It Banishes Fear! The Savage Automatic. Stevens Catalog 57 Stevens Catalog 53 c. Savage Old Rifle Scopes. Old Gunsights : A Collectors Guide, Savage Arms Postcard, c. Visit our partner sites: www. Savage Rifles are Great! Buy now at Amazon! A Collector's Guide to the Savage 99 rifle. I just ordered a limbsaver recoil pad for it. I'd say I think it would go through a few shoulders before it hit rounds with the pad it has on it now. Maybe it's got some good life in it yet.
Thanks for the info. Maybe walnut? The wooden stocks on both were beech with a walnut colored finish. So unless your rifle was a special order of some sort yours will also be a beech wood stock. Beech wood is a very good stock material being very stable and strong. Very often it not considered desirable however due to a lot of misconcetions and history.
So if you wish to change your stock try looking at Boyds Stocks. Keep in touch through this site to pick up pointers and tips. Your savage in 7 mm Rem Mag should serve you well and be effective for all big game except the largest, most dangersous game. Take your time between shots and keep the barrel temperature down. I picked up a used G model Savage in 7mm Magnum several years ago that was made at about the same time as yours.
Found a Walnut stock at Numrich to replace the beech stock, just like walnut better, and added a Limbsaver pad. Rifle was very accurate with hand loads and also shot the Remington Core-Lokt gr PSP ammunition better than any other factory stuff.
If you do not hand load, I would also recommend you try some Hornady or Remington reduced load ammunition. The Hornady Custom Lite gr shot best in mine. Similar Threads G long Action. You read that right. Remember Me? Advanced Search.
No other manufacturer would even dream of spending so much time and effort on offering a single video chipset, and thus most manufacturers dropped their Savage 3D products, including Diamond Multimedia, a name that would later hold much significance for the company. Then came the Savage4 in , just about an entire year after the release of the Savage 3D, and the market wondered if we were due for another unpleasant surprise from the once dominant S3.
The initial benchmarks looked solid, the performance of the chipset was much improved over the old Savage3D and most of the bugs the original solution were fixed in the Savage4. A key sign of improvement was in the fact that Diamond Multimedia, a major player that had dropped their original Savage 3D product, was now supporting the Savage4. The Savage4 ended up being a pretty good OEM solution because it was inexpensive and it worked, but, for the hardcore gamer and performance enthusiast, the chip was not a viable solution at all.
The driver problems were still there. At the same time, the Savage was to be the second consumer level graphics chipset of this generation to feature an on-board hardware transform and lighting engine that would help to off-load some of the transform and lighting calculations from the CPU and onto the graphics card. Once again, the product, on paper, appeared to be a very capable competitor.
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