I just received a family heirloom Remington 513-T which I have always enjoyed myself but nobody cared much for other than me. My grandpa got it for my uncle but it ended up being too heavy for him as a kid and not interesting as an adult, so it sat in grandpa's gun case from the 50's to the 90's. Then my dad and I got it sometime when I was around 12-13 or so and we'd take it to the family farm, but my dad just wasn't into shooting a lot, so it maybe got shot 10 or 20 days out of the last 20 years that I know of. So now I'm at a great gun club and want to get into small bore shooting, so I asked if I could keep it because I have use for it. Done. It's going to get more shooting with me in a month than it likely has its entire existence.
Just looked up the date and it was made in 1950. The metal is in pretty good condition but not what I'd call a museum piece but it cleans up nice. The stock looks like a chipmunk attacked it in spots--not irrecoverable by any means but refinishing would cost a little money as I'm not all that well practiced at wood work and likely would hand the task off to someone. The irons are fantastic, Redfield aperture sights correct for the period, likely on there at time of purchase, I'm guessing the only ones it's ever worn. Bore is very nice as this has seen minimal use.
Now here's the dilemma: do I thread it? Can it be done to where it doesn't look out of place and butchered, and not screw up the accuracy which this beauty has? I'd like nothing more than to have a classic tack driver with just one minor update to make it everything I want it to be. Can a thread protector be done to look retro, to look as if it were originally done that way? I want it to look natural with a Sparrow or another high quality can that can be on there and not occlude the sights--maybe see if the suppressor can be finished to match the finish closely. I basically want a 1950's rifle to have just one more feature added so it will do everything I want from now till 2050 and beyond. It deserves the love it never got.
Anyone got some example pics of a rifle from that time with a heavy barrel threaded and/or with a can on it? If it can't be done right I won't do it at all, but I really, REALLY want to.
Just looked up the date and it was made in 1950. The metal is in pretty good condition but not what I'd call a museum piece but it cleans up nice. The stock looks like a chipmunk attacked it in spots--not irrecoverable by any means but refinishing would cost a little money as I'm not all that well practiced at wood work and likely would hand the task off to someone. The irons are fantastic, Redfield aperture sights correct for the period, likely on there at time of purchase, I'm guessing the only ones it's ever worn. Bore is very nice as this has seen minimal use.
Now here's the dilemma: do I thread it? Can it be done to where it doesn't look out of place and butchered, and not screw up the accuracy which this beauty has? I'd like nothing more than to have a classic tack driver with just one minor update to make it everything I want it to be. Can a thread protector be done to look retro, to look as if it were originally done that way? I want it to look natural with a Sparrow or another high quality can that can be on there and not occlude the sights--maybe see if the suppressor can be finished to match the finish closely. I basically want a 1950's rifle to have just one more feature added so it will do everything I want from now till 2050 and beyond. It deserves the love it never got.
Anyone got some example pics of a rifle from that time with a heavy barrel threaded and/or with a can on it? If it can't be done right I won't do it at all, but I really, REALLY want to.