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Didn’t mean the trust fund thing literally or to be derogatory.
Just seems like the whole S2H school is your deal with a ton of time and effort invested. With how much $ people are paying, it just seems crazy that you wouldn’t be compensated for your efforts.
Getting paid for training is a far cry from shilling or representing brands. I can’t see how it would hurt anyone’s credibility.
It’s a ways away from more/different models. I imagine it will depend on whether the market responds favorably to a company actually trying to do better, versus just copying what everyone else is doing.
Oh I know you didn’t. Just what has been said.
I mean, one would think. But this thread isn’t the first time people have claimed that I now am “biased” because of S2H- never mind that I don’t get paid, and that I am, and have been critical of several things done by all of the companies. I’m doing the classes, gear development and testing because it needs to be done- not to make money. The other teachers for S2H do get paid.
I am critical about everything done and there is zero bias or nonsense that I will participate in.
However, with the advent of those, the lack of SWFAs, and the ever increasing price of a Tikka, it feels more and more like trying to buy skill when recommending things.
No longer is it a $600 Tikka, $40 vertical grip, $40 Sportsmatch rings, and a $300 scope. So, sub $1k.
Now it is a $850 Tikka, $250 cut and thread, $500 stock, $130 UM scope rings, $1,200 RS1.2, $70 bolt handle, and $480+200 muffler. So, $3,680 plus tax/shipping.
And now it will soon be $3-3.5K rifle, $1,200 scope, $170 NF rings, and $480+200 muffler. So, $5,050 to $5,550.
And damnit, I wish I hadn't done that math.
I am happy to see the innovation, I do believe they are improvements. The RokStok and UM bolt handle are excellent deals, and for what it is, so to will this rifle be. But, it feels different.
Another thing is that now quite a few of us recommend Tikkas, so you no longer have to. Which while not a reflection of you changing, it all the same shifts perspective. Of course, the A-10 suppressor recommendation shows you ae still focused on performance and value.
@Formidilosus I do believe this project is a good one. I also appreciate the advances in equipment you have caused (I own 2 RokStoks, and have UM bolt handles on both my Tikkas). As a gear head, I like it and would be looking at lesser things to buy if those were not available.
However, with the advent of those, the lack of SWFAs, and the ever increasing price of a Tikka, it feels more and more like trying to buy skill when recommending things.
No longer is it a $600 Tikka, $40 vertical grip, $40 Sportsmatch rings, and a $300 scope. So, sub $1k.
Now it is a $850 Tikka, $250 cut and thread, $500 stock, $130 UM scope rings, $1,200 RS1.2, $70 bolt handle, and $480+200 muffler. So, $3,680 plus tax/shipping.
And now it will soon be $3-3.5K rifle, $1,200 scope, $170 NF rings, and $480+200 muffler. So, $5,050 to $5,550.
And damnit, I wish I hadn't done that math.
I am happy to see the innovation, I do believe they are improvements. The RokStok and UM bolt handle are excellent deals, and for what it is, so to will this rifle be. But, it feels different.
Another thing is that now quite a few of us recommend Tikkas, so you no longer have to. Which while not a reflection of you changing, it all the same shifts perspective. Of course, the A-10 suppressor recommendation shows you ae still focused on performance and value.
I'm not Form, but some things in this post just don't make sense.
The price increase for Tikkas is what it is; Form clearly has nothing to do with that.
SWFA scopes and Sportsmatch rings still work. The SWFA was always an outlier in terms of price to performance - in part because it's a simple scope with an unchanged recipe. The RS1.2 is priced closer to similar offerings.
Cutting, threading, and suppressor has always been recommended. As has a round bolt knob (previously, the main option was Turbon knobs).
The Rokstock is clearly an improvement, but arguably is what most stocks should be like. And plenty of people on here who've made their own vertical grip and negative comb mods to factory stocks.
As for actions other than Tikka, Form has always said he likes pre-64 Winchesters. As for higher-end offerings, as with the MRC, Form has always recommended Steyr, Sako, Blaser, etc.
I get your overall point that now that we have better (far better, in some cases) offerings than a stock Tikka and fixed SWFA, then things will cost more. But we're not comparing apples with apples - and this is clearly not about "trying to buy skill when recommending things" - it's about buying things that have clear performance benefits due to better design.
Again, Form has always said that the best thing to spend money on is a case of 223 and to go and learn to shoot well.
Moushiwake gozaimasen. I will try harder next time, Sensei!Nearly perfectly correct.
The new receiver uses a dovetail left lug as well. The key difference between the old and new is how it's done-Sounds like a nice setup. I'm hoping they sell bare actions with no machining on the integral scope bases, just square bridges that I can fit to whatever rings I want.
On a more in line tact, what method are they using to deal with bolt bind?
The previous MRC design used a dovetail shaped left bolt lug that was supposed to mate to a dovetail shaped raceway in the receiver. It was a stupendously hit or miss system since they didn't fit the bolt to the receiver and loose bolts would bind horribly. It was luck of the draw if the bolt lugs were a good fit to the receiver since the bolts were just pulled from a bin and put in whichever receiver was on the bench.
I fixed a bunch of them over the years.
Jeremy
I'm torture testing the long action right now in .375 H&H. We've got some DG rifle stuff in the works.If the action will hold it without too much work, I'd work in a .375 h&h option.
Thankfully it isn't just MRC here. Grace Engineering is a third gen, family owned business, better known to the public as G5 Outdoors and Prime Archery. While I'm the only one 100% dedicated to the firearms side of the company, we have an army of machining and manufacturing experts backing this project up.The only way for a new gun company to start, grow, and be sustainably profitable - if it isn't backed by 8-figure investment - is to find a very narrow niche and be at or near-best in class. Own the niche that has the least amount of direct competition. Having the Rokstock alone as a factory option qualifies there - add in the expected competence of the build, and they'll create a following fast. But competing on low prices is the highway to doom for a small company. You can't out-walmart Ruger or Savage on price point, or low-cost value. So, find the niche people are willing to pay for, be damn good at it, and grow from there.


That is what I suspected in the fully machined actions you are making. Don't take it as I think its a bad design. It's in the execution. I made a fair amount of money fixing the old cast actions and wondered if you took the original design or modified it. Once they were fit properly, it was a slick action, but took some work.The new receiver uses a dovetail left lug as well. The key difference between the old and new is how it's done-
The old receivers and bolts were investment castings. Every pair had to be made to fit on the bench. Very dependent on the skill of the 'smith and the "luck of the draw" as you say.
The new receivers and bolts are fully machined from solid with some pretty tight tolerancing. They fit because they were designed from the start to do so. I actually had to increase some design clearances a bit in development because I made everything too tight.
I'm torture testing the long action right now in .375 H&H. We've got some DG rifle stuff in the works.
Thankfully it isn't just MRC here. Grace Engineering is a third gen, family owned business, better known to the public as G5 Outdoors and Prime Archery. While I'm the only one 100% dedicated to the firearms side of the company, we have an army of machining and manufacturing experts backing this project up.
View attachment 792648
View attachment 792650
The new receiver uses a dovetail left lug as well. The key difference between the old and new is how it's done-
The old receivers and bolts were investment castings. Every pair had to be made to fit on the bench. Very dependent on the skill of the 'smith and the "luck of the draw" as you say.
The new receivers and bolts are fully machined from solid with some pretty tight tolerancing. They fit because they were designed from the start to do so. I actually had to increase some design clearances a bit in development because I made everything too tight.
I'm torture testing the long action right now in .375 H&H. We've got some DG rifle stuff in the works.
Thankfully it isn't just MRC here. Grace Engineering is a third gen, family owned business, better known to the public as G5 Outdoors and Prime Archery. While I'm the only one 100% dedicated to the firearms side of the company, we have an army of machining and manufacturing experts backing this project up.
View attachment 792648
View attachment 792650
@Formidilosus I tried and apparently failed to be clear that the cost is not your fault. My point was on why some peoples perceptions may have changed. You clearly took it differently.
Anyway, I'm going to go enjoy the two small caliber Tikkas in RokStoks I have with UM bolt handles, RS1.2s, and no bipod because what you say works actually does work. I'm also going to try my best to bow out of this conversation because I'm not trying to be combative and it appears I am coming across as such.
True PovertyHey some of us are still slumming swfa's and sportsmatch rings.