In looking at the other photographs of this gun, it does not appear to be the Professional S but rather the Professional with removable trigger group.That is an ok price. A new one is about $4000ish. There are not very many R8-Professional S models out there. I would not be afraid to buy one. The removable trigger group adds a pound. They (the S) were originally $1000 cheaper. But I don't know if you can still get one for $1000 cheaper.
Barrels are $1400-1600ish new for basic 17mm barrels. There are always used barrels.
This is not a custom barrel gun. Both American sources suck. Get used to that aspect of it.
Just be aware that Blaser .223 barrels are 10” twist.I ordered a R-8 last week ...in 300WM.
Now to continue down the rabbit hole.
I think a 223 barrel and a 375 barrel are in my future!
Yep, you don't need anything else.I owned a R8 professional with 30-06 and 9.3x62 barrels. One of the few rifles I regretted selling.
$300 if you order a Innogun Quick Release Mount for Blaser from Titanium Gunworks…I have several. They subtract VAT for us Americans.You also still need a $500 scope mount
Where did you find the best place to order from?I ordered the rifle with 2 mounts
I will need a third at some point.
Agreed. It would very easy to drop $10-15k on a outfitYep, you don't need anything else.
I know lots of guys that don't have sold everything and bought 2-3 stocks and a few barrels. This can be problematic for some people. As they start collecting things they want but don't need.
Cove Creek Outfitters. Worked with Bobby. Easy transaction and a good bit less than what others were selling forWhere did you find the best place to order from?
Thank you
One issue is you'll need to get some kind of collar adapter to mount the barrel. It is not a Blaser option. Also I suspect if the receiver/bolt gets damaged due to a malfunction you will be on your own if you use one.
Blaser barrels are really good. I'd seriously weigh what percentage improvement you'd get by replacing one with a higher twist vs. just buying what the factory knows works and leave it alone. Blasers are not a tinkerer's rifle if that is your thing. "If it ain't broke, don't fix it."
I don’t suppose there is any way to get a Bix’nAndy barrel here in the States?I can tell you that there is one quality aftermarket Blaser barrel company and it is not in the USA. It is Bix and Andy in Austria.
A Blaser is not a 700 clone. I think this is the hardest thing for people to get over.
I had thought you were probably getting shafted on Blaser prices in New Zealand but do not think that that is the case. Your scope mounts are $650 NZD, that's $400. That's an ok price. About $150 USD cheaper than ours are now.This is the crux of it. You buy a Blaser because the entire thing just works without any drama.
I know plenty of shooters that are always changing this and that with their rifles for the latest bullet, etc. But, they are constantly having various issues. Bullets fly apart at apex, don't perform as advertised, require constant load development, triggers that have problems, etc.
I never have had a single issue the Blaser or swapping calibres. The thing always works. Same for other mates of mine with them and they shoot lots of animals a year in culls, etc. The rifles are not treated with great care but always work and are always accurate.