DarylS
.700 member
Reged: 10/08/05
Posts: 27635
Loc: Beautiful British Columbia, Ca...
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Still waiting for those pictures.
-------------------- Daryl
"a gun without hammers is like a Spaniel without ears" King George V
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NitroX
.700 member
Reged: 25/12/02
Posts: 40581
Loc: Barossa Valley, South Australi...
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Quote:
Still waiting for those pictures.
?
etc
-------------------- John aka NitroX
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Govt get out of our lives NOW!
"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
"A Sharp spear needs no polish"
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Homer
.416 member
Reged: 07/04/09
Posts: 3081
Loc: Canberra, Australia
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Mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm Donuts!
Merry Christmas! Homer
-------------------- "Beware the Lolly Pop of Mediocrity,
Lick it Once and You Will Suck Forever"
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93x64mm
.416 member
Reged: 07/12/11
Posts: 4379
Loc: Nth QLD Australia
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Quote:
My confession is ........ ............ it has a Monte Carlo stock. ............... it is a bit embarrassing. 
Being a Model 1200 Delux Parker Hale with a Mauser 98 Santa Barbara action it was in the 70's quite fashionable. Probably still is with some Weatherby shooters. 
Even worse it actually shines like a mirror in sunlight.
Don't feel bad at all about this one John, I have one too but in .308 Norma Magnum! Great trigger on mine........have to agree with you one the stock though - but it was all the rage here back in the late '70's & early '80's! By the way your new take on the stock is far more practical & classical - back to the 'future', what is old is new again! Lovely piece mate, I hope you get out with it soon
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DarylS
.700 member
Reged: 10/08/05
Posts: 27635
Loc: Beautiful British Columbia, Ca...
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VERY nicely done - BRAVO!
-------------------- Daryl
"a gun without hammers is like a Spaniel without ears" King George V
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NitroX
.700 member
Reged: 25/12/02
Posts: 40581
Loc: Barossa Valley, South Australi...
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If I could change one thing about my "new" custom stock is I would have a shorter forend. It looks better when the24 inch barrel is fully shown in photos. However more classic is a shorter forend.
One is never fully pleased .... 
I must compare it to the Whitworth and see if there is any difference.
PS the photos were earlier in the thread.
I will have to post photos from the .30-06 thread onto this one as well. As "tribute" to the rifle.
-------------------- John aka NitroX
...
Govt get out of our lives NOW!
"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
"A Sharp spear needs no polish"
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NitroX
.700 member
Reged: 25/12/02
Posts: 40581
Loc: Barossa Valley, South Australi...
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Quote:
Don't feel bad at all about this one John, I have one too but in .308 Norma Magnum!
Are you channelling Bob Penfold? 
[quote Great trigger on mine........have to agree with you one the stock though - but it was all the rage here back in the late '70's & early '80's! By the way your new take on the stock is far more practical & classical - back to the 'future', what is old is new again! Lovely piece mate, I hope you get out with it soon
I think of the stock as the "Classic American". Some classic Brit features, but also designed for modern scopes and also the lomger forend. Which are features of the modern classic stocks in the USA. And probably appropriate for a .30-06.
As for my joke of "channelling Bob Penfold". I was influenced and enjoyed reading the articles of Bob Penfold and Col Allison in the late 1970s and early 1980s.
Bon of course used a .308 Norma Magnum with a stepped barrel, obviously rechambered from a .30-06.
Col Allison wrote a lot about his 7mm Remington Magnum and also the .30-06. He re-barrelled his .30-06 to 7mm Rem Mag. Later saw wisdom and had a .30-06 again.
Articles about hunting in Alaska and Africa, Australia and NZ.
-------------------- John aka NitroX
...
Govt get out of our lives NOW!
"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
"A Sharp spear needs no polish"
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Ripp
.577 member
Reged: 19/02/07
Posts: 16072
Loc: Montana, USA
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Quote:
If I could change one thing about my "new" custom stock is I would have a shorter forend. It looks better when the24 inch barrel is fully shown in photos. However more classic is a shorter forend.
One is never fully pleased .... 
I must compare it to the Whotworth and see if there is any difference.
PS the photos were earlier in the thread.
I will have to post photos from the .30-06 thread onto this one as well. As "tribute" to the rifle.
Nice photo of the rifle John..
I actually have a pre-64 Winchester in 300H&H at the gunsmiths getting redone as we speak so i found your comments on the stock interesting
The original one is not in good shape..have to have it either redone or have a custom one done..
-------------------- ALL MEN DIE, BUT FEW MEN TRULY LIVE..
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NitroX
.700 member
Reged: 25/12/02
Posts: 40581
Loc: Barossa Valley, South Australi...
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Quote:
Nice photo of the rifle John..
I actually have a pre-64 Winchester in 300H&H at the gunsmiths getting redone as we speak so i found your comments on the stock interesting
The original one is not in good shape..have to have it either redone or have a custom one done..
Go back in the thread. Lots of other photos. I DO want to take more photos, as I used some big rifle rest sandbags to display the rifle and they look silly.
I am not an expert on stock designs. But my take on the classic Brit stock it has less wood, a much shorter forend, and also drop at heel, for open sight use.
The classic American looks like my stock. Straight comb for good scope use, and the longer forend.
If I ever get my .318 WR made, it will probably be a combination. I have admired a stock I saw on a magazine cover of an original .318 WR , black and dark with age, but a short forend. BUT nowadays unless only set up for open sights, the stock does need the straight comb for use with the scope.
-------------------- John aka NitroX
...
Govt get out of our lives NOW!
"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
"A Sharp spear needs no polish"
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NitroX
.700 member
Reged: 25/12/02
Posts: 40581
Loc: Barossa Valley, South Australi...
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Quote:
"I've a confession to make ... the pics took too long, but here they now are."









 These two photos could be redone without the bags I think.
Still need to find the open sights and put them back onto the rifle.
Basically a simple re-modelling of a Parker Hale 1200 Delux. Replacement of the stock from a blank supplied by Roger Vardy. Stockwork by Ross Waghorn, including the buffalo horn forend. Some metal work ie replacement of the bolt handle by Bob De Vries.
The barrel could do with a clean up and re-blueing one day.
 And Blitzen was very excited by the photo session.
-------------------- John aka NitroX
...
Govt get out of our lives NOW!
"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
"A Sharp spear needs no polish"
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500Boswell
.400 member
Reged: 21/07/06
Posts: 1281
Loc: Queensland
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NICE !!!!
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Louis
.375 member
Reged: 13/05/15
Posts: 977
Loc: France
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Very nice restauration work and now an interesting British & American classic combination in style! Louis
-------------------- "Everything that doesn't kill me makes me stronger"
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NitroX
.700 member
Reged: 25/12/02
Posts: 40581
Loc: Barossa Valley, South Australi...
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From the
"Why you can't go wrong with the .30-06" thread
My first centrefire was a .222 Remington. At the time the most popular centrefire in Australia.
My second was a .30-06. At the time the most popular hunting cartridge in the USA. But nowhere near the popularity here in Australia of course. The .243 and .270 was the standard at the time for deer and medium game.
I shot many feral goats with my .222. But after a trip with too many wounded goats needing follow up to finish off, and also shot my "largest horned billy" ever, several times in the chest, but it ran off into the bush. A search could not find its body. I am sure it was dead.
So I bought my .30-06 and never lost another wounded goat, and also don't believe I had anymore goat follow ups. I remember one nanny came running out a few dozen yards away from me, above it on the mountain slope, looking down hill for what disturbed it. A Nosler Solid Base HP at the base of the skull completely exploded its head, bits falling all over including behind me! I also had my longest ever shoots on medium game, 400 yards or more. A herd of feral goats fleeing me on from another mountain slope, fleeing along a ledge above a cliff. I managed to snipe each goat in line in turn. Until I wounded one, gut shot, and it fell down the cliff. And bleated in the rocks below. Try as I could I couldn't hit it to finish it off down there. Several shots until I hit it properly and it died.
Most deer I have shot has been with my .30-06, my two red stags, most fallow, my sambar, I have carried it on every sambar hunt. Even my small hog deer trophy stag! Not my chital. A .308 was used there. I have shot a lot of meat deer with a some other rifles, starting with my .222s and also 6.5x55 but most trophies with the .30-06.
Feral pigs, I have used all sorts of my rifles.
Not a water buffalo. But I did carry my .30-06 on my first Top End trip with 220 gr Norma RNSPs loaded up by the previous owner of the rifle for that purpose. Ah yes, that was another reason for buying the .30-06, trying to take a buffalo with it. Did not find any on that trip. At the time the buffalo were not as far South as where we hunted then. St Vigeon Station South of the Roper River. An abandoned cattle station, the owners had just walked off it, unable to make it work. Every man and his dog in the NT was hunting there. Later it was given to the Aborigines as another reserve. I reckon I still have that box of ammo somewhere ... but did shoot a Volkswagen combivan with it. We tried all sorts of ammo on it. A burned out VW van lost and stuck in the bush forever.
BTW on the same trip found a whole diesel fuel tanker abandoned in the bush. Fuel of diesel. What had evidently happened, was the trailer got stuck in the mud at the beginning of the wet. The prime mover detached and got out of there. And the large diesel tanker trailer stayed there for the entire wet, the river crossing flooded and the roads underwater. The owners had not yet recovered it as the Wet was only just over when we were there. We did sample a few jerry cans of diesel from it ... no doubt locals would pass it with empty tanks, and leave with full ones ... ?
Shot a lot of donkeys with my .30-06. A few camels. Scrub bulls? I can't remember?
Most of my African plains game have been taken with my .30-06. I did have some troubles with the 180 gr Nosler Partitions acting like FMJs on that first trip. 200 gr Semi Pointed Nosler Partitions I also had along worked fine. They don't make those since then. Took warthog, impala, duiker, zebra, wildebeest, kudu and also an eland. Another (dickhead) PH said it couldn't be done. A shot and a finisher to speed it along. the eland was a very enjoyable hunt.
And my one and only NZ feral sheep/ram.
A few rabbits even, and some foxes. Some skips.
I remember trying Remington accelerator sabot ammo in it. A .224 55gr SP at 4000 fps. I remember it shoot about a foot higher than my usual 150 gr loads. From memory was not that accurate, maybe one and a half inches at a 100 yards. Did flatten a skip at close range with one.
I really wish saboted ammo was researched more and created more. Imagine being able to use a .375 with good bullets to hunt medium game with. Loading up say 180 gr .30 calibre or 140 gr 6.5mm etc. Magnum performance plus. A new thread I think.
My restocked Parker Hale 1200 Delux Mauser 98 in .30-06 remains my first reached for rifle for any medium game and deer hunt. I need to find the open sights for it, and put those back on. Or new ones fitted.
It now ears a different scope. I started with a Weaver steel 4x scope with a tapered post and fine cross hair reticle. Now it has a second hand S&B 4x scope in QD mounts with a German post and cross hairs reticle. Whatever it is called? I find a 4x scope adequate for medium game, out to 300 metres to even 400 metres. If one knows the rifle one is shooting.
[image]http://nitroexpress.info/ubbthreads/photos_info/200706/PH30_06_STOCK_IMG_0021_WEB.jpgg[/image]
My one and only sambar stag, taken with thanks to Gryphon. If he ever visits here still. 
A good afternoon's work?
My first trophy deer.
No rifle in the photo, but my South Aust Red Stag taken with the .30-06.
I would like to try 250 gr RNSPs in it oneday. Maybe I don't need a .318 Westley Richards? O)
And before I forget. I at one time planned to replace my Parker Hale M98 .30-06 (God Forbid) with a M70 Featherweight Winchester in .30-06. That rifle could not be made to shoot better than six inches at a one yards .... so was one of few rifle I have ever disposed of.
AND I have TWO other .30-06s, one a barreled action of a Colombian FN M98 Mauser rebarreled to .30-06 by the Colombians I assume. Kept it for a custom project, however esteemed members here said it is too pitted.
And the other is a double rifle barrel set for my Tikka/Valmet. Since it had final fitting for my double action, I have not used it. In the last month or so, have been thinking of giving it a real try. I have been thinking of attempting to return to go to being a "double rifle purist". I think the .30-06 will be able to do ANYTHING the M98 can do, including shooting at range. At least with one of the barrels.
-------------------- John aka NitroX
...
Govt get out of our lives NOW!
"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
"A Sharp spear needs no polish"
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crshelton
.333 member
Reged: 10/11/15
Posts: 379
Loc: Republic of Texas
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For what it is worth, I tried my brothers .06, but passed it on. My M70 FWT .308 works for me as your '06 does for you. Had it 40 years and it still shoots sub minute of angle and is my main go-to rifle for big game. I do have big bores for really BIG and dangerous game tho.
-------------------- CRS,NRA Benefactor Member, TSRA, DRSS, DWWC, Whittington Center
Android Ballistics App at http://www.xplat.net/
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93x64mm
.416 member
Reged: 07/12/11
Posts: 4379
Loc: Nth QLD Australia
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Quote:
Quote:
Don't feel bad at all about this one John, I have one too but in .308 Norma Magnum!
Are you channelling Bob Penfold? 
[quote Great trigger on mine........have to agree with you one the stock though - but it was all the rage here back in the late '70's & early '80's! By the way your new take on the stock is far more practical & classical - back to the 'future', what is old is new again! Lovely piece mate, I hope you get out with it soon
I think of the stock as the "Classic American". Some classic Brit features, but also designed for modern scopes and also the lomger forend. Which are features of the modern classic stocks in the USA. And probably appropriate for a .30-06.
As for my joke of "channelling Bob Penfold". I was influenced and enjoyed reading the articles of Bob Penfold and Col Allison in the late 1970s and early 1980s.
Bon of course used a .308 Norma Magnum with a stepped barrel, obviously rechambered from a .30-06.
Col Allison wrote a lot about his 7mm Remington Magnum and also the .30-06. He re-barrelled his .30-06 to 7mm Rem Mag. Later saw wisdom and had a .30-06 again.
Articles about hunting in Alaska and Africa, Australia and NZ.
Spot on John - you got me in one! Appears we have read the same articles, those by Mr Penfold have long since got to the bin from over use! Wonderful cartridge the .308NM As to your stock, the only change if it was mine would be to also slim it down just a little at the fore end as you mentioned. It is one hell of a very nice hunting rifle there John none the less!
Ross Waghorn does exceptional work
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tinker
.416 member
Reged: 12/03/05
Posts: 4835
Loc: Nevada
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Really nice looking rifle!
-------------------- --Self-Appointed Colonel, DRSS--
"It IS a dangerous game, and so named for a reason, and you can't play from the keyboard. " --Some Old Texan...
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NitroX
.700 member
Reged: 25/12/02
Posts: 40581
Loc: Barossa Valley, South Australi...
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Quote:
Quote:









 These two photos could be redone without the bags I think.
Still need to find the open sights and put them back onto the rifle.
Basically a simple re-modelling of a Parker Hale 1200 Delux. Replacement of the stock from a blank supplied by Roger Vardy. Stockwork by Ross Waghorn, including the buffalo horn forend. Some metal work ie replacement of the bolt handle by Bob De Vries.
The barrel could do with a clean up and re-blueing one day.
 And Blitzen was very excited by the photo session.
Just revisiting my rifle. I MUST take new photos without the shooting bag! And it needs those open sights. They are somewhere! Or get new ones. And the young fellow Blitzen is a very old fe!low now almost 15.
I have thought of rebarrelling this to .318 WR but that would be very stupid
-------------------- John aka NitroX
...
Govt get out of our lives NOW!
"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
"A Sharp spear needs no polish"
Edited by NitroX (14/10/22 10:52 PM)
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DarylS
.700 member
Reged: 10/08/05
Posts: 27635
Loc: Beautiful British Columbia, Ca...
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Still a great looking rifle.
-------------------- Daryl
"a gun without hammers is like a Spaniel without ears" King George V
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NZHunter
.224 member
Reged: 16/08/11
Posts: 31
Loc: New Zealand
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As is Blitzen, just love expressions on hunting dog faces
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NitroX
.700 member
Reged: 25/12/02
Posts: 40581
Loc: Barossa Valley, South Australi...
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Quote:
As is Blitzen, just love expressions on hunting dog faces
My old mate, gone almost eight months ago, two days short of his Christmas Eve birthday, and age of 15 years.
Yes he has intense expressions, common of pointers.
Seeing this image earlier reminded me I need similar of the young Donder monster.
-------------------- John aka NitroX
...
Govt get out of our lives NOW!
"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
"A Sharp spear needs no polish"
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