luv2safari
Member
I ran onto this round years ago when I was gearing up for a moose hunt and had decided on getting a new Remington Classic in 35 Whelen. I did, and the rifle shot patterns, not groups. After doing the usual bedding tricks, changing scopes and mounts, trying an encyclopedia full of loading data I sold the gun. What a disappointment!
An older friend and mentor heard of my failure with the 35 and told me to try a 9.3X62. HUH??? Never heard of it. Bob had one, a beat up Husqvarna on an FN 98 surplus military action, wearing a K-4, and he loaned it to me to try out. I did, and I sent the 35 down the road to a happy Remington collector; he didn't care how it shot.
Bob was loading RWS components he had gotten from Stoeger's, and the old Husqvarna shot one hole five shot groups. I was in love. Bob died not too long afterward, and all his collection was sold at auction by a big famous auction house. The 9.3 sold for much more than I could afford.
Some years later I found an FN 98 commercial-actioned 9.3X62 in Shotgun News, then still just a paper publication. It wasn't expensive, so I took a chance and sent a check. The rifle was in excellent condition, but I had to have it drilled and tapped and the bolt forged for scope use. I bought an ungodly expensive box of RWS ammo and now had a healthy investment in a gun nobody knew anything about. An old purple colored Leupold 3-9 went on top, and the rifle shot just like Bob's had.
I've never been without a 9.3X62 since then, and I never made the moose hunt. I did start hunting Africa on some new credit cards and used a Husqvarna 98 9.3X62 and a Tikka 512 combo gun set in 9.3X74R/9.3X74R and 12ga/9.3X74R. I'm too old and poor now to hunt anywhere but close by, providing I draw any tag at all, and I still carry a 9.3X62 much of the time, one that's killed everything from Steenbok to buffalo.
If you feel you might need a "hammer" in your future but don't want to carry a ten pound rifle that still knocks the snot out of you, you might consider the old Otto Bock classic.
An older friend and mentor heard of my failure with the 35 and told me to try a 9.3X62. HUH??? Never heard of it. Bob had one, a beat up Husqvarna on an FN 98 surplus military action, wearing a K-4, and he loaned it to me to try out. I did, and I sent the 35 down the road to a happy Remington collector; he didn't care how it shot.
Bob was loading RWS components he had gotten from Stoeger's, and the old Husqvarna shot one hole five shot groups. I was in love. Bob died not too long afterward, and all his collection was sold at auction by a big famous auction house. The 9.3 sold for much more than I could afford.
Some years later I found an FN 98 commercial-actioned 9.3X62 in Shotgun News, then still just a paper publication. It wasn't expensive, so I took a chance and sent a check. The rifle was in excellent condition, but I had to have it drilled and tapped and the bolt forged for scope use. I bought an ungodly expensive box of RWS ammo and now had a healthy investment in a gun nobody knew anything about. An old purple colored Leupold 3-9 went on top, and the rifle shot just like Bob's had.
I've never been without a 9.3X62 since then, and I never made the moose hunt. I did start hunting Africa on some new credit cards and used a Husqvarna 98 9.3X62 and a Tikka 512 combo gun set in 9.3X74R/9.3X74R and 12ga/9.3X74R. I'm too old and poor now to hunt anywhere but close by, providing I draw any tag at all, and I still carry a 9.3X62 much of the time, one that's killed everything from Steenbok to buffalo.
If you feel you might need a "hammer" in your future but don't want to carry a ten pound rifle that still knocks the snot out of you, you might consider the old Otto Bock classic.
The Surprising 9.3x62 Rifle Cartridge — Ron Spomer Outdoors
The 9.3x62? As a firearms and hunting writer I expect to discover and investigate new guns and cartridges. I don’t anticipate discovering an old cartridge that’s trending. But this one is. The 9.3x62 of 1905 , which doesn’t even have a last name, is finally catching the spotlight in the USA. Some
www.ronspomeroutdoors.com
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