TimH said:I've been thinking about buying a single-shot rifle for years. I like the look and feel of Browning's 1885 models, but I am somewhat intrigued by Thompson's SS rifle system......buy any barrel you want, etc. Don't know if I like the break action compared to the falling block, though.
Does anyone have one or know anything about them??? I'm thinking it would be really cool to switch from a 22-250 or 243 barrel for coyotes , to a 7mm or 300 mag or 30-06 or whatever for bigger critters, or even a shotgun barrel.
Over the years I have owned, extensively handloaded for and shot quite a few single shot cartridge rifles. Example Trapdoor Springdields, Martini Henrys, .577 Sniders, Rolling Blocks, High Walls, Shaps 74 and 75s, Ruger #1s, etc.
I love single shot rifles but I dont use them that much anymore.
#1 No single shot rifle unless its a single shot bolt action can shot as accurately as a bolt action. Single shots can be made to shoot extremely well. However your never going to get the accuaracy out of them that you could get with a bolt action. Even with a 15 pound bull barrel <which eliminates bedding, vibration concerns for the most part>they wont shoot as accurate because of the way the action pushes the cartridge into the chamber. They tend to push the cartridge into the chamber off center so with single shots you need to keep your chamber tolerences really close by custom barrel and chamber jobs and be handloading. Also indexing the round while handloading it and when chambering it is important for accuracy in a single shot rifle. Even with all that bolt actions are better.
#2 I cant walk very far anymore so when im carrying a rifle now a days its on horseback for the most part. I dont like carrying a gun horseback with one in the chamber. With a repeater it only takes a second to chamber a round.
As far as the Thompson Contender goes I have only used the pistol version in 7-30 waters. I wasnt crazy about the gun because under recoil that lever to break the chamber open would come back and nail your hand if you tried to shoot the gun properly with two hands<think Jeff Cooper>.
I have been out of the gun scene for a few years now but I never liked the Brownings that were made in Japan. I dont like idiot warnings stamped all over my gun. If I was going to get a High Wall<1885 Winchester> which is what the browning is patterned off of I would buy one from Montana Armory in Big Timber MT. There nice guns, way better than any Browning.
One thing I dont like about the 1885 models is that after you fire it you have to bring the hammer back to half cork before you open your action. If you dont do this, over time you will break your fireing pin.
The best single shot rifle that I know of by far is the Ruger #1. I have one of the first ones that were ever made. The wood is beautiful! Trigger is adjustible but with stoneing and crockus cloth I got it down to a 1/2 pound pull.
BTW A falling block design is better than a break open design. Try loading a break open design when you are shooting prone and its self explanitory.