Will Henry -
Howdy !
i authorized a short article on my .22-35 wildcat, that did get printed in
“Precision Shooting “ magazine in late 1977, if I recall the date right.
In the article, I talked about my first range trip w/ the new rifle.....
a local area benchrest match sponsored by Fred Sinclair; that took place
@ the “Blue Creek “ range just West of Wiltshire, OH.
While I was doing initial fire forming on my newly-formed wildcat cases....
not watching wind flags..... shooting in cold, blowing snow conditions....
I managed to shoot what would have qualified as 3rd place.
I said it “would have been “ a third place finish, but my “ varmint rifle “ was something like 8oz above the class wt limit. At the time, my first iteration of the rifle was: Wichita WBR1375 single shot benchrest action,
1.375” 24” straight bull SS Hart 1-14, Bishop walnut/walnut laminate
heavy target style stock w/ 2.75” wide for end and high comb; a 2oz trigger converted by Ken Burns; and a 24X Leupold in B&L rings and Weaver bases.
Even though I understood My gun was too heavy to be legal for the class,
I was extremely proud to have eeked-out such good groups @ 100.
Especially considering that I was going up against regular benchrest shooters, shooting full tilt bench guns, chambered in .222, .222 Mag; and old tyme 6X47. This included Fred Sinclair, himself a small group world record holder and NBRSA Hall of Fame’r; and Fred’s wife Becky, her being a formidable shooter in her own right.
My .22-35 Remington fire form load was a chuck full case of IMR4350.... which I believe was 43.0gr under custom 52gr FB HP’s from Ron Fifer; and CCI LR Match. I had done all the brass prep and reloading tricks I could, to prep for the competition.
To my knowledge, no highly distributed gun magazine ever ran an article on the .22-35 Remington. And, as you likely know.... at the time ....there was a benchrest wildcat already out there already called“ . 22-35 “.
That one ( I believe ) was based on .222Mag w/ a 35*shoulder angle. But, by that date it was on its way out; as the .22PPC had debuted the year before. So, with full knowledge, I went ahead and named my wildcat “ .22-35 “; anyway ! That decision has never been criticized.
As an aside -
No .35 Remington-based wildcats are mentioned in Ackley’s 2 vol treatise
“ Handbook for Shooters and Reloaders “. This was somewhat of a surprise, as Ackley himself had wildcatted .35 Rem down to 6mm; and other of his wildcats were described in his handbook.
I DK whether any of this helps ?
With regards,
357Mag