Because he's advancing Rimfire accuracy.but why is the Peightal built Nitro in a Calfee spec rifle thread? Just curious.
but why is the Peightal built Nitro in a Calfee spec rifle thread? Just curious.
Because he's advancing Rimfire accuracy.
When I got into Rimfire Benchrest (RFBR), many, if not most, were shooting factory rifles of one sort or another. All of these had been modified to some extent.
Some still had factory barrels others had aftermarket triggers, all had three inch stocks. This was a time of discovery and everything you could imagine was being tried.
Everyone was looking for a better mousetrap.
Back then the Lilja tight bore barrels were the custom barrel of choice, although many others were also being used.
One of the more surprising things I saw was Winchester 52s fitted with Remington 37 barrels. The thought was the Rem. 37 barrels were better than the Winchesters.
Selby Wright won the 1992 BR-50 Nationals with Win. 52 with a Remington 37 barrel. Many preferred the Remington 37 complete rifles,
over the newer Rem 40X rifles mainly because of the barrels.
Others shooters bought new Anschutz 54s, Super Match rifles, the same ones you see used in the Olympics. They were put in benchrest stocks, tuned up, then off to the range.
Later on Anschutz built a rifle named the “BR 50”, it became fairly popular. But buying a new rifle to compete did not always workout how one hoped it would.
By the end of the second year of shooting the “new” rifle and being beat by much older guns we began to realize it took time, and many rounds down the barrel to make a rifle shoot really well.
Some caught on earlier than others.
Then there was the East German Suhl 150 problem. We figured it was a problem. We spent thousands on our Anschutz rifles, and they spent hundreds on the Suhl 150s, and they got a better result.
Our brand new high dollar Anschutz 54s were beautiful, very well machined, looked great, these Suhls were rough, not very pretty, but shot lights out.
Seemed all they had to do is put a Suhl 150 in a benchrest stock and go shoot. They had great barrels and triggers. Jim Williams from Stone Mountain, Georgia did just that.
He imported Suhl 150s by the caseload. Had them restocked, found ammo for them, and sold them in different grades. Grade 10 being the highest.
These were fairly low cost rifles that would put you in the BR-50 winners circle. One of the most famous of these Suhl 150 shooters was Harry Deneen and there were many others.
Not everyone went this way. We also had full on custom rifles being built. If you went to the BR 50 Nationals, or later on to the ARA Nationals you would see everything you could image,
and some you couldn’t. Many full time machinist were in the sport and some very talented hobbyist. They created some of the most interesting shooting contraptions.
Everything from full on rail guns to single shot, remove the entire bolt to load a round. ARA rules allowed just about anything you can haul to the bench to be shot.
And the guys went wild creating new ideas to make a better mousetrap. As I said, the early days were a time of discovery and it was a very exciting time.
This trend went on for quite awhile but slowly settled into rifles and equipment you see today. Standard 3 inch benchrest stocks, some straight lined, some not,
standard length, and weight barrels, custom triggers, muzzle devices, and high quality scopes. Today one could call most of the rifles being shot in RFBR cookie cutter rifles.
You’ve seen one, you've have seen them all.
Improvements have made in all the equipment we use, especially in the rests. The one piece rest have became very popular. The Farley type rest has a significant following,
but some still use two piece rests with sand bags. IR 50/50 three gun rules requires this type of rest set up so many have stuck with it.
Many smiths have built killer rifles. But at this time I would like to focus on the rifles known as “Calfee Spec rifles”.
William (Bill) Calfee has built many benchrest rifles, as well as pistols. But among the finest he ever produced were the series he called his Spec rifles.
Some of these rifles have went on to become known around the world. They have won everything there is to win in RFBR.
Of course you can say the same thing about other rifles he built that weren’t Spec rifles. Rifles like Raging Inferno, Deuces Wild, Rooster, True Grit, Chisum, Tack Driver, and TDX.
As good as these guns were they were not Spec Rifles.
These non-Spec rifles were built by the customer providing Bill with a bedded stock, an action, barrel blank, trigger, and muzzle device.
Bill assembled these pieces into a finished rifle. Some of these rifles had lapped, and post chamber lapped barrels. This enabled them to shoot right from the start.
There are many stories of people receiving one of these rifles and winning the first match they shot with it. I received Tack Driver on Thursday and won matches Saturday and Sunday with it.
When these rifles were sent to their new owners, Bill told them not send money until they were happy with the rifle. If you are not happy, send it back, and Bill would pay the charges.
This was a standard practice with Bill Calfee rifles. I know of no other smith’s that offer this.
SPEC rifles were, and are very special. SPEC rifles were built from the ground up by Calfee. They had special treatment. Most had special graphics, many had the complete action jewelled.
He treated these as his pride and joy. He put the same care and attention into these as he did his pistols. All Spec rifles have their Spec number on the action.
I thought for years there had to be at least a hundred SPEC rifles, they were winning everything. But to my surprise there were only 7 Spec rifles built.
I, like others, thought the first three “Project rifles” Calfee built were Spec rifles but they were not.
Project Rifle 1. This rifle was built, but I can find no record of whom it was built for, nor what happened to it. This is one of two Calfee rifles that have simply disappeared.
The other was Night Train, but that is another story.
Project Rifle 2. Was built for John S. Esposito and was sent to him in Texas.
Project Rifle 3. Was auctioned off. It was named “Tennessee Stud”. Jim Pepper won the auction and in the process coined the term “Spec rifle”.
Jim Pepper wrote on his bid for Tennessee Stud that he would like to bid on the “Calfee SPEC rifle”. That term “Spec rifle” gave Bill the idea of calling all future project rifles Spec rifles.
The first rifle identified on the action as a Spec rifle was Spec 4. Merlin. That is how the Spec series was born. Tennessee Stud, project rifle #3. is now owned by Chuck Morrell.
The SPEC rifles were:
SPEC 4. Merlin.
SPEC 5. Black Death
SPEC 6. Duke Of Earl
SPEC 7. Paladin.
SPEC 8. Marcia
SPEC 9. Georgia Shaker
SPEC 13. Carolina Gold
There was to be a SPEC 10. To be named “The Virginian” but it was never built.
The very mention of these rifles will get some people's back up. But this is history and it is time to let it go.
I can’t count the number of National, Regional, and State Matches these rifles have won. A few are still on the range, and still at the top of the game.
There is no doubt these rifles have had an enormous impact on our sport. They have made all of us better shooters, drove us to building better equipment, and got us to where we are today.
Beating a Spec rifle, any Spec rifle became a goal. At least it did for me. When I see one at a match, I shoot harder, use the best stuff I have, and give it my all.
I want to beat that Spec Rifle if I can. Spec rifles represent a high standard, a standard I want to meet or beat.
Ever noticed how when you get fixed on something, how everything about it can bother you.
When I first heard the name “Black Death” SPEC 5. I thought what a stupid name for a rifle. I’ve never been into spooky movies or any of that sort of stuff.
Then I learned that a guy named Allen Bates owned that rifle. Now that was a bit much.
You get it?? ‘Allan’ as in Edgar Allan Poe.... “Bates” as in The Bates Motel…
As macabre as all that sounds it was nothing compared to the slaughter Allan Bates put on the field at the Professional Shooting League (PSL) match in Saint Louis, MO. in 2011. He clobbered us good.
Mike Sherrill now owns Black Death, and he is still using it to flog us with when he gets the chance.
I was never lucky enough to own a Calfee SPEC rifle, and I’m still a little jealous of those that did. There will never be another one built, but they will always hold a special place in the history of our sport.
If anyone knows more about these SPEC rifles please post it here. I would really like to know what happened to SPEC 1. Just can’t believe someone would have such a rifle and never compete with it.
There are many rifles built by other smiths, that have had an impact on our sport. Please feel free to share your stories here.
TKH
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Tony, what happened to LBK, you know Little Black Knight? This “most iconic rifle in RFBR history” has been MIA for awhile now. Mr. Calfee offered to let me shoot it and compare it to mine, but that never materialized. I ask if it could be sent to the IR indoor Nationals, but never heard anything back. Now it seems as if LBK has disappeared. Thought maybe it got traded or exported…….. asking for a friend.Stiller this thread isn't just for Calfee Spec Rifles.
This is the last paragraph in the first post in this thread.
"There are many rifles built by other smiths, that have had an impact on our sport. Please feel free to share your stories here."
TKH
George,Tony, what happened to LBK, you know Little Black Knight? This “most iconic rifle in RFBR history” has been MIA for awhile now. Mr. Calfee offered to let me shoot it and compare it to mine, but that never materialized. I ask if it could be sent to the IR indoor Nationals, but never heard anything back. Now it seems as if LBK has disappeared. Thought maybe it got traded or exported…….. asking for a friend.
Lets hope so. See what you can find out.George,
Please tell your friend I'm like you. I haven't heard anything about LBK in long time now. Perhaps he is just waiting for the right time to make a grand entrance. We do have the IR 50/50 Indoor Nats coming up.
TKH
When I got into Rimfire Benchrest (RFBR), many, if not most, were shooting factory rifles of one sort or another. All of these had been modified to some extent.
Some still had factory barrels others had aftermarket triggers, all had three inch stocks. This was a time of discovery and everything you could imagine was being tried.
Everyone was looking for a better mousetrap.
Back then the Lilja tight bore barrels were the custom barrel of choice, although many others were also being used.
One of the more surprising things I saw was Winchester 52s fitted with Remington 37 barrels. The thought was the Rem. 37 barrels were better than the Winchesters.
Selby Wright won the 1992 BR-50 Nationals with Win. 52 with a Remington 37 barrel. Many preferred the Remington 37 complete rifles,
over the newer Rem 40X rifles mainly because of the barrels.
Others shooters bought new Anschutz 54s, Super Match rifles, the same ones you see used in the Olympics. They were put in benchrest stocks, tuned up, then off to the range.
Later on Anschutz built a rifle named the “BR 50”, it became fairly popular. But buying a new rifle to compete did not always workout how one hoped it would.
By the end of the second year of shooting the “new” rifle and being beat by much older guns we began to realize it took time, and many rounds down the barrel to make a rifle shoot really well.
Some caught on earlier than others.
Then there was the East German Suhl 150 problem. We figured it was a problem. We spent thousands on our Anschutz rifles, and they spent hundreds on the Suhl 150s, and they got a better result.
Our brand new high dollar Anschutz 54s were beautiful, very well machined, looked great, these Suhls were rough, not very pretty, but shot lights out.
Seemed all they had to do is put a Suhl 150 in a benchrest stock and go shoot. They had great barrels and triggers. Jim Williams from Stone Mountain, Georgia did just that.
He imported Suhl 150s by the caseload. Had them restocked, found ammo for them, and sold them in different grades. Grade 10 being the highest.
These were fairly low cost rifles that would put you in the BR-50 winners circle. One of the most famous of these Suhl 150 shooters was Harry Deneen and there were many others.
Not everyone went this way. We also had full on custom rifles being built. If you went to the BR 50 Nationals, or later on to the ARA Nationals you would see everything you could image,
and some you couldn’t. Many full time machinist were in the sport and some very talented hobbyist. They created some of the most interesting shooting contraptions.
Everything from full on rail guns to single shot, remove the entire bolt to load a round. ARA rules allowed just about anything you can haul to the bench to be shot.
And the guys went wild creating new ideas to make a better mousetrap. As I said, the early days were a time of discovery and it was a very exciting time.
This trend went on for quite awhile but slowly settled into rifles and equipment you see today. Standard 3 inch benchrest stocks, some straight lined, some not,
standard length, and weight barrels, custom triggers, muzzle devices, and high quality scopes. Today one could call most of the rifles being shot in RFBR cookie cutter rifles.
You’ve seen one, you've have seen them all.
Improvements have made in all the equipment we use, especially in the rests. The one piece rest have became very popular. The Farley type rest has a significant following,
but some still use two piece rests with sand bags. IR 50/50 three gun rules requires this type of rest set up so many have stuck with it.
Many smiths have built killer rifles. But at this time I would like to focus on the rifles known as “Calfee Spec rifles”.
William (Bill) Calfee has built many benchrest rifles, as well as pistols. But among the finest he ever produced were the series he called his Spec rifles.
Some of these rifles have went on to become known around the world. They have won everything there is to win in RFBR.
Of course you can say the same thing about other rifles he built that weren’t Spec rifles. Rifles like Raging Inferno, Deuces Wild, Rooster, True Grit, Chisum, Tack Driver, and TDX.
As good as these guns were they were not Spec Rifles.
These non-Spec rifles were built by the customer providing Bill with a bedded stock, an action, barrel blank, trigger, and muzzle device.
Bill assembled these pieces into a finished rifle. Some of these rifles had lapped, and post chamber lapped barrels. This enabled them to shoot right from the start.
There are many stories of people receiving one of these rifles and winning the first match they shot with it. I received Tack Driver on Thursday and won matches Saturday and Sunday with it.
When these rifles were sent to their new owners, Bill told them not send money until they were happy with the rifle. If you are not happy, send it back, and Bill would pay the charges.
This was a standard practice with Bill Calfee rifles. I know of no other smith’s that offer this.
SPEC rifles were, and are very special. SPEC rifles were built from the ground up by Calfee. They had special treatment. Most had special graphics, many had the complete action jewelled.
He treated these as his pride and joy. He put the same care and attention into these as he did his pistols. All Spec rifles have their Spec number on the action.
I thought for years there had to be at least a hundred SPEC rifles, they were winning everything. But to my surprise there were only 7 Spec rifles built.
I, like others, thought the first three “Project rifles” Calfee built were Spec rifles but they were not.
Project Rifle 1. This rifle was built, but I can find no record of whom it was built for, nor what happened to it. This is one of two Calfee rifles that have simply disappeared.
The other was Night Train, but that is another story.
Project Rifle 2. Was built for John S. Esposito and was sent to him in Texas.
Project Rifle 3. Was auctioned off. It was named “Tennessee Stud”. Jim Pepper won the auction and in the process coined the term “Spec rifle”.
Jim Pepper wrote on his bid for Tennessee Stud that he would like to bid on the “Calfee SPEC rifle”. That term “Spec rifle” gave Bill the idea of calling all future project rifles Spec rifles.
The first rifle identified on the action as a Spec rifle was Spec 4. Merlin. That is how the Spec series was born. Tennessee Stud, project rifle #3. is now owned by Chuck Morrell.
The SPEC rifles were:
SPEC 4. Merlin.
SPEC 5. Black Death
SPEC 6. Duke Of Earl
SPEC 7. Paladin.
SPEC 8. Marcia
SPEC 9. Georgia Shaker
SPEC 13. Carolina Gold
There was to be a SPEC 10. To be named “The Virginian” but it was never built.
The very mention of these rifles will get some people's back up. But this is history and it is time to let it go.
I can’t count the number of National, Regional, and State Matches these rifles have won. A few are still on the range, and still at the top of the game.
There is no doubt these rifles have had an enormous impact on our sport. They have made all of us better shooters, drove us to building better equipment, and got us to where we are today.
Beating a Spec rifle, any Spec rifle became a goal. At least it did for me. When I see one at a match, I shoot harder, use the best stuff I have, and give it my all.
I want to beat that Spec Rifle if I can. Spec rifles represent a high standard, a standard I want to meet or beat.
Ever noticed how when you get fixed on something, how everything about it can bother you.
When I first heard the name “Black Death” SPEC 5. I thought what a stupid name for a rifle. I’ve never been into spooky movies or any of that sort of stuff.
Then I learned that a guy named Allen Bates owned that rifle. Now that was a bit much.
You get it?? ‘Allan’ as in Edgar Allan Poe.... “Bates” as in The Bates Motel…
As macabre as all that sounds it was nothing compared to the slaughter Allan Bates put on the field at the Professional Shooting League (PSL) match in Saint Louis, MO. in 2011. He clobbered us good.
Mike Sherrill now owns Black Death, and he is still using it to flog us with when he gets the chance.
I was never lucky enough to own a Calfee SPEC rifle, and I’m still a little jealous of those that did. There will never be another one built, but they will always hold a special place in the history of our sport.
If anyone knows more about these SPEC rifles please post it here. I would really like to know what happened to SPEC 1. Just can’t believe someone would have such a rifle and never compete with it.
There are many rifles built by other smiths, that have had an impact on our sport. Please feel free to share your stories here.
TKH
View attachment 23540 View attachment 23541View attachment 23542View attachment 23543View attachment 23547
My rifle was a but ch hongisto border barrel cut rifled had lapped and kelbys stole -swindle hurst jewel trigger 1/2 ounce trigger with a Von Arron’s rest all roller bearings a great stock blue and white swirls million sold it when I retired too expensive to shoot butch did the chamber for lapua ammo better gun than this old fart could shoot good luck guysspec
Just curious, did this come up for sale?
SPEC 8 was bought by Scott Siegfried, of Milton, Delaware.It looks like it is sold. Calfee Spec 8 Marcia
Curious Tony, who owned it and/or how many owners that you may be aware of Over that time span.SPEC 8 was bought by Scott Siegfried, of Milton, Delaware.
He is starting the evaluation process to access how the rifle's performance. The rifle was built a long time ago (14 years). I don't think it has been modified to any degree. It will be interesting to hear his assessment.
TKH
Thanks Tony, sounds like it could be a low milage honey.Tim,
I can't remember the name of the original owner perhaps someone will post it here. But the rifle was built in memory of his wife and that is where it got its name. Marcia. He was not a serious competitor.
I think Tom Shearer was the second owner, and he did not shoot it in major matches. He may not have shot is much at all.
The rifle has never been shot in a National, PSL, or Triple Crown match as far as I know. I would expect it has a very small round count. I can't speak for its condition but hopefully we will get a report on that from the new owner. Scott Siegfried.
After 14 years we may finally know if this rifle has the right stuff. I wonder how many other rifles are built with all the right parts but never really tested or developed to reach its full potential.
If anyone has more or better information about this rifle, please post it here.
TKH
Bob,Everyone who has competed in 22 rimfire has lost a true artist of a gunsmith – Bill Calfee. Bill’s innovations created our game and propelled it forward every year. Hoke Kerns introduced me to Bill in the 90’s and we became friends immediately; we talked every day about the sport of rimfire for years. Bill had health problems that he worked right on through his whole life. There is no telling how many Calfee rifles have won or placed in matches over the years. If you have not seen one of his XP-100’s you need to see one and hopefully be able to shoot it. Have you ever heard of BR50? Bill was there. This sport has benefited so much from his steady hand for refining actions to introducing new barrels and actions.
You never stayed on the phone long with Bill, unless he had a story to tell or tell you about shooting some new test Lots. He could get excited and tell me who and how many bullets someone could buy. He was a treasure and will be missed by all.
Rest Easy My Friend,
Bob Collins