Author Topic: I like my 3030! Regardless!  (Read 15309 times)

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Offline Cheesehead

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Re: I like my 3030! Regardless!
« Reply #60 on: April 06, 2009, 04:52:27 PM »
Your right about the appearance of the rifle. It is non threatening in appearence, but packs a much bigger punch than a so called assault rifle. ::)

I've owned several "assault" guns.  I now have an old SKS.  Most of the folks I've seen with  them have a spray and pray attitude, (one of my brothers is that way.)  It only  takes one shot if its in the right place.  If the going gets really rough, you can't beat a shotgun.  The old standbys will still get the job done, despite all the modern stuff we have now.
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Offline filmokentucky

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Re: I like my 3030! Regardless!
« Reply #61 on: April 06, 2009, 07:25:50 PM »
What does this have to do with your post regarding your M1A? You've lost me. Unless you are saying that your rifle is chambered for a true assault rifle cartridge.
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Offline myronman3

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Re: I like my 3030! Regardless!
« Reply #62 on: April 07, 2009, 03:50:49 AM »
once upon a time, the lever was the state of the art assault weapon. 

 

Offline SHOOTALL

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Re: I like my 3030! Regardless!
« Reply #63 on: April 07, 2009, 04:48:06 AM »
assult weapon is a divide and destory term today . it is used by the anti's today to divide gun owners into groups , get them thinking that this group or that group can be singled out as the problem and the rest of the gun owners will look the other way as they are eliminated .
From reading here it seems to be working .
We don't have to like each other or each others gun but we d--- well better like the fact that we can own what we want and stant togather to keep that freedom !
If ya can see it ya can hit it !

Offline Dee

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Re: I like my 3030! Regardless!
« Reply #64 on: April 07, 2009, 07:21:45 AM »
I believe we have inadvertently drifted from a pleasant discussion of the virtues of the 3030 Winchester, to a debate. Too bad. :(
You may all go to hell, I will go to Texas. Davy Crockett

Offline SHOOTALL

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Re: I like my 3030! Regardless!
« Reply #65 on: April 07, 2009, 07:23:31 AM »
sorry DEE .
If ya can see it ya can hit it !

Offline Cheesehead

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Re: I like my 3030! Regardless!
« Reply #66 on: April 07, 2009, 07:27:04 AM »
I believe we have inadvertently drifted from a pleasant discussion of the virtues of the 3030 Winchester, to a debate. Too bad. :(


+1
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Offline SHOOTALL

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Re: I like my 3030! Regardless!
« Reply #67 on: April 07, 2009, 07:35:03 AM »
back on subject , i once read where a forest ranger or game warden out west got trapped in a box canyon by 5 or 6 grizz bears . He used his 30-30 to kill them all and escape . The story was in one of the hunting mags in the 70's . seemed to work for him OK .
If ya can see it ya can hit it !

Offline myronman3

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Re: I like my 3030! Regardless!
« Reply #68 on: April 07, 2009, 08:32:06 AM »
i didnt know griz hunted in packs..... ;D

Offline SHOOTALL

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Re: I like my 3030! Regardless!
« Reply #69 on: April 07, 2009, 08:35:47 AM »
don't know just read the article . maybe they ended up in a berry patch togather ?
then also two sows with cubs would make up the number . Wish i still had the magazine as it was an interesting article . It was about the 30-30 .
If ya can see it ya can hit it !

Offline Dee

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Re: I like my 3030! Regardless!
« Reply #70 on: April 07, 2009, 08:58:14 AM »
I've told this story before, but I'll shorten it this time. Back in the early 70s two friends of mine were going on a guided big game hunt in Canada. For months they talked about their rifles. One had a 300 win mag, and I don't remember what the other one had. Everyday at lunch they talked endlessly about bullets they were going to use.
When the big hunt day arrived, they flew to Canada, took a small plane to a wilderness camp, and then two guides took them by horse back to a camp farther in.
While they were playing wilderness around the campfire the first night, one asked that if they didn't fill all their tags if the old guide would help them fill them. The old man said that he would see that all tags were filled. My friend said the old man could use his big rifle, and the old guide just smiled and said he had just as soon use his, that it had worked for him all his life.
When asked what he used, he produced an old, and I do mean old, Model 94 Winchester 3030. The stock had been broken at the receiver, and he had wrapped it in bailing wire, and the wet rawhide over that. The forearm stock had rode in a saddle scabbard so long that one of the scabbard straps had worn almost thru the forearm in one place. They were both embarrassed at having spent so much money on rifles and that perfect ammo to hunt Canada. The old man did indeed see that all tags were filled.
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Offline Antietamgw

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Re: I like my 3030! Regardless!
« Reply #71 on: April 10, 2009, 07:12:13 PM »
My 3030 Winchester, and my old Remington 870 will if needed. Do it all! JMO

I disagree completely - I'd choose my Marlin 336 and my Ithaca 37  :)
Keep your plow share and your sword - know how and when to use them.

Offline Halwg

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Re: I like my 3030! Regardless!
« Reply #72 on: April 11, 2009, 03:01:35 AM »
Yep, the Marlin 336 and Ithaca 37 for me, as well!
The older I get...The better I was.

Offline Dee

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Re: I like my 3030! Regardless!
« Reply #73 on: April 11, 2009, 03:50:36 AM »
The Marlin is a pretty good rifle, but I tried one of the Ithacas as did a lot of other agencies armorers, and it sucks for tactical defense or offense, because of the loading and ejecting going on in the same place. The military and L.E. looked at it, and went: Uh, No thanks.
The 870 Rem, or the Mossberg 500 is definitely a better choice.
You may all go to hell, I will go to Texas. Davy Crockett

Offline filmokentucky

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Re: I like my 3030! Regardless!
« Reply #74 on: April 11, 2009, 06:49:23 AM »
The Ithaca Model 37 has had a long history of military use starting in WWII and continuing on through Korea and Vietnam where it served with distinction. Law enforcement caught on to it's usefulness early on and it remained a mainstay for many years, accompanying police officers on their rounds. It is still in use today and is still a fine combat shotgun. It was available in a parkerized finish with matte oil finished walnut stocks  just like any other M&P weapon and was a great comfort in a wet foxhole on a dark night in the Central Highlands.
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Offline mangulator

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Re: I like my 3030! Regardless!
« Reply #75 on: April 11, 2009, 07:17:27 AM »
Dee, you make a good point Marlin makes a good weapon and after 25 years in law enforcement I will choose a 870 Remington or Mossberg any time I wish I could carry the Marlin on duty...

Offline Siskiyou

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Re: I like my 3030! Regardless!
« Reply #76 on: April 11, 2009, 09:16:12 AM »
The 30-30 is better!

The Ithaca M37 proved effective in a couple of the smaller departments in the country, one was L.A.P.D., and the other was L.A. Sheriff’s Department.  The Sheriff’s Department is larger than many small cities.  Towards the end they had some rather ugly looking shotguns after seeing years on patrol.  With the ups and downs of Ithaca I do not see it as a practical law enforcement shotgun.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Los_Angeles_County_Sheriff's_Department

The M870 Remington was standard for the outfit I worked for.  All my training at the time centered on the M870.  The M870 was an easy transition for me because I used a M760 since I was fourteen.  The combat training with the M870 does not easily translate to the M37 for many users.  At an annual combat shoot a left-handed officer brought a M37.  When placed in a mix of shotguns with officer not seeing what had gone on before was a little scary.

This was taking place on a police range.

#1.  A 175 pound training dummy was placed 25-yards from four silhouette targets.  Next to the dummy was placed a shotgun, in this case a M37.  The shotgun had two live rounds in it and there were live rounds on the ground.

#2.  The down dummy was an officer down.  The officer in training was to use cover and his handgun to get to the down officer.  Once at the dummy the officer was to engage the bad guy targets.

The training quickly demonstrated that mixing a non-standard weapon into the mix result in confusion, and in the field could lead to the loss of life.

Success with any weapon centers on training, and being familiar.  This scenario showed that using a non-standard weapon to accommodate a left-hand officer put others at risk.  A better answer was to provide the officer additional training to the officer with the agency mandated shotgun.

During WWII my father-in-law was an Army officer who took part in the fighting in New Guinea, and the Philippines.  He saw the M37 being used in combat, and used by guards.  A few years after the end of the War he was assigned to duty in Alaska.  He bought a M37 Ithaca.  After he passed away it became my shotgun and that is why I was familiar with the M37 on the range.

I love the M37 for bird hunting, and I have adapted some of my L.E. training to the M37.  In a critical situation if given the choice I would pick up a Remington M870. 
Felt recoil with the M37 is greater than the M870.  Being I am from the dark ages my issued M870 was lighter than the later Police M870 shotguns.  I have been using a 12-gauge duck gun since I was about 10-yearsold and have adjusted to it.  But your standard M1A1 police recruit does not have that background.  I found out that memory does have an effect when using a shotgun.

While on a two-week hunting trip I used my M37 to take limits of Mt. Quail, and grouse.  At the same time I bagged a few bandtail pigeons.   I fired a good part of a box of high base shells every day.  At the end of the trip I was sore, and my brain was reluctant for me to bring the M37 up.  When I returned home I installed a heavy duty recoil pad on the stock.

Many police recruits have problems with recoil generated by the 12-guage shotgun.  Many recruits of small stature have problems, and in some cases this has resulted in the issue of “wimpy” loads for whiners.  I have always marched in the other direction and carried Magnum 00 12-pellet loads and rifle slugs.  These loads are not friendly in my M37 Feather weight, but life is better with the thick recoil pad.

I believe the 30-30 Winchester is a better then the shotgun in the hands of the experienced officer.  The North Hollywood shootout proved the weakness of the 12-guage when loaded with buckshot against an armored subject when the range extends beyond a few yards.  The failures on that day were administrative and political.  I do not recall any mention of shotgun slugs being used.  When the robbery went down a few well placed rounds from a 30-30 would have brought the bad guys down and there would have been no need for officers to search for rifles from a local gun store.

I recall meeting up with a Sheriff’s detective to investigate a person who fired three rounds at a passing car in a campground.  The tall, thin, silver-haired detective stepped out of the Ford LTD, wearing a gray pin stripe suit.  I thought this might be the wrong guy for this problem.  I quickly changed my mind, when he pulled a well kept 30-30 Winchester out of the trunk.  They had sent the right officer for the job.


Marlin 30-30 April 2009
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Offline Sweetwater

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Re: I like my 3030! Regardless!
« Reply #77 on: April 11, 2009, 11:01:13 AM »
Although I was raised on bolt actions (my Dad had his reasons), I did get to carry my gramp's 94Winchester 32WSpcl when I was 14. In 1963, I had swapped my very well used 6.5x55 mil-surp Husqvarna for a late '50's Sivertone maple archtop guitar. For my birthday that Fall, Dad got me an NRA-new 8x57 Persian Carbine. He had started sporterizing it and it wasn't ready when deer season opened. Grampie offered to let me borrow his 94Winchester until my new rifle was finished. I loved it, but never shot an animal with it, until the year 2000! That's another story!

So, where am I going with this? Being surrounded with bolt-guns, I've always had a fascination for leverguns. I now have 5, two of which are family heirlooms passed down. A '73 in 38-40 from my Greatgrandfather, and the '94 in 32WSpcl from my Grampie. My 41Mag Marlin is a blast, my '86 Win in 40-82 is a kitchen-table carbine and like shooting history itself, while my 356BB 94Win sits on the rack, hoping to be picked. All this, and I still have a little heart-thump when I see an ad for a 30-30 - either 94 or 336. There is magic and mystique in the thutty - thutty (even sounds like an adventure in the making). I may never get one; may have to stay content with the 32WSpcl and it's bigger brothers on the rack; none of which detracts from the longing of not having that one piece of americana that you guys have had since boyhood! My hat if off to you and your good fortune. You have been blessed and proven it's worth.

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Offline dpastordan

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Re: I like my 3030! Regardless!
« Reply #78 on: April 12, 2009, 11:49:00 AM »
Do I like the .30-30?  You betcha! I have a barrel insert in .30-30 for my .22 magnum over 20 gauge.  I have a Stevens bolt action with a Williams receiver sight.  I have a Handi-Rifle in .30-30 with a Weaver K4 scope (which has killed deer and boar).  I used to have a Model 94 (Youth model) with a receiver sight that killed boar and deer.  On my first deer hunt I used a Winchester Model 64 (a pistol gripped 94 basically). 

Jack O'Connor is one of the few who writers who has written positive words on the .30-30.  He has a whole chapter in his book on the rifle.  With todays loads like the Hornady 165 soft tipped slugs and Federal's Nosler partitions - the .30-30 is probably more effective than ever.  I wonder what he would say about the state of the .30-30 today!  He wrote of Eskimos killing polar bears, Mexicans shooting Grizzlies in the Chihuahua mountains, Yukon prospectors shooting moose, and one market hunter who would average 18-20 elk per box of .30-30 cartridges. 

I just picked up a Savage 99 take down in .30-30 and plan to put on a tang sight on it.  I have other rifles [and my other favorite rounds are the .243 and .30-06) but when it gets down to hunting...the .30-30 usually gets grabbed.  On my father's side of the family the norm is to hunt with the .30-30 or a 12 gauge. 

Know the gun, know the animal, know where to place the shot. 

Offline Snowman366

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Re: I like my 3030! Regardless!
« Reply #79 on: April 13, 2009, 01:54:37 PM »
Jack O'Connor is one of the few who writers who has written positive words on the .30-30.  He has a whole chapter in his book on the rifle.  He wrote of Eskimos killing polar bears, Mexicans shooting Grizzlies in the Chihuahua mountains, Yukon prospectors shooting moose, and one market hunter who would average 18-20 elk per box of .30-30 cartridges. 

Now is about as good a time as any for me to ask this. I've got Sam Fadala's book on the .30-30 Winchester. Are there other books that are dedicated to, or have extensive mention of the .30-30?

Offline deernhog

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Re: I like my 3030! Regardless!
« Reply #80 on: April 13, 2009, 03:19:13 PM »
It comes down to this unlike us that set around and think about what gun for what chore and have never really done it, they used what they had to get the job done or get eaten. Eskimos were a very patient hunter and didn't just charge out and shoot a polar bear where ever they saw it. They would wait until the time was right and the place was right them shoot the bear. They would hunt a polar bear with a .223 but on their terms.  Know what it can do and use it right.
Deer hunting is mostly fun then you shoot one and it turns to work.

Offline Old Fart

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Re: I like my 3030! Regardless!
« Reply #81 on: April 15, 2009, 04:10:48 AM »
This has been a really great thread, for the most part, and I have enjoyed a lot of what has been posted. Like a lot of the other old farts posting here I've had chance to use many different guns. I have to admit I liked them all. Single action, double action, semi auto, pump, lever action, bolt, I don't care what it was I enjoyed banging away with them. What I find myself enjoying most these days are the old guns I grew up with. I just don't really enjoy going out and blasting a couple thousand rounds off in a few minutes. To me taking one on my less hi-tech guns to the range and spending a little time putting a bullet on target makes for a pleasant day.

I've shot lot's of 30-30 through a winchester over the years. That sucker did everything it was supposed to do if I did my part. Nowadays I shoot a 35 rem in a marlin. Luck of the draw. I came across a 336 made in the mid 70's that was just about pristine. It grabbed my attention and has been elevated to favorite status. Still hunt with my ithaca 37. I like the way it puts my hulls between my feet for easy retieval. Got a mossberg for general purpose stuff. I've never felt at a disadvantage with it. Started shooting a 10-22 a few yaers back and have came to appreicate it. The only relatively new additon is a set of the .17 rimfires. I really like those little plinkers. Granted they may not be a first pick on a windy day, but they will flat out shoot.

And yes I still like my 30-30.
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Offline SHOOTALL

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Re: I like my 3030! Regardless!
« Reply #82 on: April 15, 2009, 04:24:45 AM »
i hate the shells under my feet tripping me and getting mashed making reloading a pain if do-able at all .
If ya can see it ya can hit it !

Offline Hodr

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Re: I like my 3030! Regardless!
« Reply #83 on: April 15, 2009, 04:48:31 AM »
I was raised slingshot, to benjamin 22, to 22lr, to 30-30.  When grown I shot everything the army would use for sniping and competition.  I was also crosstrained in Turkey on all warsaw pact at an airforce base.  When I got out of the army mom had my slingshot hanging on the bed, when she died I inherited the benjamin and a 22 marlin autoloader.  My brother got the 94 winchester and my son inherited his grandfathers 22 short octagon barrell gallery rifle.  Something happened at my brothers house (?) and he removed all firearms because of his twin 6 year old girls.  By the time he thought to tell me the guy supposed to hold them had sold them and moved.  I have chased that rifle for 20 years.  So far I have followed it through 7 owners.  When I find it price won"t matter.  From the first time I shot it I could not miss and I don't ever recall using the sights.  It was just there.  I have  a 94 trapper in .357 that is the same way.  I will never cease to hunt for dad's rifle.  I found the serial # on an old sales slip and marked as Dad's bitrthday present in 1953 along with an engraved Browning sweet 16 that was my fathers pheasant gun.

blindhari

Come to think of it anyone ever hear of a guy named Marcel Ringsly.  Last lead I have on the 30-30
TANSTAAFL

Offline kernman

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Re: I like my 3030! Regardless!
« Reply #84 on: April 15, 2009, 06:44:01 AM »
Manny Rock,
\
I'm curious: what do you mean by "25 yards of extra practical shooting range"?

Offline mannyrock

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Re: I like my 3030! Regardless!
« Reply #85 on: April 15, 2009, 11:35:28 AM »
Kernman,
 
    I just meant that in view of the flater trajectory of the .30-30 compared to the .35 Remington, most older shooters feel comfortable taking slighly longer shots with the .30-30 than the .35.   I have no experience with the pointed LeverEvolution round, but conventional wisdom with regular ammo was that the .35 Remington was good out to about 150 yards, and the .30-30 out to about 175 yards.

  Just my thoughts.

Mannyrock

Offline mechanic

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Re: I like my 3030! Regardless!
« Reply #86 on: April 15, 2009, 11:42:38 AM »
Dee,

It appears your post is conjuring up some memories for a lot of folks, most of them good!!!  You can't go home again, but you can take a little piece of it with you it seems.
Molon Labe, (King Leonidas of the Spartan Army)

Offline 222

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Re: I like my 3030! Regardless!
« Reply #87 on: April 15, 2009, 12:38:59 PM »
5 years ago I received my father-in-laws 94 30-30 made in 53 I believe and have used it on two whitetail does. When I recieved it it had a K2 weaver scope in williams side mount scope was fogged up so I put a K4 Weaver in the rings works as my father-in-law wanted. I would have perferred peeps but this one was not drilled for them. Any way I couldn't bring myself to change sights. Memories. lol Thanks Dee

Offline Dee

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Re: I like my 3030! Regardless!
« Reply #88 on: April 16, 2009, 10:56:46 AM »
It has been a good thread, hasn't it mechanic.

222, no offense, but I'm bettin that 1953 Model 94 Winchester 3030, IS drilled and tapped for a Lyman 66 Aperture sight. Are absolutely sure it isn't?
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Offline Sweetwater

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Re: I like my 3030! Regardless!
« Reply #89 on: April 16, 2009, 04:18:59 PM »
222-

Sounds like your tang isn't tapped for a tang sight, but, like Dee posted, the left side should be drilled and tapped for that Lyman peep sight. It may be hidden by your scope side mount. Just a thought...

Dee-
This has been a great read; Thanks!

Regards,
Sweetwater
Regards,
Sweetwater

Courage is being scared to death but saddling up anyway - John Wayne

The proof is in the freezer - Sweetwater