Importance of gun fit/handling/balance to you?
Posted: Sat Jan 27, 2018 5:05 pm
Seems like the older I get, the more I appreciate a rifle that comes to the shoulder, naturally, with little effort; one that balances to the point where the sights (or scope crosshairs) just seem to line up on target by themselves and, lastly, one that is a joy to carry.
To be sure, this is a subjective thing, a personal taste thing and also a functional thing, based on the shooting position you use, but as rifle features go, it really doesn't get much discussion or attention, these days. Accuracy? Try to find a discussion about a rifle where that one doesn't come up. Reliability, cycling, smoothness of action? Same. Handling, balance, fit, though? Not that often.
I don't think it's a coincidence that some of the older guns designs were built with that handling thing in mind. How smooth and how quick a rifle came to your shoulder and how it balanced for you were important features in the old days. It sold rifles. Of course, shooting styles were different in the old days. Sitting at a comfy bench with a fancy rest, trying to shoot tiny groups on paper and measuring them down to the last tenth of an inch? That would have been considered odd and, for some, not even real shooting.
So, given that this whole fuzzy "hate to post this one down" or "can't stop shooting it" rifle feature, let's show some of our favorites. Here's some of mine.
My Browning semi-auto 22, the (SA-22). This one is a featherweight of a gun, yet it shoulders, perfectly, sights right on target and it holds with great steadiness, despite it's lack of weight. Great design. It should be, after all, it was designed by John Browning. This really is a jewel of a little gun to pick up and shoot. Made in Belgium, 1973, 22 LR

Here's my favorite offhand shooting rifle of all time, one I could carry all day in the squirrel woods and, in fact, I did that very thing, many times, back in the day. The Marlin 39A is proof that the way a rifle handles is more than the sum of it's technical measurements. 1946 vintage 39A, 22 LR

And here's what I consider to be the greatest 30-30 to carry and shoot ever made. Although I love my Marlin centerfire lever guns and consider the Marlin to be the superior action, I've never found a 30-30 lever gun that beats the way a Model 94 feels in the hand or at the shoulder. Model 94 Winchester, made in 1952

Oh, lots more for me to include, here, but now it's your turn. Let's see some of your "can't put it down, once I start to shoot it" rifle choices (and rifles, only, please). Time for fun, here. Go for it.
To be sure, this is a subjective thing, a personal taste thing and also a functional thing, based on the shooting position you use, but as rifle features go, it really doesn't get much discussion or attention, these days. Accuracy? Try to find a discussion about a rifle where that one doesn't come up. Reliability, cycling, smoothness of action? Same. Handling, balance, fit, though? Not that often.
I don't think it's a coincidence that some of the older guns designs were built with that handling thing in mind. How smooth and how quick a rifle came to your shoulder and how it balanced for you were important features in the old days. It sold rifles. Of course, shooting styles were different in the old days. Sitting at a comfy bench with a fancy rest, trying to shoot tiny groups on paper and measuring them down to the last tenth of an inch? That would have been considered odd and, for some, not even real shooting.
So, given that this whole fuzzy "hate to post this one down" or "can't stop shooting it" rifle feature, let's show some of our favorites. Here's some of mine.
My Browning semi-auto 22, the (SA-22). This one is a featherweight of a gun, yet it shoulders, perfectly, sights right on target and it holds with great steadiness, despite it's lack of weight. Great design. It should be, after all, it was designed by John Browning. This really is a jewel of a little gun to pick up and shoot. Made in Belgium, 1973, 22 LR

Here's my favorite offhand shooting rifle of all time, one I could carry all day in the squirrel woods and, in fact, I did that very thing, many times, back in the day. The Marlin 39A is proof that the way a rifle handles is more than the sum of it's technical measurements. 1946 vintage 39A, 22 LR

And here's what I consider to be the greatest 30-30 to carry and shoot ever made. Although I love my Marlin centerfire lever guns and consider the Marlin to be the superior action, I've never found a 30-30 lever gun that beats the way a Model 94 feels in the hand or at the shoulder. Model 94 Winchester, made in 1952

Oh, lots more for me to include, here, but now it's your turn. Let's see some of your "can't put it down, once I start to shoot it" rifle choices (and rifles, only, please). Time for fun, here. Go for it.
