Bolt Action Rifles. Wayne Zwoll

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rel="nofollow" href="#uc8106421-b4c5-5d95-903f-7e4908e76da5">Winchester Model 70 Post-’64

       Winchester Models 54 & 70

       Winchester Model 70 Revisited

       Part IV: Trends in Bolt-Action Rifles and Cartridges

       Not Quite Custom

       It Doesn’t Even Look Cheap

       A Bolt Rifle for Little Bucks

       Touch But Don’t Look

       Real Rifles Wear Wood

       Barrels for Bolt Actions

       Headspace 101

       The Lightweight Trend in Bolt Rifles

       Does it Kick?

       The Best Aren’t Always Last

       Cartridges that Reach as Far as You Can See

       Short Stature, Long Reach

       Part V: Shooting Bolt Rifles

       Better Shooting at your Fingertip

       When Safeties Can’t Help

       Five Steps to Zero

       Shoot Better

       More on Standing

       Slings and Hasty Slings

       Aiming Where They Aren’t

       Cants

       Pitching the Curve Ball

       Getting the Drift

       Documenting Marksmanship

       Last Thoughts on Long Shots

       Part VI: Reference

       Appendix—Magazine Guard Screw Sizes & Threads

       Barrel Shank Drawings

      Introduction

      This is the fourth rendition of Bolt Action Rifles. It is the first not completed by Frank de Haas. Frank’s original edition came along in 1971; an encyclopedic work that told readers more than most readers cared to know. But that was Frank. He wasn’t just a gun enthusiast; he was a mechanic, someone keen to learn all he could about firearm mechanisms, and adept at passing that knowledge along. He began writing in 1943, and continued until his death in 1994, just after finishing the third edition of this book (the second was published 10 years earlier). Frank wrote for shooting-industry periodicals and became one of the NRA gurus who answered reader questions. Early on, the NRA paid him $1.25 a letter, furnishing the stationery and envelopes, demanding carbons of the responses.

      Frank de Haas was certainly qualified for such duty. Technically well-informed, he wrote in a matter-of-fact way that was neither entertaining nor provocative. It was the facts, straight up. And Frank’s readers appreciated that. They wanted to know how guns worked, why a given serial range was better than another for wildcatting, what could be done to ensure feeding in a rifle rebarreled to a straighter case. Frank told them about the origin and manufacture of rifles, what the barrel stampings meant, how to tell if a receiver was of nickel or double heat-treated carbon steel. He offered his opinions too, but made sure to identify them as such. And if he didn’t know what you wanted to find out, he’d tell you that too: "… how strong and safe are the low-numbered 03 actions? This I cannot answer. When made, they were proof tested with loads developing 70,000 psi, and very few failed this test..." Even when conceding ignorance, Frank left you with a solid nugget of information.

      An inveterate experimenter, Frank spent lots of time at his modest workbench – first in a local plumbing shop, then in a corner of his basement. With a Craftsman lathe and drill press, he restocked military rifles and rebarreled sporters. He took on gunsmithing jobs for friends and sometimes for readers, if the work intrigued him. He wrote about what he saw and didn’t like to pass along untested conclusions. While his colleagues collected rifles, Frank had a collection of rifle actions. Most were candidates for projects. His interest lay inside the mechanisms, and no company could long hide shoddy workmanship or poor design from Frank. In the interests of better shooting, he’d suggest that Remington improve the trigger on its 788, then point out that "the irregular pattern of the locking lugs on the (Mossberg) M800 turns me off." Even rifles he praised – Kimber’s 82 Hornet, for example – took barbs: "I would also like my rifles to have a bolt sleeve lock and perhaps a bolt handle of different shape to reduce the notch in the stock…"

      But Frank seemed to like all rifles, and his summations reflected his innate gentleness. Devoted to his family, he attended church regularly and was by all accounts a charitable man. He didn’t pass himself off as an expert or even a professional gunsmith – though he designed and built his own single-shot rifles. He established himself instead as a quiet authority on the workings of sporting rifles, particularly bolt actions. It is in that spirit that I’ve brought this latest edition of Frank’s premier work up to date. I have not changed

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