building a custom rifle
#11
Nontypical Buck
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: S.W. Pa.-- Heart in North Central Pa. mountains-
Posts: 2,600
I've restocked and bedded 98's with rebarreled actions. They functioned well, and shot decent. Would I do it again for myself? Nope. Too much bother when for equal or less investment you can get excellent lightly used high-end rifles, or a brand new CRF of your choice. JMO........
#12
Fork Horn
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Georgia
Posts: 364
Hey Guys. I have a few quick questions. I'm building a custom rifle on a mauser action. How much will a gunsmith charge me to resize my action to make it feed a different caliber? And what do i do about a a magazine. I want a simple internal magazine, if i have a mauser action what else will i need, if anything? The caliber im going with is the good ol 30'06 incase that helps with anything. Thanks im new to this custom rifle stuff so bear with me
#13
Spike
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: South Florida
Posts: 39
wow had no idea it was that complicated. this is more of something to keep me busy and to personalize to my needs so i understand it will cost as much or more than a production rifle. maybe i will build on a remington 700 action insted. less smith work.
#15
Nontypical Buck
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Eastern PA USA
Posts: 1,398
I did this too, back in the day!
I did this pretty much "on the cheap", with a .270 Browning barrel that came off a gun a guy changed to a .300 mag. I had an Argentine Mauser with the nicer floorplate, and I got a French Walnut stock that I did myself as I did pretty much stock work for 2 shops at the time. Ended up with a beautiful, nicely checkered, heavy (8+ pounds bare) gun that had mediocre accuracy, compared to the guns I already had. I was not aware that anyone was still really doing this, since the value of military mausers increased so much since the '70s and '80s. If you really want a mauser, a used gun would be less expensive and involved. I recently saw the Remington 798, which I never knew they made. Interesting, but still a little heavy. Good luck with whatever you decide to do.