Riflecrank
AH enthusiast
My final offering will be sold at a discount, only 8K USD.
This is a .500 Jeffery made from a CZ 550 Magnum .416 Rigby action.
This was done because the action is an amazingly slick feeder of the .500 Jeffery, for whatever reason.
The bolt hardly ever overrides the rebated rim of the .500 Jeffery.
Ejection is sloppy but positive since the true Mauser claw is drawn inward on rearward traction of the bolt. Work the bolt fast and hard and you will eject !
The stock is the cast-off laminate from the first .500 Mbogo.
The barrel is a very fat Light Target (straight taper) McGowen cut to 24" length, 1:20" twist, with a secondary recoil lug on the barrel.
Stock got paper thin on fore end top edges whensanded out for the fat barrel,
so I built it up with epoxy.
Never fear, I plan to sand the rough areas of fore end topside down to smooth and then paint the whole stock with grey truck bed coat, textured.
Again, Vais Brake, scope and rings not included. Thead protector included.
The antique 1:20" twist will be good with cast bullets.
The chamber was done with a Dave Kiff PT&G reamer that adds 0.25" length of parallel-sided free-bore to the C.I.P. .500 Jeffery homologated "no-throat" chamber.
The set trigger and safety of the standard CZ 550 Magnum remain as OEM.
Good for BPCR match shooting.
Indeed, the .500 Jeffery is a close equivalent in case capacity to the 50-140 Sharps.
Use this rifle with duplexed BP and paper-patched bullets for even better performance than the antiques.
Or the easy way is powder-coat-painted, gas-checked, BHN-25 cast bullets.
Some ideas for a start on .500 Jeffery/50-140 Sharps nostalgia.
The Really Big Fifty.
777-grainer works even better in a 1:20" twist.
In the 1:10" twist .500 Mbogo it was slowed down to 1800 fps for slower spin rate but could only do about 2-MOA.
I expect much better from the ".500 Jeffery Match" with 1:20" twist.
Haven't tried that cast load yet, but this rifle has been in the works since 2003 when I was still BES afflicted.
Make me an offer ?
This is a .500 Jeffery made from a CZ 550 Magnum .416 Rigby action.
This was done because the action is an amazingly slick feeder of the .500 Jeffery, for whatever reason.
The bolt hardly ever overrides the rebated rim of the .500 Jeffery.
Ejection is sloppy but positive since the true Mauser claw is drawn inward on rearward traction of the bolt. Work the bolt fast and hard and you will eject !
The stock is the cast-off laminate from the first .500 Mbogo.
The barrel is a very fat Light Target (straight taper) McGowen cut to 24" length, 1:20" twist, with a secondary recoil lug on the barrel.
Stock got paper thin on fore end top edges whensanded out for the fat barrel,
so I built it up with epoxy.
Never fear, I plan to sand the rough areas of fore end topside down to smooth and then paint the whole stock with grey truck bed coat, textured.
Again, Vais Brake, scope and rings not included. Thead protector included.
The antique 1:20" twist will be good with cast bullets.
The chamber was done with a Dave Kiff PT&G reamer that adds 0.25" length of parallel-sided free-bore to the C.I.P. .500 Jeffery homologated "no-throat" chamber.
The set trigger and safety of the standard CZ 550 Magnum remain as OEM.
Good for BPCR match shooting.
Indeed, the .500 Jeffery is a close equivalent in case capacity to the 50-140 Sharps.
Use this rifle with duplexed BP and paper-patched bullets for even better performance than the antiques.
Or the easy way is powder-coat-painted, gas-checked, BHN-25 cast bullets.
Some ideas for a start on .500 Jeffery/50-140 Sharps nostalgia.
The Really Big Fifty.
777-grainer works even better in a 1:20" twist.
In the 1:10" twist .500 Mbogo it was slowed down to 1800 fps for slower spin rate but could only do about 2-MOA.
I expect much better from the ".500 Jeffery Match" with 1:20" twist.
Haven't tried that cast load yet, but this rifle has been in the works since 2003 when I was still BES afflicted.
Make me an offer ?
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