So, I'm not in danger of actually doing this anytime soon, I just like the idea so I'm kicking around stuff to look into in the event this still makes sense to me in a year-ish.
I'm toying with building a new hunting rifle. This would be an all-around rifle for everything from tracking whitetails in the eastern big woods, to occasional trips to hunt elk-sized critters, and everything in between, as well as informal practical-precision type targets. I already have appropriate rifles including a couple tikkas in short-action standard calibers (7mm-08 and similar), but none are as accurate as I'd like compared to some semi-custom rigs I've shot, so my main focus would be essentially duplicating what I already have but in a significantly more accurate platform. Despite accuracy being a primary goal I would consider this a traditional hunting rifle, NOT a "long range hunting rifle".
My questions are for folks who have gone down this road multiple times, as most of my gun-tweaking experience is either around shotguns or rifles for target games. For a middling-lighter-weight traditional sporter-weight gun, say around 8.25lb or less scoped:
1) which actions should be on my list to look into (including any I already own), and most importantly, WHY?
2) pro's and cons to having a gun built versus buying a barreled action and assembling the remainder myself? On the surface, it seems like all the stocks I'd likely be looking at are essentially a chassis system inside a traditional-looking stock, and I can bolt on and adjust a trigger, do a good job with mounting a scope, etc, so I'm not actually sure what benefit I get by having a gun "built for me".
If it matters for the above questions, I'll probably end up with a short action caliber or possibly a short-action magnum like a 6.5prc or similar, but extremely unlikely I'd go for anything bigger. It's very likely this'll end up with a smaller suppressor on it at least some of the time, and I'll mainly be shooting factory ammo. I'm not particularly leaning toward any budget, really just getting some thoughts from experienced folks that I can consider to work up my own set of priorities and budget and see what makes sense for me.
Thanks in advance.
(Also, didja see how I started my first sentence with "so"? Nifty, huh? I learned that here)
I'm toying with building a new hunting rifle. This would be an all-around rifle for everything from tracking whitetails in the eastern big woods, to occasional trips to hunt elk-sized critters, and everything in between, as well as informal practical-precision type targets. I already have appropriate rifles including a couple tikkas in short-action standard calibers (7mm-08 and similar), but none are as accurate as I'd like compared to some semi-custom rigs I've shot, so my main focus would be essentially duplicating what I already have but in a significantly more accurate platform. Despite accuracy being a primary goal I would consider this a traditional hunting rifle, NOT a "long range hunting rifle".
My questions are for folks who have gone down this road multiple times, as most of my gun-tweaking experience is either around shotguns or rifles for target games. For a middling-lighter-weight traditional sporter-weight gun, say around 8.25lb or less scoped:
1) which actions should be on my list to look into (including any I already own), and most importantly, WHY?
2) pro's and cons to having a gun built versus buying a barreled action and assembling the remainder myself? On the surface, it seems like all the stocks I'd likely be looking at are essentially a chassis system inside a traditional-looking stock, and I can bolt on and adjust a trigger, do a good job with mounting a scope, etc, so I'm not actually sure what benefit I get by having a gun "built for me".
If it matters for the above questions, I'll probably end up with a short action caliber or possibly a short-action magnum like a 6.5prc or similar, but extremely unlikely I'd go for anything bigger. It's very likely this'll end up with a smaller suppressor on it at least some of the time, and I'll mainly be shooting factory ammo. I'm not particularly leaning toward any budget, really just getting some thoughts from experienced folks that I can consider to work up my own set of priorities and budget and see what makes sense for me.
Thanks in advance.
(Also, didja see how I started my first sentence with "so"? Nifty, huh? I learned that here)