Rifle Setup: Christensen Ridgeline vs. Seekins PH2

Joined
Nov 3, 2022
Messages
36
Location
Missoula, Montana
In the market for a new rifle setup this offseason and would like some help and feedback.

My criteria:

Budget:
$3,500 for full setup (rifle/scope/rings)

Use case: Primarily on deer sized game. Occasional elk.

Shot Distance: 95% of shots will be within 400 yards, but want the ability to shoot up to 600 yards if conditions allow.

Caliber: Leaning heavily toward 6.5 PRC, but I'm open to suggestions.

After extensive research, I have narrowed it down to:

Rifles:

-Christensen Arms Ridgeline
-Seekins Havak PH2

Scopes:

-Vortex Razor HD LHT 3-15x42
-Zeiss V4 4-16x44

Rings:

-Talley Lightweights
-Vortex PMR

Break (if buying Seekins)

-Seekins ATC

Thank you for your help and suggestions!
 
OP
MontanaMuley
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Nov 3, 2022
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Location
Missoula, Montana

AndrewMT34

Lil-Rokslider
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Sep 14, 2020
Messages
231
Location
North Idaho
I have no experience with Christensen rifles but I absolutely love my Seekins Havak PH2.

6.5 PRC is a great caliber and will absolutely take elk, but if you are going to elk hunt often or want to try some heavier bullets I'd look into the 7 PRC.
 
OP
MontanaMuley
Joined
Nov 3, 2022
Messages
36
Location
Missoula, Montana
I have no experience with Christensen rifles but I absolutely love my Seekins Havak PH2.

6.5 PRC is a great caliber and will absolutely take elk, but if you are going to elk hunt often or want to try some heavier bullets I'd look into the 7 PRC.
Appreciate the feedback! My thinking is to start with the 6.5 PRC this year (since it serves my primary use case without overkill) and add a 7PRC or 300PRC in the future for larger ungulates.
 
Joined
Jun 15, 2016
Messages
2,830
What makes you prefer the Christensen over the Seekins?
I don't have anything negative to say about Seekins, and have no experience with them. They look like very nice rifles.

I am on my 4th Christensen and have been very pleased with my purchase on all 4.

From an apples to apples standpoint, the barrel on the Havak PH2 does not appear to be carbon wrapped like the Ridgeline, which to me is the only reason to buy the Ridgeline (vs the Mesa)
 
Joined
Apr 15, 2014
Messages
380
In the market for a new rifle setup this offseason and would like some help and feedback.

My criteria:

Budget:
$3,500 for full setup (rifle/scope/rings)

Use case: Primarily on deer sized game. Occasional elk.

Shot Distance: 95% of shots will be within 400 yards, but want the ability to shoot up to 600 yards if conditions allow.

Caliber: Leaning heavily toward 6.5 PRC, but I'm open to suggestions.

After extensive research, I have narrowed it down to:

Rifles:

-Christensen Arms Ridgeline
-Seekins Havak PH2

Scopes:

-Vortex Razor HD LHT 3-15x42
-Zeiss V4 4-16x44

Rings:

-Talley Lightweights
-Vortex PMR

Break (if buying Seekins)

-Seekins ATC

Thank you for your help and suggestions!
I will follow this. I've been eyeing the ph 2 also.
 
OP
MontanaMuley
Joined
Nov 3, 2022
Messages
36
Location
Missoula, Montana
Seekins if only for the stock. It provides a much better platform for shooting than what they put on the ridgeline.

I would get a tikka roughtech or Sako s20 (for $1100 on euro optic right now) over both of them though. x2 on trijicon over vortex or zeiss.
Thanks for the suggestions on the Tikka and Sako. The Seekins stock does fit me better than the Christensen. Specifically, I have to "reach" for the trigger on the Christensen vs. it being right there while handling the Seekins.
 
Joined
Dec 30, 2014
Messages
9,603
Thanks for the suggestions on the Tikka and Sako. The Seekins stock does fit me better than the Christensen. Specifically, I have to "reach" for the trigger on the Christensen vs. it being right there while handling the Seekins.

Yeah, to get your hand in a position for a good trigger press on that ridgeline stock it has to kind of float off in no mans land.
 

IdahoBeav

WKR
Joined
Jan 29, 2017
Messages
803
I own a Ridgeline and get good results. I have only handled the Seekins, haven't shot it, but I would still go with the Seekins over the CA. The Ridgeline has a ton of bad reviews, stories of rifles going back and forth from the CA factory, etc., and there have been big discount sales on the Ridgeline and Mesa here and there the last couple years, almost like CA and retailers are trying to purge bad batches.

I'd look at what you can afford from Nightforce or even Leupold over a Vortex. Sending binos and spotters in every year for warranty replacements is one thing, but having to dismount, remount, and re-sight a rifle every year is another.
 
OP
MontanaMuley
Joined
Nov 3, 2022
Messages
36
Location
Missoula, Montana
I own a Ridgeline and get good results. I have only handled the Seekins, haven't shot it, but I would still go with the Seekins over the CA. The Ridgeline has a ton of bad reviews, stories of rifles going back and forth from the CA factory, etc., and there have been big discount sales on the Ridgeline and Mesa here and there the last couple years, almost like CA and retailers are trying to purge bad batches.

I'd look at what you can afford from Nightforce or even Leupold over a Vortex. Sending binos and spotters in every year for warranty replacements is one thing, but having to dismount, remount, and re-sight a rifle every year is another.
Appreciate the insight on the rifle and scope. I've had good luck with the Vortex Razor line, but will check out what Leupold and Nightforce has in similar price range.
 

JCMCUBIC

WKR
Joined
Nov 22, 2020
Messages
457
Anyone know the mag box OAL in the Ridgeline? If it's a standard short action it will be 2.8-something. The PH2 in 6.5 PRC comes with a 3.14" detachable mag box. The extra OAL freedom is a good thing if you reload.

I've been shooting a Seekins in 6.5 CM for a couple of years and a previous one in 6 CM. I really like them, so I'd go with the PH2 just on fit and previous experience.
 
Joined
Dec 30, 2014
Messages
9,603
Anyone know the mag box OAL in the Ridgeline? If it's a standard short action it will be 2.8-something. The PH2 in 6.5 PRC comes with a 3.14" detachable mag box. The extra OAL freedom is a good thing if you reload.

I've been shooting a Seekins in 6.5 CM for a couple of years and a previous one in 6 CM. I really like them, so I'd go with the PH2 just on fit and previous experience.

The 6.5 PRC mag boxes are a hair over 3" in the ridgeline. Wouldn't be able to fit factory ammo in them at 2.8.
 

idahodave

WKR
Joined
Jan 2, 2019
Messages
436
Location
Boise, ID
MontanaMuley,

Ridgeline shot good after some load development, but it took a while (and money) to get there. The factory chamber was REALLY tight on the Ridgeline as well fwtw. Literally every load I tried in the Havoc printed sub-moa. I'm convinced I could have dropped a Black Cat and a ball-bearing down the barrel and got MOA groups in the Havoc. It's just stupid accurate with 180 VLDs in my 7mm Rem Mag out as far as I've shot it (700ish).

The ergonomics of the stock I believe are much better on the Havoc imho, though that is subjective I acknowledge. The stock itself is MUCH more rigid on the Havoc, but I haven't handled the new FFT stock on the Ridgeline so that might be a closer race on the newer Ridgeline models.

While the Havoc action STARTED rougher than the Ridgeline, after a bit of use I think the Seekins is much smoother. I don't still have the Ridgeline, so in it's tough to do a direct comparison in all honesty.

Magazine length goes to the Havoc in terms of seating high BC bullets waaaay out there.

Same for twist rate. In 7mm Rem anyway, the Seekins is 1:8 as opposed to the Ridgeline's 1:9. Prolly a moot point in the 6.5 PRC I suppose.

Again, I'd happily shoot either one the rest of my life. I'd just be more confident doing it with a Seekins. Their customer service (while unlikely you'd ever need it) is beyond reproach from all accounts. The same cannot be said of Christensen Arms.

Just my two cents.

Dave
 
OP
MontanaMuley
Joined
Nov 3, 2022
Messages
36
Location
Missoula, Montana
MontanaMuley,

Ridgeline shot good after some load development, but it took a while (and money) to get there. The factory chamber was REALLY tight on the Ridgeline as well fwtw. Literally every load I tried in the Havoc printed sub-moa. I'm convinced I could have dropped a Black Cat and a ball-bearing down the barrel and got MOA groups in the Havoc. It's just stupid accurate with 180 VLDs in my 7mm Rem Mag out as far as I've shot it (700ish).

The ergonomics of the stock I believe are much better on the Havoc imho, though that is subjective I acknowledge. The stock itself is MUCH more rigid on the Havoc, but I haven't handled the new FFT stock on the Ridgeline so that might be a closer race on the newer Ridgeline models.

While the Havoc action STARTED rougher than the Ridgeline, after a bit of use I think the Seekins is much smoother. I don't still have the Ridgeline, so in it's tough to do a direct comparison in all honesty.

Magazine length goes to the Havoc in terms of seating high BC bullets waaaay out there.

Same for twist rate. In 7mm Rem anyway, the Seekins is 1:8 as opposed to the Ridgeline's 1:9. Prolly a moot point in the 6.5 PRC I suppose.

Again, I'd happily shoot either one the rest of my life. I'd just be more confident doing it with a Seekins. Their customer service (while unlikely you'd ever need it) is beyond reproach from all accounts. The same cannot be said of Christensen Arms.

Just my two cents.

Dave
Hey Dave, thanks for the explanation. It's helpful to hear from someone who has handled both. I've heard nothing but good things about Seekins.
 
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