Stories of My First Rifle. . .Sort Of

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Bigslug
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Stories of My First Rifle. . .Sort Of

Post by Bigslug »

Felt a strong need to feel like I was nine again and took this one to the range the other day:
Rem 511 1.jpeg
Rem 511 1.jpeg (134.61 KiB) Viewed 692 times
Remington 511 mag fed repeater. If any of you guys remember my Brother from another mother, Kenfu1911 from the old forum. . .both of us parted company from the sporting goods store where we met working in the early 1990's, and in the early '00's, I helped him get hired as my replacement at the smaller gun shop that I was about to leave for my current job. During the overlap, this rifle came in used on my day off.

When Kenny said "Look what came in yesterday. I think I'm gonna buy it"

My reply: "OH NO YOU ARE NOT!!"

The reason for this? My ACTUAL first rifle:
9-57 Rem 510.jpg
9-57 Rem 510.jpg (22.99 KiB) Viewed 692 times
This is the Model 510 Targetmaster solid-bottom single shot version that belonged to my late uncle, the eldest kid in the family. Produced in September of 1957, he, my Dad, and probably a whole lot of other Boomer kids shot the bejeezus out of it through the late '50's and into the '60's. My uncle didn't have his kids until well into my teens, so this rifle ended up with my Dad for me to learn on. He had a local gunsmith do some repairs (sear wouldn't hold the striker - scary!), and I got to graduate from the BB gun to this some time around 1980. It made the move with us from IL to CA in '84 and was probably THE tangible link to the more rural aspects of my early upbringing.

By the time I was "adulted", the poor thing was pretty well worn out (the sear wasn't holding again), but the sentimental attachment was strong. Long story shortened, I ended up having the barrel re-lined and re-did a good bit of the lockwork (pain in the ass - Remington was definitely in "solid state" mode on these things). It is now in the hands of my late uncle's son who has two small boys of his own. Some projects are just projects; that one was a moral imperative. It's where it belongs.

So a little more of the 511 I was shooting the other day:
Rem 511 2.jpeg
Rem 511 2.jpeg (197.21 KiB) Viewed 692 times
Rem 511 3.jpeg
Rem 511 3.jpeg (43.9 KiB) Viewed 692 times
One of the "problems" with my original 510 is that model has an "auto reset" on the safety: when you pull the bolt to the rear to eject your single empty case, the safety lever gets pulled to the "on" position. Not a problem - maybe even ideal - on a kid's first rifle, but when you've grown up and branched out to other things, having to remember to take off the safety every shot can be REALLY annoying. The repeater versions built on that same action thankfully do not have that problem, so the 511 lets me get the nostalgia out of my system without the M-Fing of the safety bittering the experience. :lol:

But my 510 story isn't quite done. Maybe 8-10 years ago, I picked up Dad and we made a drive to one of the gun shops we frequent at the outer edge of our normal cruising range. What just so happened to be on their used rack was this:
Rem 510-X 1.jpeg
Rem 510-X 1.jpeg (106.03 KiB) Viewed 692 times
Remington 510-X. Identical to the "Ancestral .22" with the exception that Remington was installing the same sights they were putting on Nylon 66's. This one is basically like new out of the box, and for all I know might have been unfired up to that point. After marveling over what was in my hands for a few moments, I walked across the shop to where Dad was doing his own thing and handed it to him without a word.

He held it, dumbstruck, for about 15 seconds with a whole lot of stuff obviously flashing back through his mind. Then he blinked himself back to the present and said, "Well, I guess we pretty much have to." :lol:

So there you go; the story of the rifle that made me. My thinking is if you've got pics and stories of your own, this might be the place. Enjoy!
WWJMBD?

I believe we should stand on Ceremony. . . while our friends handcuff the sanctimonious little prick and take him away.
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Zee
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Re: Stories of My First Rifle. . .Sort Of

Post by Zee »

Very nice! I grew up on similar. Can’t remember if it was Remington or Winchester. But, I looks similar other than it was a single shot.
Mine had a cocking knob at the rear of the bolt.
I first met Kenfu at that shop. Back in the early 00s. I was out that way doing a protection detail for the shoe store. Stopped by to meet him. You’d gone by that time.
Talent hits a target no one else can hit; Genius hits a target no one else can see.
JunkCollector
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Re: Stories of My First Rifle. . .Sort Of

Post by JunkCollector »

What happened to kenfu ?
My first was a single shot 22
Yup pull the knob back to cock.
Don't let your fingers slip..
Yup happened once
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Zee
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Re: Stories of My First Rifle. . .Sort Of

Post by Zee »

Dad still has that rifle. Hope to own it one day. Lots of memories. Shooting and squirrel hunting. First game animal with that rifle. Squirrel.
Talent hits a target no one else can hit; Genius hits a target no one else can see.
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Bigslug
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Re: Stories of My First Rifle. . .Sort Of

Post by Bigslug »

JunkCollector wrote: Mon Mar 09, 2026 2:59 am What happened to kenfu ?
Just spoke to him a couple days ago. Suggested he rejoin us here. He's home sorting through some medical issues. Might have more time for this now.

Pull knob to cock? Suspect you two had Winchester 67/67A's or one of a few clones. Picked up a long and youth one of those myself - good fun!

Pull knobs and automatic safeties. . .kind of annoying on the one hand, but on the other a little soothing to the brain to operate them - - at least once you assimilate the fact that you're not shooting "other guns" and get into their rhythm.
WWJMBD?

I believe we should stand on Ceremony. . . while our friends handcuff the sanctimonious little prick and take him away.
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Zee
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Re: Stories of My First Rifle. . .Sort Of

Post by Zee »

It was a Winchester, then. I remember it being one of the two.
Talent hits a target no one else can hit; Genius hits a target no one else can see.
PFD45
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Re: Stories of My First Rifle. . .Sort Of

Post by PFD45 »

Damn, makes me think of Saturday mornings (early 70's) getting on my mini-bike that I bought with my paper route money and riding into the desert outside of Litchfield Park, Az.
I would go by Western Auto and get 50 rounds of .22 for under a buck.
Mine was a Marlin single shot and I would carefully load a cartridge into the chamber and meticulously close the bolt. When I pulled that knob back . . . a jack rabbit would be well advised to skedaddle.
Thanks, might have to re-visit that.
Freezer
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Re: Stories of My First Rifle. . .Sort Of

Post by Freezer »

Chipmunk was another bull to cock .22 kids rifle.

I've seen a few of those. My first rifle was a Remington 514 single shot. That was my only 22 until I was almost 30. I have had many a hour at the ranges and in the field with that rifle. It was very accurate My sons learned to shoot with it also and now my youngest has it.
Gene L
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Re: Stories of My First Rifle. . .Sort Of

Post by Gene L »

My first .22 was a cheap pull bolt rifle with a hardwood stock. I shot plenty of squirrels with it but I always as a kid wanted a Winchester or a Remington. I shot a squirrel on Dec 26 and still remember the wonderful smell of rifle powder on a crisp morning. I think I could go to that exact spot today.
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Zee
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Re: Stories of My First Rifle. . .Sort Of

Post by Zee »

Same, Gene. Good memories
Talent hits a target no one else can hit; Genius hits a target no one else can see.
Elk Creek
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Re: Stories of My First Rifle. . .Sort Of

Post by Elk Creek »

Very cool! We start with 22’s and seem to gravitate back to them.
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Bigslug
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Re: Stories of My First Rifle. . .Sort Of

Post by Bigslug »

Freezer wrote: Mon Mar 09, 2026 4:39 pm My first rifle was a Remington 514 single shot.
I'm wantin' one of those for no particularly good reason. They don't have an auto-engage safety, and you don't have to do anything other than shove the cock-on-close bolt home before you can shoot.

I like running repeater bolt guns fast, but single loading each round has a certain sumptin-sumptin.
WWJMBD?

I believe we should stand on Ceremony. . . while our friends handcuff the sanctimonious little prick and take him away.
Wambli Ska
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Re: Stories of My First Rifle. . .Sort Of

Post by Wambli Ska »

PFD45 wrote: Mon Mar 09, 2026 3:46 pm Damn, makes me think of Saturday mornings (early 70's) getting on my mini-bike that I bought with my paper route money and riding into the desert outside of Litchfield Park, Az.
I would go by Western Auto and get 50 rounds of .22 for under a buck.
Mine was a Marlin single shot and I would carefully load a cartridge into the chamber and meticulously close the bolt. When I pulled that knob back . . . a jack rabbit would be well advised to skedaddle.
Thanks, might have to re-visit that.
I got one of those Marlins for my daughter as her first rifle. Had the barrel cut down to 16", recrossed with a target crown and a filler for the rear dovetail, I then mounted a nice 1" Bushnell scope on it. Basically an early version of a Cricket but with the barrel cut down and re-crowned and by default a stouter profile that little rifle was/is a tack driver. She has it now and it will probably become her daughter's first bolt action gun.
Wambli Ska
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Re: Stories of My First Rifle. . .Sort Of

Post by Wambli Ska »

I have an old 511 in the safe somewhere. Inherited from a good buddy when he passed away and left me all his guns. He had it drilled/tapped for a scope but the scope and mount were removed years ago before I got it but I have another one that I got from a member here a while back and I just found it so time to get that little bugger out and bring her back to former glory with a period scope from eBay. She's a good shooter with iron sights but the holes in the receiver drive me nuts so I have to get rid of them.
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Bigslug
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Re: Stories of My First Rifle. . .Sort Of

Post by Bigslug »

Wambli Ska wrote: Tue Mar 10, 2026 8:13 pm I have an old 511 in the safe somewhere. Inherited from a good buddy when he passed away and left me all his guns. He had it drilled/tapped for a scope but the scope and mount were removed years ago before I got it but I have another one that I got from a member here a while back and I just found it so time to get that little bugger out and bring her back to former glory with a period scope from eBay. She's a good shooter with iron sights but the holes in the receiver drive me nuts so I have to get rid of them.
I'm not sure when the change occurred, or the option became available, but my 510-X has a grooved receiver for scope rings, and the older ones don't.

They're worth hanging GOOD glass on if they're equipped for it. We've got a Kiwi over on Cast Boolits who's gone WAAAAAAY down the rabbit hole with all kinds of unorthodox tweaks to a 510 to wring benchrest-quality accuracy out of the thing. Base action and barrel however - unchanged save for maybe a re-crown. The system absolutely WILL deliver, even though it's more of a solid-state, not-intended-to-be-detail-stripped kind of rifle. To be honest, my Winchester 69A from the same period is a better machine in that regard, but "favorites" in this case has little to do with mechanical superiority. When they brand themselves onto your DNA, it's hard to separate yourself.
WWJMBD?

I believe we should stand on Ceremony. . . while our friends handcuff the sanctimonious little prick and take him away.
Wambli Ska
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Re: Stories of My First Rifle. . .Sort Of

Post by Wambli Ska »

Bigslug wrote: Tue Mar 10, 2026 11:28 pm
Wambli Ska wrote: Tue Mar 10, 2026 8:13 pm I have an old 511 in the safe somewhere. Inherited from a good buddy when he passed away and left me all his guns. He had it drilled/tapped for a scope but the scope and mount were removed years ago before I got it but I have another one that I got from a member here a while back and I just found it so time to get that little bugger out and bring her back to former glory with a period scope from eBay. She's a good shooter with iron sights but the holes in the receiver drive me nuts so I have to get rid of them.
I'm not sure when the change occurred, or the option became available, but my 510-X has a grooved receiver for scope rings, and the older ones don't.

They're worth hanging GOOD glass on if they're equipped for it. We've got a Kiwi over on Cast Boolits who's gone WAAAAAAY down the rabbit hole with all kinds of unorthodox tweaks to a 510 to wring benchrest-quality accuracy out of the thing. Base action and barrel however - unchanged save for maybe a re-crown. The system absolutely WILL deliver, even though it's more of a solid-state, not-intended-to-be-detail-stripped kind of rifle. To be honest, my Winchester 69A from the same period is a better machine in that regard, but "favorites" in this case has little to do with mechanical superiority. When they brand themselves onto your DNA, it's hard to separate yourself.
Yeah my gun is pre-groove 511 Scoremaster with that long ass 25" barrel (LORD I love old .22s). Actually old enough that the quality of the black walnut stock is VERY NICE!!! I believe when they added the grooved receiver they switched to hardwood stocks. Like I said before with open sight this rifle will hit anything I lay that front sight on so I will hang a decent scope on it to see what it does, but it will have to be a period correct glass because I don't need this gun to be the top performer in the case. Maybe al old 4X Steel Weaver just shoot to its potential as it did circa early 1940s. There's no serial number that I can recall but apparently there is a date code on the barrel. One of these days I'll try to figure out when it was born.
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Re: Stories of My First Rifle. . .Sort Of

Post by Admin »

My brother has the single shot version of that rifle. It is amazingly accurate gun, and was his go-to rifle when Jihad was declared against the squirrel attic invaders. It handles those Aguilla "SSS" heavy .22LR rounds like a champ and would quietly dispatch the tree-rats like no body's business.
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Justsomedude
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Re: Stories of My First Rifle. . .Sort Of

Post by Justsomedude »

I'm fairly certain that's the same model that I rebarreled to 17HM2 for a guy because the barrel was junk and he didn't want to reline it. He too got his as a young boy as a gift from his dad (IIRC.)
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