Fireflyfishing
WKR
I read through the entire thread. I won’t buy one of those.
@Formidilosus
Are you still waiting to get this gun back or for a replacement from Howa? Interested to hear what they are doing about it.
That sounds like an issue with the floor plate inletting. I would guess it’s too shallow given that it’s not picking up a cartridge and maybe not level given that your trigger guard cracked. If so, it may be an easy fix.I learned my lesson. "Pay attention when Form writes or speaks about something." I got my Howa Superlite barreled action in a 6.5 Creedmoor with a 16.25" barrel. Just for fun I thought. I bought the Stocky's special Superlite stock in the Vertical Grip model. It weighs 22 oz vs 17-18 oz for the regular hunter model that comes from the factory. The rifles weighs 4 lbs 12.8 oz in the VG stock. Assembled the rifle and stock. Seemed to fit well. Torqued the action screws to 25 in/lb. Increased the torque to 35 in/lbs. The trigger guard promptly snapped in 2. The bottom plastic is fine, it just split in the middle of the trigger surround. Left it at 35 in/lbs. Put the mag in to cycle some rounds. It will not feed a single round. The back of the mag drops down when you pull the bolt back and the bolt passes right over the top of the case. If you hold the back of the mag up flush with the stock, it feeds just fine. I haven't shot it yet because I am just annoyed. It is going in the safe. Anyone want a Superlite cheap?
Thanks. I figured it might be the stock causing the problem.That sounds like an issue with the floor plate inletting. I would guess it’s too shallow given that it’s not picking up a cartridge and maybe not level given that your trigger guard cracked. If so, it may be an easy fix.
I have published many articles about rifles. I can tell you this, every single time I was hands on, running them hard, and using them as meant to be used. A few things I learned.It’s nearly a total waste of my time. But, this isn’t for me. I do not ask to do this, I am asked to do it. The industry, gun writers, “reviewers”, etc are near totally full of shit. Almost never is there any actual use on products, and only glowing reviews are done… got to keep the advertisers happy and get that free swag again.
The industry sucks and products don’t work because no one calls out the BS.
I commend you for being upfront about how you dealt with a dud. You pretty much said outright that only favorable, or at the very least, neutral reviews of a product would maintain your association both with whatever publisher is buying your article and whatever manufacturer is sending you free subject matter. Reminds me of every State of the Union address I've ever seen. Everything is rosy! Good reviews sell rifles and selling rifles generates ad revenue. The only problem with that is the omission of the truth and omitting the truth is a deception in its own right.I have published many articles about rifles. I can tell you this, every single time I was hands on, running them hard, and using them as meant to be used. A few things I learned.
Yes, some writers - like many in the mainstream media will sugar coat things. I have seen it happen. Some don't but it is rare. Your life as a writer is pretty short when you poo poo someones product.
If a manufacturer "sent" me a rifle that had all those issues, its 100% on them. Makes me wonder if some marketing guy just randomly decided to go grab one without any oversight or forethought and so you get what you get for a review - would not fix it so it shot better
If I did get one of these, I would send it back with a polite and respectful no thank you for the review. I have returned glass and other review items before for this reason rather than keeping them as part of the payment.
I have a howa 1500 action rifle. The action is about 25 years old and it runs great, now with with minimal smithing it runs even better. I did put a Timney in it which made a huge difference as well. Built another one in 6.5 CM for a 14 yr old hunter - runs great.
Have a huge dislike for lightweight guns. When you are so focused on trimming weight, something has to give and it looks like in this case, the entire build is flawed. Sucks when it happens
@Formidilosus any updates on this?
Damn. Was looking forward to seeing how the trigger worked out.Nope. I’m guessing we’ll never get the gun back nor see another.
I know a very famous gun writer that was sent a rifle from a well-known custom/semi-custom gun maker. The writer published a glowing article about how great the rifle was, including pictures of groups fired in the article.I have published many articles about rifles. I can tell you this, every single time I was hands on, running them hard, and using them as meant to be used. A few things I learned.
Yes, some writers - like many in the mainstream media will sugar coat things. I have seen it happen. Some don't but it is rare. Your life as a writer is pretty short when you poo poo someones product.
If a manufacturer "sent" me a rifle that had all those issues, its 100% on them. Makes me wonder if some marketing guy just randomly decided to go grab one without any oversight or forethought and so you get what you get for a review - would not fix it so it shot better
If I did get one of these, I would send it back with a polite and respectful no thank you for the review. I have returned glass and other review items before for this reason rather than keeping them as part of the payment.
I have a howa 1500 action rifle. The action is about 25 years old and it runs great, now with with minimal smithing it runs even better. I did put a Timney in it which made a huge difference as well. Built another one in 6.5 CM for a 14 yr old hunter - runs great.
Have a huge dislike for lightweight guns. When you are so focused on trimming weight, something has to give and it looks like in this case, the entire build is flawed. Sucks when it happens
Yep, "gun writer".I know a very famous gun writer that was sent a rifle from a well-known custom/semi-custom gun maker. The writer published a glowing article about how great the rifle was, including pictures of groups fired in the article.
The rifle was returned, and they were using it for a range day event. The rifle wouldn't fire. After disassembly, they realized the firing pin was cut...it was a sample they took to SHOT. I wish they would have asked the writer a few questions, but they chose not to. He just never sent any other rifles for review.
Any insight into the the writer or the manufacturer?I know a very famous gun writer that was sent a rifle from a well-known custom/semi-custom gun maker. The writer published a glowing article about how great the rifle was, including pictures of groups fired in the article.
The rifle was returned, and they were using it for a range day event. The rifle wouldn't fire. After disassembly, they realized the firing pin was cut...it was a sample they took to SHOT. I wish they would have asked the writer a few questions, but they chose not to. He just never sent any other rifles for review.