Building an “optimal” vs a cool rifle

Joined
Oct 19, 2025
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I’m in need of an ultralight mountain gun. I’ve settled on a shorty 6.5 creedmoor but there’s two distinct routes I can take.

Option one: The Rokslide Classic
You already know this one, Tikka t3x 6.5cm, chopped barrel to 17”, Rokstok, Trijicon 3-18, suppressor

Option two: The Super Cool Hawkeye
Ruger Hawkeye Ultralight 6.5 cm, barrel chopped to 17”, Ruger compact walnut stock bedded, action and trigger job, Trijicon 3-18, suppressor

My body is telling me option two but my brain is telling me option one. In the end the ruger will probably be lighter but will probably group worse. My dad had Hawkeyes growing up so I have a sentimental attachment to them. And before you say “get both” I am a one gun per purpose type of guy. My plan is to have one ultralight and one thumper rifle, that’s it.

Obvious pros of the Tikka are easy barrel swaps if I ever wanted to get a carbon fiber barrel, a more inherently accurate action, a better stock barrel (I think?), ergonomics with the Rokstok, and no gunsmithing work required to achieve sub MOA.

Any thoughts?
 
ruger currently has 6.5 CM in 16.6" barrels, already threaded in the hunter models.

I do believe dependent on specific model that price for a Tikka within you build list could/would be less expensive as well as a lighter configuration.
 
ruger currently has 6.5 CM in 16.6" barrels, already threaded in the hunter models.

I do believe dependent on specific model that price for a Tikka within you build list could/would be less expensive as well as a lighter configuration.
The Tikka would be lighter than the Hunter model you’re talking about. I’m looking at the Hawkeye ultralight model that has a pencil barrel. The barrel contour is pretty heavy on the Hunter, plus it has a full size stock. The base weight of the Ruger build, no scope, would be around 5.75 lbs once the barrel is chopped. You are right on the cost but they are close. I’ll put a breakdown below.

Build 1

• Tikka 6.5 CM — $800

• Barrel chop & thread — $200

• Rokstok — $700

• Rings — $150

• Suppressor — $900

• Total: $2,750


Build 2

• Ruger Ultralight 6.5 CM — $1,030

• Barrel chop, action, stock work — $650

• Compact stock — $150

• Rings — $90

• Suppressor — $900

• Total: $2,820
 
my mistake, didn't know they were making an ultralight model. Both build out lists sound pretty cool man. personally I lean tikka and have for a long time. sounds like you've heard/read all the pros to the tikka so ill spare you lol. both rifles will kill and both you should be stoked to bring along on a hunt. let us know what you choose and maybe a little review after you've had it for a while.
 
I spent awhile trying to not jump on the tikka train. Eventually I got a 6.5 creedmoor, now I have a few more and they are what shoot 95% of the time.
 
Could spend an arm and a leg and get a walnut rokstok, might add some sentimentality... Rugers are cool. Tikkas are capable of becoming a sentimental weapon as well, they are an attractive rifle. Both will work.
 
Tikkas are the easy button and damn hard to beat. Ease of swapping barrels is also pretty damn nice.

That said I really like my rugers!
 
Could spend an arm and a leg and get a walnut rokstok, might add some sentimentality... Rugers are cool. Tikkas are capable of becoming a sentimental weapon as well, they are an attractive rifle. Both will work.
Yeah wood rokstoks are sick I just don’t want to drop $2k on a stock
 
What about them keeps you going back? Accuracy or something else?
It’s been years, I got that 6.5 creedmoor back in ~ 2018 right before the price jumped from 600 to 950 (if I remember right).

I actually had a t3 30-06 back in maybe 2009 that I used for elk hunting for a few years. At the time I didn’t really know much (I still know less than lots of folks here) but it didn’t seem any more accurate than my Remington 270 so it was just a hunting rifle. That gun was a stainless model and was 329.00 out the door at sportsman’s watehouse at the time.

When I got on rokslide people were starting to play up the accuracy of tikkas and to me it didn’t make sense since the one I had was just as accurate as my other guns.

Anyways I got the 6.5 right before one of the early price increases and didn’t shoot it much for a few years. Eventually I pulled it out for a hunt and really liked it, I just sort of liked the solid build, accuracy etc. as it happens there just isn’t much available for quality stainless rifles with a decent magazine system. Savages are trash, Winchester extremes are getting close to 2k, kimbers can be hard to find, all the Brownings are ceracoated, there just isn’t many options for quality stainless rifles. I think I have 4 tikkas now, maybe 3 2 are still in the boxes, I got them and have just been busy with other things but the 2 I have for regular use have not been babied at all, they both have 18” threaded barrels. There just isn’t anything as good for the money and some people might argue even for more money.

I still have a few kimbers and some big boomers but the tikkas just get grabbed 95% of the time, they are durable, low maintenance, easy to work up loads for and easy to get good accuracy from.

Edit to add: lately I just don’t care much about guns, I still like to read about them on rokslide but for myself, I just want to grab something that works, I do t have a lot of interest in tweaking them, I just want to shoot them and put them away dirty. Tikkas seem to be pretty good for that.
 
Yes. Been a long time since I did though
Did bedding achieve sub 1 moa consistently? My dad’s stock 7 rem mag Hawkeye shoots 0.5 moa 5 shot groups all day, but a lot of people say their rifle shoots 1.5 moa out of the box. Thats fine if bedding fixes it but I’m not 100% confident it will. Really that’s the main thing pushing me towards the tikka.
 
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