sestoppelman
AH ambassador
Horse hockey! Guessing you are not stateside right?
Bushnell might still have something in their range. Otherwise, email OpticTrade or Cameraland.My wife and I also recently acquired a pre-64 Winchester Model 70 in .300 H&H. We were both born in 1951 and had been looking for a '51 for a couple years.....in price and condition we could live with. My wife was/is really excited about the purchase, which really adds to the total enjoyment. Like everyone else who is new to this cartridge, we are now looking for some Norma brass.
Our rifle was fitted with a externally adjusted B&L scope from the '60's. Small crosshairs difficult to see. I have a Weaver scope I could install, but prefer to go with newer optics. What scope(s) in the fixed 4 to
variable 12 are long enough not to require bases that extend over the cartridge platform/bolt opening area?
@SargeThese are fine old rifles, I was going to buy one a while back as I want a Pre 64 Win but it had been rechambered to 300 Weatherby just seemed so wrong & now last week found a Browning Hi Power Mauser & it to has been rechambered to 300 Weatherby from 300 H&H, must be a serial rechamber guy here, if I can get it cheap enough I might make it a .458Win .
@Bob Nelson 35Whelen He should be forced to walk around wearing a shirt saying I love the .300 Weatherby and the .243 Winchester!@Sarge
Maaate you bought ruined rifle.
The person that did such damage should be taken out and horse whipped. The original 300 H&H was the quintessential cartridge now ruined by a rechamber. The old girl can be loaded to almost equal the weatherby and feeds like a newborn baby. I w ould have preferred it in the old H&H.
Bob
@ZG47.@Bob Nelson 35Whelen He should be forced to walk around wearing a shirt saying I love the .300 Weatherby and the .243 Winchester!
@SargHey Hey ease up, I didn't do any rechambering & I didn't buy the Pre 64 (kind of wish I had) & the Browning is only on the radar right now !
Nothing wrong with the 300 Weatherby either it is a fantastic caliber, only two Weatherby's I think are Ok the .300 & the 270 Weatherby & I don't like .270 but they must have got some thing right in those two as they kill very well & at all ranges, on our game in NZ any Hunter that came armed with the .270 Weatherby killed his animals like the hand of God & that is rare with any client hunter !
Not what I want how ever & I had a .300 Win Mag, great cartridge to but I went back to the great 30/06 as after using the .300Win for a bit (I shot a lot with it Moose Sheep Bears Etc) thought it did nothing better than the 06 !
Now the .243 Win is some thing else ?
I bought a pre-War .375 H&H Model 70 last year, but when I received it, the stock was snapped in two at the pistol grip, beyond repair. Miraclously, I was able to find a pre-War .300 H&H stock on eBay and then it was just a question of having the barrel channel opened up and a Silvers pad fitted. Insurance paid for it.Awesome find, I've got a Pre-64 M70 in both 300 and 375 H&H. I need to replace the stock on the 300. I'd planned to take it to RSA this summer but the LOP is WAY too short and a few other things going on with it.
You can't go wrong with a .300 H&H for African plains game. As pointed out above, a four round magazine, with one up the spout, gives you all the fire power you need. This is the largest animal I took with mine. It's a Grevy's zebra, the largest of all wild equines.
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