Mojave
WKR
- Joined
- Jun 13, 2019
- Messages
- 2,928
I have one stock and four barrels here in Germany.
In the states I have gone through this several times and started with the R93 system.
I personally like the R8 better, I don't mind the pound plus increase in weight.
In Germany, it isn't the most popular rifle, but it is in the top 5-8. Cost is prohibitive everywhere on them. They are basically $5000-6000. New barrels are $1500ish.
There are aftermarket barrel options in the USA but both of them are absolute dog shit.
It excels for three or four reasons. Most of which are more important to European consumers who mostly do drive hunts.
1. It wasn't the fastest straight pull, the Strasser is a hell of a lot faster and the Browning Acera is faster still. But it is one of the more accurate straight pull rifles available in Europe. I owned a Savage Impulse and it was crazy accurate. Blaser's have good to great accuracy. Not the best though, and there are a lot of competitors even from the same house brand Sauer and Mauser.
2. The change barrel capability is quick and has high precision. Sauer is not quick, the other options are also not quick. So it single handedly wins in this category. Every Blaser made has this it doesn't matter if it is a single shot, drilling, over and under double, or side by side double.
3. Great trigger, mine is not an Atzl. Still good, not a Bix N Andy though. Atzl is Bix and Andy they make that trigger for Blaser.
4. The Safety is tops. Europeans are kind of used to de-cocker rifles. Blaser started this trend, makes for a very handy rifle as you can carry it loaded with one in the chamber safely.
I do not think it is the best rifle in the world. I think it is a good rifle.
Couple other concepts, good or bad.
1. Blaser was the sole source for parts. You couldn't get a barrel or scope mounts from anyone else. Now there are 8-10 guys making mounts.
2. A couple of guys are making the lower receiver, there is quite a bit of aftermarket stocks available.
3. Barrels are the only problem. There is only one company that was making barrels that was good at it, they are Bix n Andy. They are so busy making triggers they stopped doing that kind of thing. Maybe it will come back. They were not ever nor will they probably ever be imported into the USA.
4. The American ones all sucked, and had major problems and as far s I know they still do. There is an option of buying a used barrel and cutting it off and doing it that way, there is also a company that makes R8 stocks that makes a barrel extension like Bencharmk does for the Sauer SSG.
5. The r8 is heavy. Remington 700 Sendero heavy.
6. If you honestly don't need a 2nd follow up shot for rapid fire on game, such as a driven hunt. Then that part of the rifle is kind of lost on you.
7. Everything made by Blaser is crazy precise and can be taken apart and put together with minimal loss to precision.
In the states I have gone through this several times and started with the R93 system.
I personally like the R8 better, I don't mind the pound plus increase in weight.
In Germany, it isn't the most popular rifle, but it is in the top 5-8. Cost is prohibitive everywhere on them. They are basically $5000-6000. New barrels are $1500ish.
There are aftermarket barrel options in the USA but both of them are absolute dog shit.
It excels for three or four reasons. Most of which are more important to European consumers who mostly do drive hunts.
1. It wasn't the fastest straight pull, the Strasser is a hell of a lot faster and the Browning Acera is faster still. But it is one of the more accurate straight pull rifles available in Europe. I owned a Savage Impulse and it was crazy accurate. Blaser's have good to great accuracy. Not the best though, and there are a lot of competitors even from the same house brand Sauer and Mauser.
2. The change barrel capability is quick and has high precision. Sauer is not quick, the other options are also not quick. So it single handedly wins in this category. Every Blaser made has this it doesn't matter if it is a single shot, drilling, over and under double, or side by side double.
3. Great trigger, mine is not an Atzl. Still good, not a Bix N Andy though. Atzl is Bix and Andy they make that trigger for Blaser.
4. The Safety is tops. Europeans are kind of used to de-cocker rifles. Blaser started this trend, makes for a very handy rifle as you can carry it loaded with one in the chamber safely.
I do not think it is the best rifle in the world. I think it is a good rifle.
Couple other concepts, good or bad.
1. Blaser was the sole source for parts. You couldn't get a barrel or scope mounts from anyone else. Now there are 8-10 guys making mounts.
2. A couple of guys are making the lower receiver, there is quite a bit of aftermarket stocks available.
3. Barrels are the only problem. There is only one company that was making barrels that was good at it, they are Bix n Andy. They are so busy making triggers they stopped doing that kind of thing. Maybe it will come back. They were not ever nor will they probably ever be imported into the USA.
4. The American ones all sucked, and had major problems and as far s I know they still do. There is an option of buying a used barrel and cutting it off and doing it that way, there is also a company that makes R8 stocks that makes a barrel extension like Bencharmk does for the Sauer SSG.
5. The r8 is heavy. Remington 700 Sendero heavy.
6. If you honestly don't need a 2nd follow up shot for rapid fire on game, such as a driven hunt. Then that part of the rifle is kind of lost on you.
7. Everything made by Blaser is crazy precise and can be taken apart and put together with minimal loss to precision.