A meeting was held last Saturday in
Phoenix, Arizona, to discuss current thinking on the status of the
Steyr Scout rifle. In attendance were John Gannaway, Giles Stock,
Heinz Hambrusch, and Jeff Cooper. Our objective was to discuss the
reception, most specifically the complaints, thus far noted on the
weapon as currently being sold. Some of the complaints so far
deserve full consideration. Some are worth considering. And some
are perfectly idiotic. However that may be, all objections to the
rifle must be placed on the table and talked about.
It is important to remember (especially for me to remember), at
this point, that there is a considerable divergence in objectives
when one considers the design of a firearm. This is particularly
true when the weapon is radical and does not follow the beaten
path. The scout rifle as now designed (conceived by me and executed
by Steyr Mannlicher) is indeed radical, and that in itself dismays
many traditionalists. From the beginning it has been my idea to
make the rifle right, and the idea of the manufacturer to make it
sell. What is right does not necessarily sell, and what sells is
not necessarily right, though your definitive businessman may not
agree.
It is obviously desirable from the standpoint of the manufacturer
that the Steyr Scout rifle sell widely and immediately. Since I am
not involved in the finances of the operation, I want to see the
weapon qualify as the standard of the world for the first part of
the 21st Century. Whether it sells or not, of course, that is the
view of the shooter rather than that of the salesman.
The first major difficulty that I have detected is a quality that I
would have thought desirable, and that is universal utility. I
discover, somewhat to my surprise, that a great many people do not
like the idea of universal utility. They would prefer to have a
piece which is perfect for shooting prairie dogs on Monday, and
another which is useful for generalized police work on Tuesday. The
Steyr Scout has achieved very nearly perfect utility in one piece,
but that is not evidently what the arms collector wants to think
about. We cannot do much about that because the ideal of the
universal rifle is basic to the scout concept. People who want
specialty guns are welcome to buy as many different specialties as
they wish.
A second major concern which I did not anticipate is this popular
rage for cartridge diversification. I have always thought that
overwhelming variety in cartridge selection was a drawback when
almost any cartridge will do well if it is well used. Thus it was
my idea to produce the weapon in the most universally obtainable
serious cartridge in the world, which is the 308, or 7.62 NATO.
Immediately we heard cries from people who want the piece to be
available in some other cartridge, not because the suggested other
cartridge is better, but because it is different. As you know, the
production of the weapon in 7-08 was contemplated for use in
jurisdictions where 30-caliber rifles are forbidden by law. Turns
out that demand is pretty small. Many of the Swedes want the piece
to be available in 6.5 Swedish, apparently because they have a lot
of that ammunition available and nothing to shoot it in. The 6.5
Swede is an adequate cartridge, but inferior in all respects to the
308. As of now the only other cartridge which seems to be
forthcoming in the Steyr Scout is the 376 JCS, of which more
later.
If we turn to more serious complaints, we hear of people who report
inconsistent ignition with the SBS action. This appears to be the
result of the use of inferior ammunition, especially military
ammunition made in marginal countries. I should think that if one
is going to use a gun for any serious purpose he will use the best
ammunition available, and test it before putting it to serious use.
I see no objection to shooting junk ammunition for play, rock
busting, etc., but not as "main battery ammunition." Still,
circumstances might arise in which one had no choice, and we
attacked that problem by considering alterations on the face of the
striker tip, and also its diameter. Those changes may be
forthcoming.
We have several opinions that the bolt lift calls for too much
force, and slows down the operation of the bolt. I do not find this
to be the case, but if some other shooter does we must listen to
him. One answer to this was the future construction of a two-piece
bolt handle by means of which the individual shooter may fit any
sort of bolt handle or bolt knob that pleases him. ("Build your own
bolt knob.")
My most serious objection to the piece as it now stands is that it
is not available in left-hand version. I do not want to get ahead
of myself here, but I detect a willingness on the part of the
factory to take this matter seriously. At least the matter of
filling in the bolt handle groove on the right-side of the stock
was discussed, as a minor aesthetic problem. I suggest you stay
tuned on this one.
Stock color is a subject which fills me with exasperation, but
there it is. It seems that various prospective customers simply
must have stocks of a color different from the standard grey. This
is not a manufacturing problem, of course, and the factory seems
inclined to give the customer anything he wants, including, I
suppose, a lavender version for queers. To show how silly this can
get, one commentator from Sweden, where flame orange for hunters is
required (as in some of the sillier parts in the United States),
requested a snow camouflage stock pattern, presumably so that even
if the quarry can see him, it cannot see his rifle. Curiouser and
curiouser!
I have had considerable success with color-coding, in various ways,
and I strongly suggest to the manufacturer that the composition
stock lends itself to this. If the 376 JCS version comes to
pass, it should have a stock of a color different from that of the
308. And the magazine, too. It would not do to confuse those.
A further odd problem has arisen in connection with the
trigger-action. The trigger on my personal piece, "Galatea," is
two-staged and breaks beautifully at 26 ounces. It was set for me
at Whittington by Steyr engineer Elmar Bilgeri, and presumably can
be set that way by any individual owner, if he knows how, without
recourse to gunsmith tools. However, the factory will not supply
that trigger over-the-counter for fear of litigation. (In a society
where anybody can sue anyone for anything, this terror of the
courts strikes me as not only unreasonable but cowardly. I want the
gun to be right. The distributor wants the gun to be impervious to
product liability action. We can make the gun right, but we cannot
do anything about product liability action.)
It seems odd to me that no one so far has made any mention in the
press of the night-light rail which comes on the piece
over-the-counter. There are a number of places where one cannot
hunt legitimately after dark, but this does not take pest control
into account. All sorts of pests, four-legged or two-legged, may
wander into your compound at 2 o'clock in the morning on a dark
night. If you slip the night light on your SS, which rides next to
your bed after dark, you can respond to that alert out by the
garage in expert fashion. When you have a suspected target you
point in from the shoulder, and with your left hand touch the light
switch. You do not use the light as an aiming index, since when you
glance through the glass you can see your crosswire right there in
the middle of the illumination spot. This is a
"Good Thing,"
but while everybody with a typewriter seems to want to discuss
group size, no one, so far, seems to have used that night
light.
On the subject of group size, I have nothing to say. The SS, as it
comes over-the-counter, is a tack driver. Using good ammunition, it
will shoot better than any shooter can shoot it.
Hirtenberger of Austria has now completed studies on the
376 JCS, a medium cartridge short enough to fit into a short
action and offering a distinct step upwards in power over the 308.
This cartridge meets the African bore-diameter floor and should
take a 260-grain partition or solid bullet out the 19-inch muzzle
at 2500f/s. (I hope the Swift people will build suitable bullets of
this weight and diameter, and wash them with molybdenum disulfide
for good measure, in factory loadings.)
The 376 JCS rifle will have to be slightly overweight because
of its necessarily heavier barrel, but this increase need not be
more than half-a-pound. Naturally the cartridge will be a
proprietary item and not readily available at the corner hardware
store. I think those who feel the need for more muscle can put up
with these drawbacks, if that is what they are. The JCS cartridge
should be superb for the Alaskan whose targets are moose and big
bear, as well as for the lion hunter. You can get more power, but
hardly in a scout package.
The sighting system calls for further development in the future. I
have been happy up till now with the Burris and Leupold
scoutscopes, but there is room for improvement, especially in the
direction of the fixed glass with all adjustments in the mount. (We
have already heard of people mounting goofy glasses on scouts, just
why I cannot say. Parry's rule is, "If I can see it, I can hit it."
Gadgeteers should bear that in mind.)
However much I may dislike it, people will immediately start
hanging gadgets on their scouts. The idea was to keep the weight
down, the length short, and the protuberances minimal. People who
do not understand this might do well to go back to their Martian
guns.
You may not believe this but one customer actually quarreled with
the fluted barrel, crying that the edges of the flutes were so
sharp that they cut his tender fingers. Herr Hambrusch suggests
that he shoot the gun enough so that the barrel becomes too hot to
touch, thus obviating that problem. But, of course, a salesman must
not jeer at the customer. That is the reason I have never been able
to be a good salesman.
The conclusive criticism is the price. We must be gentle about this
because regardless of what you see on the tube, a lot of people
seem to be distressingly short of cash. But the price of the scout
is not going to come down. Considering what you must pay at a good
restaurant for a good dinner, which will be only a memory tomorrow,
the Steyr Scout, which will last you the rest of your life, is a
conspicuous bargain. If you must make do with a junk gun you can
get it for a lot less money than an SS. And it will shoot, and that
may be your only overriding consideration. Most, however, do not
acquire guns because they absolutely must have them, but rather
because the possession of a fine instrument enriches the quality of
life. So shoot what you have now until you can afford a scout, and
thereafter be happy.
Which leads me to one last point. I have a friend and client who is
quite well off and lives elegantly on the elegant coast of
California. Among his other possessions he prizes a Ferrari and two
Scouts. The question before the house is: Is it "cooler" to have
two Scouts and a Ferrari, or to have two Ferrari and one Scout?
Jeff Cooper
August 26, 1998
The foregoing is a supplement to, but not a substitute for, the
high summer edition of Jeff Cooper's Commentaries. (Vol. 6,
No. 9)
Please Note. These "Commentaries" are for personal
use only. Not for publication.