auto loader rifle and pump rifle
#11
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: gully mn USA
Posts: 93
RE: auto loader rifle and pump rifle
I have several rifles and bought the 7600 cause it was different and very accurate with the free-floating barrel. Mine shoots 1.25" all day long. It's not the kind of gun I would shoot at the bench for hours on end, I prefer bolt for that, but for hunting it's hard to beat. Mine is in 7mm-08 with a laminated stock, and I think I am going to get another this winter, maybe in 30-06.
#12
Nontypical Buck
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Bradford, Ontario
Posts: 2,205
RE: auto loader rifle and pump rifle
Both the 7400 and the 7600 have always been marketed to a distinct type of rifle buyer and most of them are not season long, serious shooters who are concerned about quality and accuracy. They are more concerned with spraying bullets allover the woods and that fact is obvious by the fact that they are more concerned with their 2nd shot than their 1st shot in the first place.
#14
RE: auto loader rifle and pump rifle
The semi auto is nice if you need the quick second shot. Sometimes, you can hit an animal once, and make a great shot, but he will still run 100 yards with a hole in his lung (a good shot) where as you could maybe hit him with a second shot real quick and drop him where he stands? I would rather collect where he drops than chase him all over the country side. It can also be nice if you are hunting something that might want a piece of you. It would allow you to make an insurance shot in record time.
#15
Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Caribou ME USA
Posts: 298
RE: auto loader rifle and pump rifle
I dont think there is any need for an auto. How much recoil do they reduce? Also, how about the browning lever action to?
#16
Guest
Posts: n/a
RE: auto loader rifle and pump rifle
ORIGINAL: pse-archer
I dont think there is any need for an auto. How much recoil do they reduce? Also, how about the browning lever action to?
I dont think there is any need for an auto. How much recoil do they reduce? Also, how about the browning lever action to?
But, you have somewhat of a point. I have shot semis for 2 decades. And often it got me into trouble more than not. On one hand, if you hunt areas where boundries is an issue, I need to get the animal down. But on the other, I have hit the hinds, I have hit the backstraps, guts on the second or third shot. Sometimes it works out, but sometimes its not a blessing.
#17
Nontypical Buck
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Bradford, Ontario
Posts: 2,205
RE: auto loader rifle and pump rifle
A semi can have some value in a situation where multiple deer are driven past you and you want to take more than one. Its not so much the speed of the action but in alot of cases its the movement of a hunter cycling a bolt, lever or whatever that spooks the deer. The auto does help with that. The only auto I would buy is the BAR. I have owned the remington and its not worth the money contrary to the pump which is very under rated.
#18
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location:
Posts: 2,052
RE: auto loader rifle and pump rifle
Terry I certainly have heard of the Benoit's, read many of their stories since I began deer hunting in the mid 80s. They are legendary and are single handedly responsible for more 7600 sales in Maine than ANYTHING else!!!
BUT, (and I know this is purely a matter of opinion) I would MUCH rather have a Browning BLR in 450Marlin or some similar caliber if I were going to get on a bucks trail in the snow and follow it for days through the moutains and bogs of the northeast. I suspect the Benoit's are so engrained in tradition set by Larry that for them to change would be like converting the Pope to Hebrew. If he had had the resources for BLRs umpteen bajillion years ago when he began hunting and learning the sacred art of tracking, I bet Remington would've dropped the 7600 eons ago.
But that's this ol'rednecks opinion for all .01/2c it's worth!
RA
BUT, (and I know this is purely a matter of opinion) I would MUCH rather have a Browning BLR in 450Marlin or some similar caliber if I were going to get on a bucks trail in the snow and follow it for days through the moutains and bogs of the northeast. I suspect the Benoit's are so engrained in tradition set by Larry that for them to change would be like converting the Pope to Hebrew. If he had had the resources for BLRs umpteen bajillion years ago when he began hunting and learning the sacred art of tracking, I bet Remington would've dropped the 7600 eons ago.
But that's this ol'rednecks opinion for all .01/2c it's worth!
RA
#19
Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Caribou ME USA
Posts: 298
RE: auto loader rifle and pump rifle
Red- I'd bet Pennsylvania keeps the 7600 market going. 7400s are more popular here in Maine.
I grew up in a family of dyed-in-the-wool lever users. My grandparents, great uncles, and uncles used nothing but lever action rifles. My father was a bolt man through and through and that is what we used.I'll bet that over 80% of my time spent hunting will find me with a bolt action in my hands. I also own 7600s and levers. I guess what I'm trying to say is that I am not married to any one action type.
One advantage that I see to the pump over a lever is the working of the action. If you have to take a quick second shot, the working of the pump drives the rifle back into your shoulder and I find that I can stay on target better. That's just me. Also my 7600s weight about the same as my Marlin levers, something that can't be said for semis.
Would I buy a BLR? Most likely not as I tend to prefer bolts and pumps to levers for my style of hunting. Your milage may vary.
I grew up in a family of dyed-in-the-wool lever users. My grandparents, great uncles, and uncles used nothing but lever action rifles. My father was a bolt man through and through and that is what we used.I'll bet that over 80% of my time spent hunting will find me with a bolt action in my hands. I also own 7600s and levers. I guess what I'm trying to say is that I am not married to any one action type.
One advantage that I see to the pump over a lever is the working of the action. If you have to take a quick second shot, the working of the pump drives the rifle back into your shoulder and I find that I can stay on target better. That's just me. Also my 7600s weight about the same as my Marlin levers, something that can't be said for semis.
Would I buy a BLR? Most likely not as I tend to prefer bolts and pumps to levers for my style of hunting. Your milage may vary.
#20
Nontypical Buck
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Bradford, Ontario
Posts: 2,205
RE: auto loader rifle and pump rifle
BUT, (and I know this is purely a matter of opinion) I would MUCH rather have a Browning BLR in 450Marlin or some similar caliber if I were going to get on a bucks trail in the snow and follow it for days through the moutains and bogs of the northeast. I
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DougMD
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07-15-2003 07:47 PM