right into, you just have to put up with flipping her over to reload.
Looks like you are all geared up to go to the woods for a squirrel hunt ! Ha Ha
hey, watch where ya point that thing!
LOL you would not want to hump that rifle around the woods to shoot tree rats LOL, not to mention the heavy sail cloth jacket/pants and super flat sole shooting boots would make for a very long day.
Very nice!!!!
I also have a 1979 1613 but it has been factory test fired & assembled but never used by the original owner. Had it a year now & haven't gotten around to cleaning it & shooting it. The factory oil has turned gummy & everything needs tore down & cleaned.
The receiver bolt area.
Attachment 103171
The bolt
Attachment 103172
The walnut & blue steel on these rifles are beautiful, maybe some day this one will get shot/used.
Attachment 103173
Heck, I bought a mas45 2 years ago that is still in cosmoline/unfired & haven't cleaned/shot it yet. It's hard to use these rifles when they are in this condition, there just isn't that many of them left.
Enjoy your time capsule.
Greaaat! Now I learn this forum has smallbore geeks too. Just what I need - more enablers.
The square-actioned Anschutzes and their thousand-axis adjustable stocks whisper to me, but for what I do (and as little as I play) the 52C seems to get it done.
But I'm not sure it's possible to beat the BSA's for sheer unmitigated cool factor - if the 24th Regiment of Foot were to go to the Olympics. . .
WWJMBD?
In the Land of Oz, we cast with wheel weight and 2% Tin, Man.
Forrest, Wow! Nice to know my rifle is not an only child. Hard to believe there are two rifles in this condition after all these years.
Bigslug, yes the 2000 series Anschutz actions are awesome but your 52C is from another era where quality and pride were paramount. As space age as I go for position shooting I go the other way for smallbore prone. I shoot a Remington 37 most of the time and I have a Ray Morgan as back up. Of course after all these years they have been all redone by the smallbore gods (Kenyon, Klienedorst and Sitman) but I love it when one of the juniors notices my rifle is different and then I tell him/her what they are. The look in their eyes is priceless.
Last edited by Hip's Ax; 05-23-2014 at 08:08 AM.
Yeah. . .they don't do them like that anymore. Let me bounce my assessment off you to see what you think:
Having shot a lot of bughole groups with a number of good old .22's, the REAL advantage of the top-end modern smallbore guns seems to be not in the mechanical accuracy, but rather in the ability to more precisely fit the rifle to the shooter. Maybe possibly a bit of lock-time advantage which would show up primarily in offhand (where most of us are bringing WAAY more error to the party than a couple miliseconds would show)
WWJMBD?
In the Land of Oz, we cast with wheel weight and 2% Tin, Man.
Having any rifle fit you to shoot your best is paramount but even more so as the bullet velocity gets below the speed of sound like a match 22lr at 1080 fps or slower. The absents of recoil and muzzle blast in small-bore shooting compared to high-power shooting is very deceiving as to how difficult it really is.
Well, along with lock time, the triggers have improved a great deal but I think you are correct. The modern stocks that are fully adjustable I think are a huge improvement. As you can see above my smallbore prone rifle are wearing modern fully adjustable stocks and I can just lie there all day on them. When my friends and I have a vintage prone session we are about crippled when we get up after a single target when we are shooting our factory 52's, 37's and the like. The stocks are like shooting a canoe paddle LOL.
Doc, yes I agree. I love it when a high power shooter joins us thinking its an easy kids game, just to get his butt whipped by pretty much everyone with any experience. They show up with whatever rifle with whatever ammo and expect to do well. That and their obvious limping and groaning at the end of the day as they find out 160 record rounds is a real grind. Some never come back, some get so interested they almost quit high power all together. I shoot everything, I have 14 NRA classifications right now but smallbore prone is my favorite.
The rifle came out of nj, go figure.
Smallbore is an art unto itself with excellent quality firearms & triggers to die for. The only other firearms I've ever seen rival the 22lr position rifles are the world class 10m airguns.
Thank you for sharing your rifles & experiences with us, I've always enjoyed your post here and on rimfire central. Your knowledge & commitment to rimfires and shooting sports in general has help countless 1000's of shooters.
LOL I came out of NJ too.
Agreed, my air rifle has an amazing trigger and the balance is superb. Where ever that hole is in the target is exactly where the rifle was pointed when the pellet left the muzzle.
Thanks for the kind words but I am not doing anything unusual, when I had questions back when the experienced guys always would help. Difference here is the internet was not around back then, I answer the questions to the best of my ability same and they did and the answered questions just stay here until someone searches and reads it. Unlike many other sports there are no deep secrets in shooting, we always tell each other the truth. Shooters are the best folks around.
Last edited by Hip's Ax; 05-29-2014 at 09:41 PM.
BP | Bronze Point | IMR | Improved Military Rifle | PTD | Pointed |
BR | Bench Rest | M | Magnum | RN | Round Nose |
BT | Boat Tail | PL | Power-Lokt | SP | Soft Point |
C | Compressed Charge | PR | Primer | SPCL | Soft Point "Core-Lokt" |
HP | Hollow Point | PSPCL | Pointed Soft Point "Core Lokt" | C.O.L. | Cartridge Overall Length |
PSP | Pointed Soft Point | Spz | Spitzer Point | SBT | Spitzer Boat Tail |
LRN | Lead Round Nose | LWC | Lead Wad Cutter | LSWC | Lead Semi Wad Cutter |
GC | Gas Check |