Not to sound like a A-HOLE but dont you think you should have learned about it before hand
As the title said, I ordered a new Model 11 in 260 Remington today and it has already shipped. Hopefully I'll have it in a few days. I have have Remington and AR style rifles but this is my first Savage. The different Savage Models were a little confusing but the Model 11 was chambered in 260 Rem so I decided to give it a try.
I already load 4 or 5 different rifle calibers and several pistol calibers but the 260 will be a new one for me. It should be a lot of fun coming up with good loads for deer and critters.
If anyone can share a little more Model 11 info and what I can expect I'd appreciate it.
Not to sound like a A-HOLE but dont you think you should have learned about it before hand
I have one. The trigger is great. Action is smooth. Sporter weight barrel has good balance and decent accuracy. Cartridge is great for 400lb/ medium size game on down. (Bell shot hundreds of elephants with a 6.5mm x 54mm so some may argue it can handle most game). It's a pleasure to shoot and very mild recoil. Synthetic stock was replaced almost immediately (which was my plan from the start). It's a well proven design. Can't say I'm a great fan of the "new" Axis style magazine with plastic loop catch, but then again it seems to be working fine.
I'm having good accuracy with the 130 gr Sierra Tipped GameChanger, 140 gr Sierra MatchKing and 143 gr Hornady ELD-X. Savage was thoughtful to use a 1:8" twist for the VLD style bullets and the magazine is long enough to seat them well past the 2.800" SAAMI spec.
H4350 and Reloader 19 are great powders for reloading.
"They couldn't hit an elephant at this distance." Last words of Gen. Sedgwik
Thank you for the reply. A lot of good info and just what I was looking for. The reason I bought the Savage is that I wanted a good, accurate and inexpensive rifle to carry in the farm truck when checking the cows and pasture fences, a rifle that I didn't mind dragging in and out of the truck a few times a day.
I'll probably see how it shoots before I mess with the stock but I ended up replacing the stock on both of my Remingtons. Not sure about the included scope yet but I already have a Sightron Big Sky and Burris rings ready to go on it if needed. To start, I plan to load 120 Speer Gold Dots for it since they have been so accurate in both of my 6.8 SPC ARs. I also have about a dozen different powders, including RL19 and H4350, that's suitable for the 260 but will try RL16 first with the 120gr bullet. I look forward to see what level of accuracy it's capable of.
I'd go with the H4350 first with the lighter 120 grain pills. Reloader powders burns "dirty" which can carbon up your barrel pretty fast, which can effect your accuracy in a new Savage barrel (which takes a few hundred rounds to settle in and start shooting better) could hurt your accuracy.
Put that Sightron on there ASAP... It will be way better than anything that comes in/on the package.
When mine came it had one loose scope base screw. Very worth checking those. I put Warne steel rings and a Nikon Prostaff 3 on mine before the first time I shot it.
"They couldn't hit an elephant at this distance." Last words of Gen. Sedgwik
Welcome to the forum.
Excellent choice of both caliber and scope mounting system.
Welcome.
Nice choice. The Savage Custom Shop built my stainless 260 with medium sporter barrel, now replaced by a Brux with trued action. Without the scope there’s now over $2k in the unit. So I guess I love it. It shoots 140 grain better than I can.
All my centerfires wear Burris steel rings
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Sounds like a nice setup, and, I second the notion of immediately replacing the scope. If nothing else you need to remove the stock scope to check the mounting screws anyway so just put yours on there when you do.
Ok thanks, just wondering.
I hunted in Ashe Co. in the 80s. That was the coldest place I've ever been. One year after hunting season we went back up there to pick up a couple tree stands. That day, with the winding blowing, the wind chill temp was -61 degrees! We about froze!
Very Nice, share some pics when you get it
I've had 4 different Savage Rifles, 7mm mag, .270 win, .308, 30-06.. all were older models.. Great shooters. out of the Box accuracy was fantastic.. I love a Savage..I replaced the triggers in my with after market basix sav 2 trigger,, I like a light trigger.. Good luck on your New Rifle.. Let us know how it shoots
I picked up my new 260, Savage 11 late yesterday. The rifle looked good and I didn't notice any flaws on any of the metal. I cleaned the bore with Bore Tech Eliminator and followed with a light coat of FP10 oil.
Today I removed the action from the factory synthetic stock, cleaned then applied a light film of FP-10 oil to all of the metal, reinstalled the factory stock and torqued both screws to 35 in/pounds. Then I removed the included Bushnell scope, bases/ rings and installed a one piece EGW picatinny rail, Burris Signature Zee rings and a Sightron Big Sky 3-12x42 scope, torquing all screws to the recommended in/pounds.
Ive also prepped some Starline brass and ready to load. All I need now is some decent weather so I can load and shoot some.
I'll try to post a few pics when I take it to the bench.
Shoot well!
"They couldn't hit an elephant at this distance." Last words of Gen. Sedgwik
Nice choice, Hauser52. I am searching for a left hand Savage in 6,5x55 Swede, a ballistic twin to your rifle. I just like the older cartridges, there isn't any thing wrong with your 260 Remington, or the 6.5 Creedmoor, all 3 are good hunting rounds. The 6.5 Creed may be better for long range target, but that is not what I am about. The Swede has a little more powder room, so it can launch a 160 grain bullet if I want or need that.
Good shooting!
Only "downside" to the .260 is that in a SA, there can be issues with OAL if loading heavy VLD's. This is where the Creedmoor has it's (only) advantage.
My Savage 11 (built on a varmint SA, in an AICS) requires single loading 140 VLD's. It's a target stick, so it's no big issue; could solve it with Wyatt's extended mags.
Building another now on an M700, I've already milled the action out for the Wyatt's extended internal box mag (hunting rifle, no DBM).
I've got a good load worked up for a 156 gr Norma Oryx for my .260 Rem with H4891SC in case I ever find a moose. No reason the .260 Rem can't get there with 160 gr bullets. At least in the Savage throat and magazine.
Heavier the bullet the less powder you can load . . . so it all works out.
"They couldn't hit an elephant at this distance." Last words of Gen. Sedgwik
I finally got to shoot my new 260 Rem some over the last few days. Bullets that I tried were 129 gr. Hornady, 130 Sierra HPBT, Speer 120 gr and 140 gr Gold Dots. The powders that I tried were H4350, H414 and H4831. Primers were CCI 200 and Winchester LRP.
All I can say is that I'm disappointed in the way it shoots. All shots were taken from my bench and sand bags. None of the loads that I tried would group consistently and I tried a lot. I rechecked the mount and ring torque. Tried different torque on the front and rear stock screws. Tried different cartridge OALs, different powder load ladders, switched primers, adjusted Accutrigger down to 2.5 pounds. Cleaned between shots, tried not cleaning between shots, deep cleaned with copper solvent. Made no difference.
I could shoot a couple rounds and they would be close to an inch, then the group would open up to 4,5 or more inches. Shots were all over the place not just a little off but a lot in any direction. Between shots I was waiting anywhere from 1 minute to 15 minutes apart, made no difference. All total I must have shot almost 100 rounds.
I've been reloading for over 40 years and no novice at developing loads for a particular caliber/gun. I'm beginning to think that the stock is the problem just like an old Rem Model 7 in 6mm that I have. I ended up putting a new B&C stock on it and now it shoots less than 1 inch groups with about any bullet.
Anyone have any other ideas that I can try?
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