The VGS Blog: anything and everything you’ll find useful, interesting, or just plain cool!
Three Simple Steps to a Legit Vintage Build
If you follow these steps you can put together a vintage build that even the most particular of your gun buddies will be jealous of.
Dressing Up the Rimfire
The old rimfires are some of the most fun to own, the most fun to shoot, but mostly, they carry with them the most memories.
The Best of the Most Famous, the Weaver K4-60B
No other scope topped more rifles during that period. It was the most popular and is still the most famous hunting scope ever made.
Great Scopes for the Post-War Savage 99s.
The optics and mounts that graced the pre-war Savage model 99’s are definitely beautiful in their own vintage right, but functionally crude in comparison to those that came after the war.
“Bear Proof” 45-70 by Turnbull Restorations and VintageGunScopes.com
This spring I decided to make myself a nice, compact bear gun that could go with me anywhere, all spring.
Turkey Medicine. Plain and Simple.
At just under 3,000 turkeys killed, I understand that I’ve been responsible for more turkeys meeting their demise than any human since those records have been kept.
Flat Out Beautiful
….in my dreams I would have owned this set up. Flat out flat. Flat out beautiful.
Savage Model 10 50th Anniversary Edition Build
I don’t always fall in love with anniversary or commemorative edition rifles, but when I do, they look like this.
Plum Fast!
When Winchester necked down the Savage 250-3000 in 1935, they created the fastest commercially available cartridge of its day
Vintage Build-1980 Elk Hunter's Dream Rifle.
That’s how it worked back then. My how times have changed.
Vintage Build-Don't break the bank, but make it look like you did.
This one is almost sure to be the prettiest shotgun in your neck of the woods this fall. It’s glamorous look will make it seem like you broke the bank, even though you didn’t.
Vintage Build-DON'T BOUNCE OFF NOTHIN'
In the 1950's very few hunters carried large calibers. In fact, a .300 was almost unheard of in normal hunting circles, making a .300 H&H a rare find in a Remington 721. This month we built a period-correct combination…
POST WAR CUTTING EDGE DEER HUNTER
During WWII companies like Remington and Weaver had increased their workforce as much as 20-fold to help save the free world. Yes, the same one that would hate them for some reason a few decades later.
1978 HOT ROD
If you owned this combination back in the day, you probably thought you were the bomb of long range hunting...and you probably were.
SIMPLICITY
In 1948 Remington introduced its bolt action 721. This rifle would come to define hunting accuracy for decades. In the post-WWII era scopes were still hard to afford yet hunters and shooters were looking for more accuracy and adjustment than iron sights offered.
VINTAGE VARMINTER
In the late 1970's when coyote pelt prices were at an all time high and prairie dogs made great off-season practice, this is the setup I would have dreamed about....
MATCHY MATCHY 22-250
When scopes were blued to match their rifles, the combinations always looked like they made sense. This month we matched a combination that really makes sense, whether you planned to coyote hunt, or shoot a match.