I was reading about the 300 H&H cartridge. It won a couple of 1,000 yard matches in the 1930s. Were custom actions available then, or was someone competing with a hunting/military action and doing well with it?
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Most competitors were using Winchester mod 70 factory match rifles in that era. Not saying that there may not have been the odd custom action but they would not have been common.I was reading about the 300 H&H cartridge. It won a couple of 1,000 yard matches in the 1930s. Were custom actions available then, or was someone competing with a hunting/military action and doing well with it?
That’s cool, but raises questions. Was it a 1917 Enfield with a single shot follower? Magazine opening welded shut? Some other action made in 1917? Built by Griffin & Howe, so not an off the rack hunting or military rifle. I would love to find a book about target shooting from that era.![]()
An NRA Shooting Sports Journal | Wimbledon Cup History: Ben Comfort's Controversial Sighters
At the 1935 Wimbledon Cup Match, Ben C. Comfort set one of Camp Perry's more memorable "firsts."www.ssusa.org
I still shoot a Weber. Here's a thread I started when I bought it:When I think of an early benchrest action I remember the Weber I had. Not sure when it was made but I think it came out of California.
Here's a link to a recent American Rifleman article on Comfort's rifle...That’s cool, but raises questions. Was it a 1917 Enfield with a single shot follower? Magazine opening welded shut? Some other action made in 1917? Built by Griffin & Howe, so not an off the rack hunting or military rifle. I would love to find a book about target shooting from that era.
Thanks.
If I order a Rimrock action from Jim Borden I can order a right bolt, left port, right eject, or a right bolt, right port, right eject or no eject. I can specify it polished or not, melonited or not, spiral bolt or smooth. Sounds custom to me. So are you talking about a custom action being a one off only?I have never even heard of a single custom action. Plenty of niche manufacturers make quality actions with several options, but that isn’t “custom”. Ordering a Mercedes Benz and choosing from the factory options makes it a quality car suited to your needs and desires but it’s not a custom car.
I'll bet there are some sitting in closets of Williamsport shooters.I’ve heard of Wolff actions from the 1960s. I saw one in Pennsylvania back around 2000. FN made single shot Mausers back in the 1950s. Those are not too hard to find these days. I find all of this to be fascinating. I would love to build an old school hunting or 1kBR rifle; FN single shot, walnut stock, Unertl scope, 264 WinMag or 300 Weatherby. That would be pretty cool.
Agree 100%. Re custom actions check out www.steveearleproducts.comIf that is the requirement, I know of several. Actions built by Vic Swindlehurst, Bob and Albert Forslund, or Gerry Geske, are certainly custom actions. In addition I have seen numerous falling block actions. Some replicas of existing designs and some wjich are unique. Post #15 is simply an example of the common tendency to bring semantics into a discussion where they don't belong. WH