it is a .22-250 I shot it many years ago in the mid 70"s it was accurate but I never shot it any real distance.Mauser or a clone I'd guess from your pics. With a 600 yard zero what caliber is that?
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it is a .22-250 I shot it many years ago in the mid 70"s it was accurate but I never shot it any real distance.Mauser or a clone I'd guess from your pics. With a 600 yard zero what caliber is that?
I am researching but dont think it is Sako unless it is before they made their own larger actions I think they used FNLooks like a Sako
yes rechamber to 22-250 it looks like it needed to be tightened half a turn more so the SA in Sako is out of sight. also the Caliber isn't visible.The name of an aftermarket Mauser safety. Looks like the Sako barrel has been cut back. Guessing a re-chamber?
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Did Mauser stamp their name on all there actions? If so where would I look ? I hate to pull scope. I was thinking of selling and thought best if scope was on target. What does A.921 mean?Quite probably Mauser, possibly sporterized milsurp ? Looks to have been refinished, not that brilliantly.
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I am trying to learn so why do you feel it was built by Sako? The SA is covered by receiver and writing is upside down. There is no visible caliber designation. if it was built when 22-250 was a wildcat it should still have caliber correct? Could it be a "cigarette" gun from after the war? More questions than answers.Looks like a non-military Mauser-style rifle built in Finland by Sako.
Unfortunately the Mauser Crest is under the scope. If you were shooting this in the mid 70's I'd say it was most likely a well done conversion. The safety, the double triggers were common add ons. Also and maybe a gunsmith can chime in, the barrel was probably trimmed during the rechamber and that's the reason the SA in Sako disappeared. Here is a crest off the internet, located right under the scope. Beautiful rifle by the way. Many variations on it.yes rechamber to 22-250 it looks like it needed to be tightened half a turn more so the SA in Sako is out of sight. also the Caliber isn't visible.
I am trying to learn so why do you feel it was built by Sako? The SA is covered by receiver and writing is upside down. There is no visible caliber designation. if it was built when 22-250 was a wildcat it should still have caliber correct? Could it be a "cigarette" gun from after the war? More questions than answers.
Do you have a picture of the complete left side of the action? That should tell if it’s a milsurp or commercial Mauser.