Dear Guys,
I am looking at a pretty neat old Remington 141 pump in .35 caliber. These rifles had a short receiver, so when two Weaver type bases are mounted on top of the receiver, they end up being pretty close together. I would imagine that this creates problems, finding the right scope with the right turret spacing and eye relief.
But on the one I am looking at, someone tried to solve this problem by mounting the forward scope base on the barrel itself, about an inch in front of the receiver.
My question is: Given that this is a take-down rifle, wouldn't there be some "looseness" or "give" in the barrel connection when it is assembled? (I recall how the Rem 870 shotgun, when assembled, has a front barrel that seems to give or creak just a bit.) If so, wouldn't this mean that the foward base would always be shifting slightly, up or down or side to side? And wouldn't this mean that you could never keep that scope sighted in?
Unlike the Remington 870, the take down screw is not on the end of the magazine tube. Instead, it is on the side of the receiver, much like a Marlin .22 lever take-down rifle.
Thanks for all comments, and tales of experience, with this issue.
Regards, Mannyrock