Hearing all the good talk about .45-70 Handis, I had set my sights on one as my year-end gift to myself. After considering the practical requirements -- new dies, brass, bullet molds, etc., and taking stock of the things I have on-hand at the loading bench, I decided I'd get just as much fun out of an ought-six as anything else. So, I ordered a standard Handi from the gun shop I like dealing with, and it arrived this week. This is the third .30-'06 rifle I have owned. I have several hundred good cases, dies, and a Lyman 311041 mold that were sitting unused since I sold my Rem 700 some years back.
The new rifle is a typical Handi -- plain pallet-wood stock, rather rough surface finish, etc. The trigger pull was good at about four pounds, and even better after I swapped the standard hammer out for a bobbed one that had been in my .357 Max when it wore a scope (Thanks to Perklo for his very clear instructions on dis- and re-assembly -- see the FAQs for the link). I polished the bore with J-B, and mounted a 4x Bushnell in anticipation of a trip to the range today. I have a handful of jacketed loads and ten with the Lyman cast bullet ready to go.
I did notice one different thing about this new Handi -- the frame is rollmarked "Harrington & Richardson" rather than "New England Firearms". I always thought that the H&R name was reserved for BCs and Target models. Someone noted that the old Wesson & Harrington name is used sometimes for special models. I have handled a few BCs, but never noticed the markings on the frame. My other NEF guns all have the NEF name on the frame. Anyone know of a change in the company?