A Browning Show Rifle

By Joe Berk

This is the fourth (and at least for now, the last) in a series of blogs on Browning bolt action rifles (the other three articles were on a .223 A-Bolt Micro Medallion, a maple-stocked 6.5 Creedmoor X-Bolt), and a .22 Long Rifle A-Bolt I used in metallic silhouette competition).  The .223 A-Bolt and the 6.5 Creedmoor X-Bolt are very accurate.  The .22 Long Rifle A-Bolt was pretty, but its accuracy was less than I thought it should be so after trying several different brands of .22 ammo I sold it.

This .308 Browning A-Bolt caught my eye for several reasons:

    • It is a stainless steel Gold Medallion A-Bolt in .308 Winchester with an octagonal barrel.  At the time, stainless steel rifles were popular, and I always thought octagonal barrels were cool.
    • I like the .308 cartridge.  It’s one of those cartridges that are inherently accurate, and I never owned a .308 that didn’t shoot well.  I already had the dies and plenty of brass.
    • I like the Browning centerfire bolt action rifles.  I knew from my experience with the .223 Micro Medallion that they are accurate.
    • My buddy Baja John and I spent a day at the range with his stainless steel octagonal .25 06 Browning.  I liked it and I knew I wanted one.
    • The walnut is exceptional.  The photos speak for themselves.  I’m a sucker for pretty walnut.

The photos below are the ones that appeared in the Gunbroker.com ad.

As an aside, Browning rifles and shotguns are manufactured in Japan by Miroku.  Miroku is an interesting firearms manufacturer for several reasons, one of which is that they did not make guns for the Japanese military during World War II (at least not that I could find any reference to).  The other modern Japanese gun manufacturer is Howa; that company made rifles for the Japanese during the war (the Arisaka rifle).  I own several modern Howas; they are excellent rifles (as are the Brownings made by Miroku).  Miroku got its start making hunting guns in 1893, and then in 1934, they started manufacturing whaling harpoon guns.  Today, Miroku manufactures rifles and shotguns under their own name and for other companies (including Winchester).  Based on my experience and observation, the Miroku Brownings are high quality firearms.

I know, I’m getting off track with the above info on Miroku and Howa. Back to the Browning .308, the topic of this blog.  Here’s the description of my .308 as it appeared in the Gunbroker.com auction:

You are bidding on a brand new Browning White Gold Octagon Medallion in 308 Winchester, this is absolutely New In The Box. These rifles were shot show specials from several years back. They feature octagon barrels, gold accents on the receiver, stunning wood and highly polished bolt handles. These are very stunning rifles and very rare. * I am thinning the herd, selling those items I just never get around to shooting. As I am again beginning to sell a lot of items I will take them to my gunsmith 1x per week for shipment, usually Saturday morning. My gunsmith is a farmer so it may then take a day or 2 to process and ship them. All guns are shipped to an FFL dealer only. It is your responsibility to send your funds and a copy of your dealer’s FFL (e-mailed legible copy is ok). I will NOT call, fax or spend time chasing down your dealer’s FFL. I will hold shipment until you send an FFL. If sending an FFL is a problem for your dealer either find another dealer or please don’t bid. * Any damage in shipping will be the responsibility of the shipping company. All products are shipped fully insured and will ship by FEDEX. Items paid for by Postal MO will ship right away. Those who pay with a bank check or personal check will wait up to 10 days to clear. I only ship to FFL dealers. I do not end auctions early so please don’t ask. I will also not take less than the minimum bid price!! * I am looking for one rifle for which I would consider working out a trade, it is a SAKO Mannlicher in .375 H&H. Otherwise I do not have an interest in trading. * All auctions need to be paid within 7 days of the end of the auction to avoid negative feedback. Once the firearm is received I would appreciate your feedback. I will always leave feedback for those who do the same. Thank you for looking at my auction, good luck!

[Information added 5/9/2012 6:59:47 AM]  I want to comment on a couple pictures; First, there is NO scratch in the stock it is just the flash creating that impression. Secondly, there is a slight reddish cast in the finish but the flash distorts the look in the one picture. The gun looks like the more brownish pictures in real life. It is a very highly figured stock.

Based on the above, it appeared the seller was firm on his price (he used two exclamation points in his admonition regarding lower offers).  I would have paid the $1399, but I come from a long line of people who believe you should never pay the asking price, at least not immediately.  Disregarding his warning, I wrote to ask if he would consider a lower price, and the answer came back in seconds:  No.  Well, that was quick, I thought, impressed with his resolve.  I was getting ready to respond with an “okay, I’ll pay the $1399” when a minute or two later another email floated in.  He would take $1275.  Done, I typed, and I hit the send button.

You might be wondering how this rifle shoots.   That would be something you and I have in common.  I’ve never fired it.  I’m considering doing so, however, and that would require adding a scope, rings, and mounts.  I may get around to doing that sometime in the near future.

What do you think?  Should I mount a scope and shoot this beauty?


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Product Review: Black Rifle Coffee

Good buddy Mike was in town for a few days, and what better way to spend it than on the range ringing the gongs that good buddy Duane built for me.  We had a blast.  We’ve known each other since the 7th grade. Mike and I joke about who’s the better shot, and after our session at the West End Gun Club, that’s still an open question.  The man can shoot (and so can I).

Mike wanted to stop at a nearby 5-11 outlet to pick up a few clothing items, and while we were there he pointed out the Black Rifle coffee.  If you read the blog you know that I’m not a member of the Mattel crowd and I have negative interest in so-called black rifles.  In fact, the closest thing I have to a black rifle is my Ruger GSR (it’s what you see Mike ringing gongs with above).  It has a green and black laminate stock that Ruger calls black laminate, so I guess maybe it could be called a black rifle.  The GSR is a fine weapon, and Mike and I were both making the gongs sing with those big 173 grain full metal jacket .308 bullets.

But I diverge.  This blog is about Black Rifle Coffee and the company that makes it.

In a word, Black Rifle Coffee is great.  I wish we had it when we rode across China, but like they say, better late than never.  You know, they don’t drink coffee in other than the big cities in China, and staying awake on the bike was a challenge for me on that ride.   But here at home I start every day with a cup of black coffee (the only way to drink it), and Black Rifle Coffee was rings my gong well.

Black Rifle Coffee is veteran owned and a portion of the profits go to veterans’ groups, police, and other first responders.  That’s a good thing.  And Black Rifle Coffee is a U.S. company.  Reading the labels tells me that the owners have a sense of humor, too.  That’s good.  Good coffee and a good sense of humor make the world more fun, I think.

It’s good stuff, and it became my coffee of choice as soon as I had my first taste.  Give Black Rifle Coffee a try.  You can thank me later.


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Ruger’s .308 GSR Rifle

The story today, boys and girls, is about Ruger’s Gunsite Scout Rifle, or as Ruger calls it, the GSR.

My Ruger GSR. I have the blue steel version in .308 Winchester, which was the way Ruger originally offered the rifle.  Ruger also makes a stainless version in .308, and both blue and stainless versions in .223 Remington.  In the last few years, Ruger started offering these rifles in several other calibers, with other stock materials, too.

To keep a short story short, here’s the bottom line:  This thing is one of the most accurate iron-sighted rifles I’ve ever owned.  To make a short story a little less short, I have to tell you the rifle’s background and a bit about how my good buddy Jim Wile (rest in peace, Jim) and I came to buy our GSRs.

A long, long time ago, in a far away galaxy, there was this guy named Colonel Jeff Cooper who sort of became a god among mortals on all things gun related.  Cooper had a lot of good ideas on handguns and was well published in his field.  The Colonel started a shooting school (it still exists) that teaches marksmanship and tactics in Arizona called the Gunsite Academy (attending one of their classes is on my bucket list; good buddies Marty and Rex have done so).  The good Colonel also had a few ideas on what would make a good scout rifle, with his concept being something light, accurate, short barreled, chambered in a respectable cartridge, and capable of mounting a low-powered scope with lots of eye relief.  The idea floated around in the gun world for a few years, Steyr produced an overpriced rifle meeting the criteria, and then Ruger picked up the concept.  About a decade ago, Ruger introduced their GSR, chambered in .308 Winchester (the 7.62 NATO round).  At the time, they retailed for about a thousand bucks.  That’s a lot of money, but as you know, I know people.  Jim and I got our GSR rifles for $800 (a pretty good deal, I think).

Jim Wile and I bought the GSRs at the same time while shopping under the influence.   I had lost a couple of teeth (sometimes this happens in political discussions, sometimes it happens as we grow older, and sometimes it happens in motorcycle crashes; I need not go into the details of my toothlessness here).  I was getting a new implant (yep, I have a couple of fake teeth), and that required oral surgery and anesthesia.   Good buddy Jim drove me to the oral surgeon and I was still half looped from the anesthesia when we got back to my place.  We’d been talking about these new Ruger GRS rifles for a while, and I guess I called a woman I know at Turner’s.  I can’t say I wouldn’t have done it if not under the influence of the tooth doc’s elixers, so I won’t, but to keep this story from growing too long, I’ll just say I was a little surprised when Jim told me the next day what we had done.  Ten days later we both owned new GSRs.

The GSR’s laminated stock. The rifle comes with spacers so you can adjust the length of pull (that’s the distance between the trigger and the buttplate). It’s a comfortable and stable platform.
The GSR has a short barrel, fixed sights, and two provisions for scope mounting: A forward-mounted Picatinny rail, and Ruger’s standard scope rings and slots above the receiver.

They are cool rifles.  The GSR rifle has a Parkerized finish (which made it an immediate winner in my book), a laminated stock, scope rings and a Picatinny rail, and a couple of recoil pad spacers so you can increase the length of pull to adjust it to what you like.   I didn’t put my two spacers in; I liked the rifle as delivered with its short stock.  The rifle had two 10-round metal mags that rattled a lot; I bought a plastic 5-round mag and that’s all I use (I like the sleeker look and the fact that it doesn’t rattle).  I don’t need 10 rounds.  Five will do just fine, thank you.

I don’t shoot the GSR that often, but I like it a lot. It is a comfortable and handy rifle. If I had a truck it would be a truck gun.

My good buddy, the late Jim Wile. Jim changed motorcycles about as often as I changed underwear. This photo was on a ride through Arizona.   We were headed into Prescott (a glorious ride in the mountains) when I shot this photo.

Before Jim went to his reward, he and I spent a lot of time doing the things God put us here to do, which is to say we covered a lot of miles on our motorcycles and we spent a lot of time at the gun club sending lead downrange.  On one of our trips to the range, Jim brought along a sheet of bulletproof glass. I was kind of floored when he pulled it out of his car and told me what it was.  Bulletproof glass?  Bitchin’!  I’ll take that challenge!

That big old pane of superthick glass was the same stuff you see in banks. Before he retired, Jim owned one of those PayDay advance stores and I think the state required him to use bulletproof glass.  Or maybe Jim just thought it would be a cool thing to have in his store.   Whatever.  It was a good inch (at least an inch) think and the pane was about 15 inches tall and 3 feet wide.  Maybe it was designed to go on top of a counter.  It had a real light greenish hue to it.  If you’ve ever been in a bank, you’ve seen this stuff.

You can probably guess where this story is going. Yep, we set that pane up, leaning against a rock, about 50 feet out and went to work.  Jim started shooting at it with a .357 Magnum Ruger SP 100 revolver. Pew! Pew! Pew!  You know, just to see if it really was bulletproof.  I mean, he had owned it for years, and I suppose ol’ Jim had been wondering for a long time.  Just curious, man.  Big kid stuff.  And that’s what we were that day.  Two kids in their 60s shooting at bulletproof glass.  If we had been 50 or 60 years younger, we would have been blowing up model cars with cherry bombs.  This day was devoted to shooting bulletproof glass, just to see if it really was. Bulletproof glass. Let’s check it out!

Jim’s .357 bullets didn’t even dent that glass. We looked at the pane’s surface up close, and we could maybe see a dust shadow where the .357 slugs had flattened.  But they didn’t penetrate or mark the glass at all.  This was cool stuff.  It really was bulletproof.  If I worked in a bank, I remember thinking, I would have felt pretty good about all this, hunkered down behind that green translucent armor.  John Dillinger?  No big deal. Bulletproof glass, see?

Okay, I thought, enough pussy-footing around (can you even say that any more?).  It was time to call up the heavy artillery.  I loaded the Ruger GSR with one of my .308 cartridges using a 173-grain full metal jacket bullet and drew a bead.  You know, just to see what would happen.  Sight alignment.  Front sight focus.  Breath control.  Concentration.  Slow, steady squeeze, and BOOOOM!!!

You know, a .357 Magnum is a powerful handgun, and you can sort of feel its power in the air when a round lights off.  But when you hear a .308 rifle let loose, there’s no comparison.   It’s God calling, and He wants to talk to YOU.  You damn well better be paying attention.  Firing a high-powered rifle, you see, is a religious experience.

The result?  The .308 went through the “bulletproof” glass like it wasn’t even there, with severe spall on the exit side. It made a .30-caliber hole going into the pane and left a two-and-a-half-inch conical hole going out.  And that 173-grain copper-jacketed-boat-tailed projectile probably didn’t even notice what it had just whizzed through.  Good Gawd!

Spall from a shaped charge warhead, entering the armor plate on the left and exiting on the right. You can see how much bigger the exit hole is. And all that fragmentation spraying out to the right? That’s the armor itself, doing most of the damage inside the vehicle.

So, about that spall thing:  Spallation is what happens when a high-speed projectile encounters a brittle barrier.  It’s a cone of material that splinters into whatever you are shooting.   You’ve probably seen this without realizing what you were looking at if you’ve ever seen a window shot with a BB gun.  It’s the conical shaped hole on the opposite side of glass, the glass that shatters and flies in the direction of the BB (don’t ask me how I know this; let’s just say there were a lot of windows where I grew up that displayed classic spallation, and leave it at that).  Spallation is the same physics effect that does most of the damage in an enemy tank when you hit one with an antitank warhead (the tank’s armor “spalls” into the interior of the vehicle and completely ruins the rest of the day for the crew).  It’s what you see in that photo above.

Anyway, seeing that coned-out “bulletproof” pane really opened my eyes to the tremendous power a .308 rifle has over a .357 handgun.  Yeah, it was bulletproof glass, but only up to a point.  Bring enough gun, and bulletproof don’t mean diddly squat (“diddly squat” is a munitions term meaning of negligible value).  And while I’m expanding the lexicon here, I guess I’ll mention that “bring enough gun” probably applies to a lot of situations.  In this situation, bulletproof glass was no match for the Ruger GSR.  If I had been thinking, I would have grabbed a photo or two of that pane, but I wasn’t and I didn’t.  I was thinking if I was a pencil-necked geek of a bank teller and Dillinger walked in with a .308 rifle, I would probably pee my pants.

The bulletproof glass engineering evaluations aside, I had my Ruger GSR and you know I had to start testing its accuracy with different loads.  What I noticed right away is that the rear aperture sight on my rifle didn’t have enough range of adjustment.  With the rear sight cranked all the way over to the left, the rifle still shot to the right of my point of aim at 100 yards.  I thought maybe I could compensate for it with the right reload, but I couldn’t, so the rifle went back to Ruger.   They had it back to me in a couple of weeks after hogging out the stock to completely free float the barrel, and the problem was gone.  I thought they did an amateurish bit of woodworking on the warranty repair, but it sure did the trick.  The GSR shot to point of aim with the rear peep centered on the rifle.  I went through my standard load development program with a variety of loads and propellants, and one stood out.    Here’s the target I shot with it:

This is one of the best open sights targets I’ve ever shot. I put 15 rounds into the 10-ring at 100 yards with my Ruger GSR.  It almost looks like I made a sight adjustment on this target, but I did not. I probably held the rifle slightly differently on the last 5 rounds.

The load for the target you see above used 180-grain Nosler jacketed softpoint boattail bullets (their Part Number 27567), a 2.800-inch cartridge overall length, no crimp on the bullet, 40.0 grains of Varget propellant, a CCI 200 primer, and Remington brass.  The Nosler bullets are expensive, as I recall. I had them on the bench for probably 20 years or more and I just decided to use them up as part of the load development for the Ruger.  I still have a few left, and when I use them up I’ll buy more.

The Ruger GSRs list at around $1200 now on the Ruger website (the typical retail price is about $1000), and you can still find good deals on them. I’ve seen the .223 GSR go on sale for as little as $599 at Turner’s, our local gunstore chain here in California. That’s a hell of a deal. They are offered in more calibers, too, including the new 350 Legend and the 450 Bushmaster (two cartridges with which I have zero experience, but they sure seem cool).  The other calibers aside, the .308 is still the king in my opinion, and I sure can’t argue with its accuracy.  These are cool guns.  You need one.  Colonel Cooper was right.


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