Cheesehead
Lil-Rokslider
- Joined
- Nov 14, 2017
- Messages
- 138
I was in this boat recently and picked up a gently used Cooper Arms Jackson Hunter in 300 wm for ~$1400. I would look at that, or gussied up Tikka if you're on the low end.
I did this for my most recent rifle. I enjoyed it because I got to pick out everything I wanted and my smith made it happen. If you find a good smith he will help/advise you along the way.Thanks for the reply. Do you just order all this and take it to a gunsmith to assemble then. Really haven’t done any custom work so this part is all new to me.
Christensen isnt a full custom rifle lol its a mass manufactured rifle.... i own one, i think id do a semi custom tikka build before buying another ChristensenI'd consider a Christensen Arms Ridgeline in either 300 Win or 300 PRC. That's a full custom rifle with CF barrel for under 1900 bucks. Lot of gun for the money, I'm not a big fan of belted cases and with Lapua making 300 PRC brass in 2021 my vote would be 300 PRC but the 300 Winnie has been around for a long time for good reason so it's a good one too.
I feel like the 300wm is going to be a long term solution for you, buy a factory rifle and shoot the hell out of it. Tikka and Vortex are never the answer btw.....
I didn't know this existed - that is a steal for that price!Christesen Arms Ridgeline or Ridgeline Titanium in 300 win mag. Hands hown a great value with all the perks of a full custom at 1/2 the cost.
The primary benefit of a custom is you get it your way. Another potential benefit is that a custom may be more consistent that a COTS rifle.$2500 will get you a custom Maverick from Alamo Precision. THE best value in firearms today. Why people would spend the same amount of money to soup up a factory tikka is beyond me, when you could have a genuine custom built on a Defiance action with a Muellerworks barrel, AG Composites stock and Triggertech trigger for the same price. No brainer!
I couldn't agree more. A factory rifle equipped the right way will compete, this was my point. If you can afford it, a custom rifle is an awesome tool to have, but under a budget you can compete with those 12k guys all dayThe primary benefit of a custom is you get it your way. Another potential benefit is that a custom may be more consistent that a COTS rifle.
There is no guarantee that a custom rifle will be any more accurate than a COTS rifle with well developed handloads.
I have a couple Savages and a couple of Tikkas regularly hang with significantly more expensive custom rifles. They may not always win but they are always competitive.
At a range in Texas, I did see a $500 setup (Ruger in 270 Win topped with a Vortex Crossfire and commercial Winchester ABLR) be very competitive $12K custom (precision shooting and not for hunting). The delta in group size was surprisingly small.
The great thing is that we can spend our money how went to when it comes to firearms (at least for now). If a custom is what works for you, then knock yourself out.
Christesen Arms Ridgeline or Ridgeline Titanium in 300 win mag. Hands hown a great value with all the perks of a full custom at 1/2 the cost.