There is a reason custom rifle makers use blueprinted remington actions, or a dozen other custom options.
Because Remington produced
millions of them for dirt cheap, with tolerances sloppy enough to satiate the masses, but require “blueprinting” to satisfy any acceptable gunsmith’s requisite level of precision?
The ADL is not necessarily a bad thing. Some custom rifle makers purposely put a blind mag on their mountain rifles. You can’t hit a release and lose ammo.
That’s one of many reasons. ADL is going to be lighter, first and foremost.
McMillan is likely worth the money for a guy wanting a drop-in stock. It’s going to be lighter and if there’s any issues with the inlet, McMillan will take care of it. Pick your finish, length of pull, recoil pad, stud and pillar setup, barrel contour, and more, all basically included. Yup, there’s a lift but of a wait, but for a stock you’ll own forever, because you’re ordering exactly what you need, it’s not a big deal if you think about it from that perspective I’ve a soft spot for the ergos of my 700’s McMillan Classic.
This thread’s responses really make me wonder how many of the responders own and operate both platforms vs read about rifles “online” and cycled the bolt of a Tikka at Sportmans Warehouse a few times, yet still chime in.
I love the “it feels cheap and plastic” argument against Tikkas. Other than the polymer trigger guard and mags, about neither of which I’ve read a credible report of failure, what are these mystery plastic parts? Or are they just that, “feelings?” Tikkas check a ton of boxes (precision being one of them) right out of said box.