Built by Al Biesen to be a perfect hunting rifle, this is a .270 Winchester on an FN Deluxe action with every custom feature.  The ergonomics are superb.

This article first appeared in Shooting Times, October, 2017.

 

By Terry Wieland

 

The ideal big-game rifle combines a number of virtues:  Adequate power and accuracy are a given, but beyond that it needs to be ergonomic.  The right weight, shape, and balance for the shooter to make it an extension of his body.

 

A deer rifle should handle like a fine shotgun, for quick, accurate shooting at sudden, fleeting targets; a mountain rifle should be accurate, but still light enough to carry; a dangerous-game rifle should come to the shoulder in an instant, like a Purdey game gun.

 

Barring luck, the only way to get a rifle that fits that way is to have one made to measure, or buy a factory rifle and have it altered.  Alas, very few of today’s production rifles even come close.  They are too heavy or too awkward; the grips are too large, and most forends are more suited to target shooting than carrying in the field.

 

One would think, after more than a century of building hunting rifles with modern chamberings, that every factory rifle would be perfect, but cutting corners, reducing costs, and taking the easy way (as with composite stocks) have actually taken rifles in the other direction.

 

Most of my acquaintances look at these statements and mutter “Well, I shoot factory rifles pretty well.”  Maybe, and maybe not.  Unfortunately, most hunters today, having never handled a rifle that really fits them, and was built to be the best possible hunting rifle, have no idea what’s good and what isn’t.

 

You can’t appreciate the driving qualities of an Aston Martin if you’ve never driven anything but a John Deere tractor.  Another alas:  Once you have driven an Aston Martin, anything less will never quite satisfy you.

 

Al Biesen, Jack O’Connor’s “genius of Spokane,” was a custom gunmaker who aspired to make perfect hunting rifles.  Not works of art, or glitzy artifacts to sit in a glass case — real hunting rifles.  It was my good fortune to acquire one of his .270s last year, a rifle from the 1980s on an FN Deluxe action.  Although I’ve handled a good number of fine rifles in my life, with names like Holland & Holland and John Rigby, the Biesen was a revelation in several ways.

 

The grip was small compared to production rifles, and fit my hand perfectly.  Similarly, the forend is slender and slightly pear-shaped.  The checkering wraps completely around, giving as solid a grip as anyone could wish.  By today’s factory standards, the grip and forend are almost dainty.  But, combined with the weight and balance of the rifle, they cause everyone who picks it up to say “Wow!  I’ve never felt anything like this.”

 

The rifle is as responsive as an Aston Martin, and feels alive in your hands.

 

Every detail, from the custom shroud with a Model 70-style safety, to the Canjar trigger, to the cheekpiece, is fashioned with hunting utility in mind.  The walnut is lovely but not gaudy, with straight grain through the forend to ensure stability.  Overall, it has the lines of a racing yacht: Lean and efficient but beautifully fashioned.

 

Over the past century, some factory rifles have been produced with these qualities.  The Winchester ’92 is as good a close-range deer rifle as anyone has ever made.  The Mannlicher-Schönauer Model 1903, in 6.5×54 M-S, is an excellent mountain rifle straight from the factory, and has been used on everything from chamois to sharks to elephants.  And — a pleasant surprise — the current Winchester Model 70 Featherweight is right up there, too.  One in .270 Winchester may not match my Al Biesen, but it’s not far behind and incorporates one or two features Biesen pioneered.  Another good modern hunting rifle is the Ruger 77 Hawkeye “FTW Hunter.”

 

It can still be done, and you don’t need to spend a fortune to get a good hunting rifle.  You just have to know what that means, and what you want, and keep looking until you find it.

Terry Wieland is Shooting Editor of Gray’s Sporting Journal, columnist for several others (including African Hunting Gazette) and the author of a dozen books on guns, shooting, and hunting.  His latest is Great Hunting Rifles – Victorian to the Present.  Wieland’s biography of Robert Ruark, A View From A Tall Hill, is available from Skyhorse Publishing.


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