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RemMag
24-02-2008, 01:33 PM
Like many shooters who are less than wealthy, I have spent a considerably amount of time looking for a rifle that delivers accuracy, durability and all round functionality in a reasonably priced package; and, after much searching, I've found it.

Long before my .243 variation finally arrived, I started thinking carefully about my choice of rifle. I spent hours scouring guntrader.co.uk, the AirgunBBS and Googling rifle makes and models to try and get an inkling of what would provide what I was after; and what was I after? Simply, functionality; I wanted a rifle with approximately MOA accuracy, which was inexpensive, robust, and moderated. My intended use was, primarily, stalking, along with a certain amount of foxing and varminting.

One advert that caught my eye was for the Howa Lightning 1500. A bit of research revealed that this was a Howa 1500 action mated with a Hogue stock; after some phoning around I discovered that most stockists in the country had sold out. The only place to see one in the flesh was Wildcat Custom rifles in Bromsgrove, so, eager with anticipation, to the West Midlands I went. The Howa 1500 action has been available in the UK for some time now, and it enjoys a reputation, amongst those in the know, as an exceptionally accurate yet incredibly cheap bit of engineering. Made in Japan, Howa actions have been rebranded by a variety of companies, most notably as the Weatherby Vanguard. Sadly, the Howa branded action has not, to date, enjoyed wide following in the UK, perhaps due to poor advertising. Things, however, look set to change.

When I arrived at Wildat rifles, I was shown a .243 Howa in a Green Hogue stock, and was immediately impressed. So much so, that I immediately reserved one pending my variation! For a mere £610 I got a Howa 1500 action mounted in a green Hogue stock, a set of weaver scope bases, scope mounts, a Nikko Sterling Gold Crown 3-9 x 40 and a Wildcat moderator fitted to the screwcut rifle.

When I first got the rifle home, I tried to fit the scope. Sadly, I had been provided with scope bases to fit weaver mounts, but had been given dovetail mounts to fit an air-rifle. A quick call to Wildcat elicited not only an apology, but a promises that the correct mounts would be with me the next day, and, true to their word, they were. Having mounted the scope and screwed the Wildcat 8 moderator (reviewed in this section by another member) onto the rifle, I gave it a good look over. The moderator is an over the barrel type, which extends back to within an inch of the stock. The barrel is free floated, and the action is, apparently, pillar bedded using aluminium bosses. The stock is a hogue overmoulded type with a dotted rubbery finish that provides excellent grip even when wet or wearing gloves. The butt-pad is about an inch thick and made of soft rubber to help absorb recoil. The action appeared smooth, although the trigger was rather heavy at first. This was easily corrected however; on removing the action from the stock two screws secured by locking nuts can be seen on the trigger unit. The front screw controls the weight of pull, and the rear screw controls trigger creep. Adjustment is simple, however, over-tightening the the rear screw prevents the three position safety from functioning. I lightened the trigger to about 4lbs weight of pull; although there was plenty of adjustment to go lighten it further if you wished to.

The rifle also boasts a 3 position safety and a floorplate magazine which holds 5 rounds, giving a capacity of 5+1. For those who are unfamiliar, the 3 position safety has two safe positions, the rearmost one locks the bolt, firing pin, and trigger, whilst the middle one only locks the firing pin and trigger, allowing you to remove an unfired round from the breech without taking the safety fully 'off'.

A bit of fiddling revealed only two minor defects with the rifle; the fore-end is a little bit wiggly, and it is possible to squeeze it hard enough to make it just touch the barrel. However, I cannot imagine many situations in which you could do this inadvertantly, so I don't see it as a significant problem. If necessary, the hollow fore-end could probably be stiffened with a bit of fibreglass resin anyway. The only other minor fault was that rounds being fed from the magazine were a little stiff, and the tips of soft pointed ammunition got ever so slightly deformed. It seemed that the ramp leading up into the chamber was at slightly too steep an angle, however, the problem eased up after a few uses and, as we shall see, did not cause any major dramas with accuracy.

For ammunition, I knocked up a load using Winchester brass, 41grains of H4831SC and Sierra 100gr SPBT bullets.

My first opportunity at firing the rifle came in gale force winds and occasional rain, hardly ideal testing conditions! Only a few clicks were needed to bring the POI on at 100 yds, and despite the gusting winds I managed to group between 1” and 2” off a rest without any real effort. The moderator seemed very effective, and I was comfortable shooting without ear defenders even after 40-50 rounds. Between the gentleness of the .243's recoil, the moderator, and the very thick and spongy recoil pad (a good inch thick) it was more like firing a .22WMR or .17HMR than a centre fire.

The next day, I met up with two other forum members for a bit of stalking. Both of them have handled, used and owned a much wider range of moderated centre fires than me, and they were both impressed by the rifles balance and light weight. A bit of further shooting under slightly calmer conditions gave a few groups around the 1”-1.5” mark. Bear in mind that this was still under 'field' conditions in a gusting crosswind, albeit off a rest, and I had made no attempt to work up a load for the rifle. I'm confident that with a bit of work on the load and bit more trigger lightening, it is easily capable of shooting well sub 1”. The importers, Highland outdoors, guarantee 1.25” loads using premium factory ammo, which bodes well.

The day rounded off well when I took my first deer with this rifle, a CWD Buck with a decent set of tusks, potentially bronze medal winning. As you might expect, the rifle functioned flawlessly, putting the shot exactly where I aimed it at about 50m distance. The buck ran 60 yards and we found it dead in the grass at the end of the blood trail. I managed to get blood and rain on the stock over the course of the day, but it remained grippy and simply wiped off with a damp cloth.

In conclusion then, this rifle package is probably the best value on the market, simple as that. It does everything most owners would ever ask of a sporting rifle as well as rifles that cost twice the price, and remember, that £610 includes a scope, mounts, and a moderator. (Screw cut rifle and scope is £395) It certainly outdoes offerings like the Tikka T3 and CZ rifles in terms of value and functionality. I can't recommend it highly enough and suspect that I may be adding more to my cabinet in the future!

Available Calibres: .223, .204, 22-250, 243, 25-06, 270, 308 and 30-06

Magnum Calibres: 300win mag, 338win mag, 7mm rem mag, 300wsm, 270wsm and 7mm wsm

SCW22
24-02-2008, 03:21 PM
Thanks very much for that mate.

I am looking at one in 243 with a black stock.

Steve

GRUMPY
24-02-2008, 04:03 PM
well i got a howa in 308, it shoots ok but
the mag is difficult to fill, why on earth they put trap door mags on rifles beats me! and the weight of the thing,phew not something i am going to carry far. how on earth anybody manages when fitted with a mod and bipod
Cooper was right when he said a rifle should not weigh more than 61/2 lbs
that ought to include scope and bipod, should not be difficult with modern
materials

RemMag
24-02-2008, 05:40 PM
Grumpy, which version do have in .308? There is a heavy barrelled version in a laminate stock which is, erm, heavier.;) The hogue stock version has not been out long.

I have not got a set of scales that will sensibly weigh a rifle, but I would guesstimate that with mod, sling, and scope its about 9lb-10lb. I'm not exactly hulk hogan but I don't find that at all difficult to carry, especially as a stalking rifle will spend most of its life slung over your shoulder. Any moderated rifle is going to weigh more, and unless everything is made of titanium 6.5lbs for a rifle, scope, moderator and bi-pod is pretty unlikely, at least the howa is better balanced than most.

nico243
24-02-2008, 06:20 PM
Very interesting reading, as I have one on order!!
I have ordered the Blued action, green hogue stock, heavy varmint barrel and also in the flavour of .243win, I plan on mainly Roe and Muntjac stalking, but also a bit of long range corvid control and a touch of fox lamping!
I am getting impatient though because it was ordered late Dec/early Jan and it was due early feb, and its not here yet:(:(
(I have got the .308 for now but I want my new toy!!! and I want it now!!!!!:mad:;):D)

GRUMPY
24-02-2008, 06:34 PM
hi Rem, its the standard rifle synthetic, when i was 16, lugging around a heavy gun was easy, at 60 its not so much fun.
i have a sako hunter 22250 that shoots great but nearly always reach for the much lighter 222
i needed a 30 cal for a particular purpose and if i had given it more thought would maybe got a 30 30 winchester
i think a good rifle is one you would pick up and go without a second thought
to that end i beggining to dream about 17 hmr with a 16inch or shorter barrel
and mod
have carried the 308 several times without seeing its intended targets
and in doing so have passed countless opertunities of bunnies, magpies crows etc. used to have a tikka 222/12g, now that was a great little carry around gun. shot more with that than anything i have had since

GRUMPY
24-02-2008, 06:36 PM
Very interesting reading, as I have one on order!!
I have ordered the Blued action, green hogue stock, heavy varmint barrel and also in the flavour of .243win, I plan on mainly Roe and Muntjac stalking, but also a bit of long range corvid control and a touch of fox lamping!
I am getting impatient though because it was ordered late Dec/early Jan and it was due early feb, and its not here yet:(:(
(I have got the .308 for now but I want my new toy!!! and I want it now!!!!!:mad:;):D)

you must get the gun carrige that goes with it and have mud terrians fitted

RemMag
24-02-2008, 06:39 PM
hi Rem, its the standard rifle synthetic, when i was 16, lugging around a heavy gun was easy, at 60 its not so much fun.
i have a sako hunter 22250 that shoots great but nearly always reach for the much lighter 222
i needed a 30 cal for a particular purpose and if i had given it more thought would maybe got a 30 30 winchester
i think a good rifle is one you would pick up and go without a second thought
to that end i beggining to dream about 17 hmr with a 16inch or shorter barrel
and mod
have carried the 308 several times without seeing its intended targets
and in doing so have passed countless opertunities of bunnies, magpies crows etc. used to have a tikka 222/12g, now that was a great little carry around gun. shot more with that than anything i have had since


That's fair enough! For those of use who are still spritely though, its not a serious impediment. (Although we will grow out of it!)

RemMag
24-02-2008, 06:42 PM
Very interesting reading, as I have one on order!!
I have ordered the Blued action, green hogue stock, heavy varmint barrel and also in the flavour of .243win, I plan on mainly Roe and Muntjac stalking, but also a bit of long range corvid control and a touch of fox lamping!
I am getting impatient though because it was ordered late Dec/early Jan and it was due early feb, and its not here yet:(:(
(I have got the .308 for now but I want my new toy!!! and I want it now!!!!!:mad:;):D)

Who did you order it through? They seem to be in high demand, which is one reason I went to Wildcat rifles; every one of them passes through his hands as he screwcuts them for the importers. This means, of course, that he is somewhat better placed to get hold of them. He's also cheaper, many others charge £250 extra for the mod, rather than his £215, and some even charge an extra £10 or £20 to add the nikko stirling and mounts.

nico243
24-02-2008, 07:36 PM
I have ordered mine through a local RFD mate of mine, you know what its like waiting when you have a new bang stick on order, although I will post a few piccys when it finally does materialise!!
as for the extra weight of the varmint barrel the bare-backed rifle is only a fraction over 9lbs so not that great a deal really!

(I used to shoot/stalk with a old sporterised tactical heavy barrelled .308 LITHGOW no#4 and that tipped the scales at an all in fighting weight of approx 14.5lbs, so methinks the howa will be a doddle;))

R0B
24-02-2008, 08:07 PM
I've got the HB stainless thumbhole laminated .308, and I think it's a beaut. trigger is superb (about 1 1/2 Lbs), does sub minute groups with factory ammo. I'm just about to start reloading for it, and I reckon I can get that down to 1/2 minute (fingers crossed). I just wish I wanted another calibre, because I wouldn't hesitate to buy another.

Rob

Mod
24-02-2008, 10:21 PM
Rem

A nice rifle and an accurate review. Hope you are happy together! :)

Now, get that head sorted and send me some pics of the finished mount. I fancy it will make a great trophy.

Keep well -

Mod & Artemis

1911 Shooter
25-02-2008, 11:17 AM
I've got a .308 with Axiom stock and a .223 with thumbhole laminate on order and the wait is driving me crazy!:(

Good review.

Barry

nico243
25-02-2008, 01:52 PM
Hey RemMag,
any chance of you posting some pics of yer new toy?

RemMag
25-02-2008, 03:38 PM
Nico, not immediately, as I've lost the lead to connect my digicam to my laptop.:rolleyes:

I'll see what I can do though.

baz
26-02-2008, 04:26 PM
I too think the Howas are the best value for money you can get bar none, I wish they would include a .222 in their range and maybe a 7-08

I have found all Howas that I have loaded for have been quite easy to get accurate results from as they dont seem too bullet fussy

RemMag
26-02-2008, 11:39 PM
I would like a 7-08 too, my .243 is great, and my 7Mag is fun too, but I wouldn't mind something that sits between them.;)

tacfoley
02-03-2008, 06:56 PM
RemMag - what an excellent review of a rifle that has rightly attracted a lot of interest.

Funny enough, on the range this morning we were discussing exactly this rifle, and I pointed out that there were already very positive reviews of this maker.

I will be printing out your words and showing a few other club-members that you don't have to pay out £2000 to get a good set-up with Howa around.

Thanks again.

tac

RemMag
02-03-2008, 10:17 PM
I will be printing out your words and showing a few other club-members that you don't have to pay out £2000 to get a good set-up with Howa around.

I'll be expecting Royalties then. :D

Thank you. I don't expect to be able to get to a 'proper' range for a month or so, but when I do I'll add some comments on the accuracy attained under more controlled conditions.