Convention says you have to pick one or the other, more recent data says you dont have to pick between them anymore.I will have to decide on caliber then (low recoil vs elk caliber).
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Convention says you have to pick one or the other, more recent data says you dont have to pick between them anymore.I will have to decide on caliber then (low recoil vs elk caliber).
Lots of great replies. I think I’ve decided to just keep the rifle and restock it. Then do a custom in the future. I will have to decide on caliber then (low recoil vs elk caliber).
What would you do in this situation? My current do-all rifle is a Winchester Model 70 Extreme Weather SS in .270 Win. It has the first-generation stock, which I really don’t like. I’ve priced a McMillan replacement at around $900–$1,000, and I’m sure it would completely change the rifle. But at that point I’d have roughly $2,000 invested in it. It is a good shooter, and it’s easy to reload accurate ammo for.
Another option would be to sell the rifle to the gun/archery shop for $900–$1,000 in store credit and start over with something else. (I bought the rifle for $950 about 10 years ago, and they go for around $1,700 now.) I already have a bow on order from this shop, so the credit would cover most of that. Then I’d start fresh with a new rifle. I’ve been looking pretty hard at both the Proof Elevation and the Seekins Havak Element M3.
I’d also really like a rifle with a threaded barrel and a suppressor to protect my hearing. Despite reloading ammo, I’d probably still choose a common, do-all caliber, and my budget is fairly flexible. I hunt deer and hope to branch out to elk in the near future. My only other rifles are a .223 and a .22, but I may add more in the future.
Thanks in advance
My guess is initial purchase and stock added together. This a where I prefer to use my wife's "girl math" against her. I have the rifle already, so that's free.Where's the $2,000 coming from you'd have invested in it?
Regardless, you're going spend at least $2k getting a new rifle, buying a suppressor, and spending time behind it than just buying the stock chopping and threading the barrel.