SeekHer wrote:Cut and recrown the barrel and mount a Red Dot/Holo sight on it or a very low power scope and you'll not need the front sight at all...That is if the receiver is drilled and tapped for scope mounts...
Receiver is already drilled and tapped. Took it to the gunsmith shop yesterday searching for bases and rings, and to get ballpark price estimates on the barrel swap/etc. Evidently, they are closed Mondays. 8^( Went back today, got the info I was looking for, but he was out of Remington bases. Stopped by another gun shop on the way home, and they have a sign on the door, closed for inventory. %$&*($%*(& I could order it, but on something this old, I would really rather take it to the shop to make sure that the bases actually fit before buying them.
Have you fired the gun yet or has it been recently fired by someone else? I ask because maybe the bulge hasn’t effected anything…Yes, better to remove it but it just might not be necessary…
I haven't fired it, and probably won't have acceptable shooting weather until mid April. Looking down the bore from the muzzle, the bulge is fairly prominent on the inside, with a visible dark ring all around, but more pronounced on the left side of the barrel. If it groups at all, I would call it a miracle.
I had an hand me down Winchester lever gun in .38 WCF (.38/55) that had a bulged barrel that my uncle created by having some snow in the barrel and firing it, thankfully with a light load…cleared the barrel and got the pressure bulge…
I strongly suspect that is exactly how this one happened. It's been rode hard, put away wet, and has very little blue left. But, the bolt works smoothly, and the receiver doesn't have any serious pitting. The trigger is actually pretty nice too, but it will have to go since I want to be able to work the bolt with the safety on, and also have a safety that doesn't require the abnormal effort to engage that this one does.
If it isn't drilled you could always go for a scout configuration but since you want to keep the action, best drill & tap it now for bases and then just get a new barrel in .35 Whelan.
I'll be going with a standard scope mount configuration, perhaps with quick release rings, but I'm not sure if that is worth bothering with, since I would only demount it in the event of a scope failure. I want to have the new barrel drilled and tapped for irons so I can continue to hunt if that happens. The side of the receiver is drilled and tapped for a Lyman peep sight, but I don't think that is compatible with the scope, and I don't want a scout setup. But I'm also not 100% on adding the irons, either. I ended up taking the factory irons off my Model 7 because I didn't like the way they intruded into the scope's field of view. The irons currently installed on the '06 are a bit lower profile than those, so I may end up filing out the dings and having them remounted on the .35 barrel. Dunno. The factory bottom metal, which is a bent piece of sheet steel, will have to go. I don't really want to spend the money for a decent floorplate set, but the original unit has got to go.
As for the caliber suggestions, I know what I want, and I want what I want. But thanks anyway. The one area where I am really unsure how I will proceed, is what finish and stock type to get. Nearly all of my sporting rifles are blued steel and wear walnut stocks, which to my mind, is just how it was meant to be. I
really want to go with a high polish blue, fancy stock, and bare polished bolt [EDIT: now that I think about it, the bolt is probably nickeled] to match
my dad's 721. Such a rifle would fill me with a great deal of pride, in the way that a modern finished rifle with a glass stock never could. But, as this will be my go-to Alaskan hunting rifle, I know that isn't very realistic. I was thinking of maybe getting it done in NP3 or something along those lines. I'm not sure what other comparable modern finishes are available these days, but this rifle will not be painted, regardless of how much I like Gunkote for EBRs. Not sure about the stock. Probably order something from [strike]H-S Precision[/strike] McMillan or even a Bell & Carlson and do the bedding myself, using Acraglas Gel instead of Devcon just to piss HTRN off.
As I typed this up, I came to the realization that I will be doing well to finish this project for under 2 grand, before buying optics.

I knew it wasn't going to be cheap, but I hadn't really mentally laid it all out there like that before. Guess I am going to chop a couple inches off the barrel and call it good for now and start accumulating parts.