Quick has given you some very good recommendations. My initial impression of my BC was exactly as yours was. In my early 60's, I'd been shooting a good while and hadn't ever paid much attention to the "kick". Weatherby Magnums..... bring 'em on. I'll sight em in for your and then shoot 'em for fun for a while...... back then. LOL That steel cresent butt plate and the light weight of the BC had me in an entirely different state of mind very soon. Of course, like a lot of Southerners, I was shooting in shirt sleeves (never wise with a .45-70. My right arm was blue from biceps to shoulder. Here's what I did:
1) Got a new (and heavier) Montecarlo buttstock and a beavertail forend from GunStocks Inc. These are partially finished and I enjoyed the process of finishing it up.
2) The buttstock came with a Limbsaver recoil at my request.
3) My better (and wiser) half sewed a recoil absorber on a web shooting jacket and I also got a Past strap on recoil absorber. (talk aboiut over kill. I wanted to leave nothing to chance. I'd waited most of a lifetime for this rifle and, by golly, I was going to shoot it.
4) I ordered a Mercury Recoil Reducer to install in the buttstock (I'd used the lead and the MRR works just as well; maybe a little better and is lighter).
Here's a few pics of the things mentioned here:
An early pic of "project - don't let the BC get you shelll shocked" before some of the final finishing work.
Later on at our range in the country. I never did put the gloss coat on. I liked the flat less reflective stage and left it there
The Past:
The other recoil absorber she sewed on the shooting vest:
It shot real good:
The recoil will never be in the .22 rimfire category but now the rifle is a joy to shoot with loads at several different levels. I mostly keep my reloads below 1800 fps and bullet wt at 435 grs or less and the rifle is now a pleasure to shoot. Good luck and enjoy your Buffalo Rifle
stuffit