In order to participate in the GunBroker Member forums, you must be logged in with your GunBroker.com account. Click the sign-in button at the top right of the forums page to get connected.
Options
Spiff Up Found Gun
Sparty_76
Member Posts: 714 ✭✭
I was helping my best friend clean up a few things and one was to get a gun inventory. Under every bed in this old huge farmhouse we found 4-5 gun cases. Several had not been taken out in years. In one was a Model 70 Winchester Stainless Steel in .300 WM. He said he had bought from a guy at work and had forgot all about it. Asked me if I wanted it to give him $200 for it plus he owed me $200. So I gave him the 200, it has a Tasco Scope on it, but I am going to replace that with a Nikon Pro Staff I have that is brand new. My question is the stock is kind of dull and the gun needs some TLC. It is not banged up just been sitting in a case for years. What can I do to "spiff" it up, and make the stock look a lusterous black again? Make the Stainless nice too. Thanks!
Comments
JIM.......
For what you have into it, you got a steal on it. If it were me. I would make sure it had a good solid scope base on it, good rings, and upgrade even further to a Nikon Monarch scope(That is where I start. I usually toss a Vortex Viper PST on most everything these days).
For the stock, There are Richards, and Boyds. I have used several of the Boyds, and installed pillars in them, and bedded the action in them using Brownell's "Steel Bed", and they work well.
I have two Classics that are SS, one is in 300 Win Mag, and the other is 7mm Rem. Mag. They both shoot real well...better than 1 MOA, with the factory barrel.
The Amour All, and tire black trick will work wonders on your plastic stock, for looks. Never use regular steel wool on a Stainless firearm. To do so, impregnates the Stainless Steel with iron atoms, and it will get red rust showing up on a stainless gun. I always keep only Stainless steel wool in the shop...just for that reason.
Clean the bore good. I like Shooter's Choice. Then work it over some with JB Bore Paste.
Load for it. I favor boattails in the over 160 grain class. 190's would be my first choice on top of a full case of a slow ball powder.
I have a practically new TC Venture .300 Win Mag that I may sell now. I do not need two .300s. I guess of the two the Winchester Stainless is a better gun, right? Although the Venture is a tackdriver, 200 Yards deadly!
Thanks for the information everyone!
Fitz
quote:Originally posted by tsr1965
The possibilities are endless. Which model is it? Is it the push feed without the claw extractor, or the controlled round feed with the claw extractor? I believe the latter is called the Model 70 Classic. It also will have a 26" barrel.
For what you have into it, you got a steal on it. If it were me. I would make sure it had a good solid scope base on it, good rings, and upgrade even further to a Nikon Monarch scope(That is where I start. I usually toss a Vortex Viper PST on most everything these days).
For the stock, There are Richards, and Boyds. I have used several of the Boyds, and installed pillars in them, and bedded the action in them using Brownell's "Steel Bed", and they work well.
I have two Classics that are SS, one is in 300 Win Mag, and the other is 7mm Rem. Mag. They both shoot real well...better than 1 MOA, with the factory barrel.
The Amour All, and tire black trick will work wonders on your plastic stock, for looks. Never use regular steel wool on a Stainless firearm. To do so, impregnates the Stainless Steel with iron atoms, and it will get red rust showing up on a stainless gun. I always keep only Stainless steel wool in the shop...just for that reason.