interested in getting a TIMBERWOLF. anyone have a review?

We have done that before including when the Western Canadian F Class championships were held in Winnipeg. We had a hog roast and hosted about 70 people including shooters, wives, husbands and kids. Machinery was running and our entire staff including Steve and myself were here to answer questions...It was a great event that we would be open to doing again.
 
It'd be interesting to have a 'customer appreciation day' of some sort, have customers out to the factory for a tour, go out shooting, have lunch at the range, We can all bring our guns, see all the different set ups we have... maybe have a couple factory guns so we can try different calibers for those of us with only one of your products, get us hooked and want to buy more... (I already want to buy more) :)

sorry to highjack a bit there

We have done that before including when the Western Canadian F Class championships were held in Winnipeg. We had a hog roast and hosted about 70 people including shooters, wives, husbands and kids. Machinery was running and our entire staff including Steve and myself were here to answer questions...It was a great event that we would be open to doing again.

I know me and Dean aka Tootall would be interested in get together and shoot day next summer and travel from BC for it. Tootall writes for SAR magazine.

:cheers:
 
I'd make the trip from Yellowknife as well for a fun shoot. I'd love to see the shop. Could see the relatives as well. Born in Winnipeg but haven't been back in years.
 
I won't mince words. Ian you are a misinformed jealous dolt. I get to shoot a timberwolf for a living. So I think I'm qualified to comment on the matter. They are the best built, most solid rifles you can buy and deadly accurate. There were 2 rifles we had issues with...One had 3700 rounds thru it and would only group 1 moa lol. The other had a chip out of the crown. Likely a byproduct of a sniper candidate being an idiot. They work in the mud, sand, rain and arctic conditions. What more do you want? Stop badmouthing an amazing Canadian company that I literally entrust my life to. End rant.
 
I won't mince words. Ian you are a misinformed jealous dolt. I get to shoot a timberwolf for a living. So I think I'm qualified to comment on the matter. They are the best built, most solid rifles you can buy and deadly accurate. There were 2 rifles we had issues with...One had 3700 rounds thru it and would only group 1 moa lol. The other had a chip out of the crown. Likely a byproduct of a sniper candidate being an idiot. They work in the mud, sand, rain and arctic conditions. What more do you want? Stop badmouthing an amazing Canadian company that I literally entrust my life to. End rant.


http://www.canadiangunnutz.com/foru...king-for-opinions/page4?p=8601530#post8601530

Your post here is very different than your opinion staring on post 171 of the thread linked above....
 
http://www.canadiangunnutz.com/foru...king-for-opinions/page4?p=8601530#post8601530

Your post here is very different than your opinion staring on post 171 of the thread linked above....

Those were the exact rifles we had problems with. After speaking and meeting with Ross and Steve personally this never happened again. And the army was kind enough to replace our shot out rifle.

Called out and explained, and both respectfully enough. This kind of discussion is how CGN should be, not the BS that some on here spout.
 
Lets say you bought a Corvette from a dealership, and the car worked flawlessly for 10 years of racing and driving you to and from work. You put many trouble free miles on it, and have a wall of trophies from racing here and over seas, the car just kept on delivering. Your mechanic just changed the oil, and you kept putting quality gas in it and the car ran great. Then one day, your new mechanic decided he wanted to rebuild the motor, and start to change a bunch of things on the car. All of a sudden, the reliability you had disappeared as well as your ability to win races. So now you hate your car, and your mechanic does a really good job of telling everyone how bad the car was in the first place and how he tried to fix it, but it was so bad he couldn't. Now everyone believes the mechanic because he works at a 5 star dealership on one of the high speed race teams.

Nobody remembers how good the car was for the ten years prior to the mechanic starting to mess around with it, they focus on the current state of poor performance, because that is what matters, the present. The mechanic does his best to deflect the blame for the poor performance from himself, because his job depends on it. So he continues to trash the manufacturer of the car as being the problem. The mechanic tries to make himself look good by saying that everyone should go out and buy a Mustang, because they are better. All of this is going on while many other people are racing Corvettes and nobody is having any problems because they leave the car as it came from the factory, and only have proper factory trained and qualified personal work on the car.

Does the problem belong to the manufacturer, or is it the fault of the mechanic?
 
Not to mention the rifles that I used as a new sniper 3 years ago were all veterans of many tours to Afghanistan. I doubt round counts were kept up and the conditions those poor rifles were put thru...you can't even imagine. My words were very harsh but it got the higher ups to get us new guns. So I'm not sorry I said it!
 
Someone used the term "machine gun" parts swapping earlier in this thread. That's literally what our "weapons techs" ( I use that term loosely ) do with our sniper systems. They aren't properly trained on precision weapon systems. It's not their fault. It's the Army's fault.
 
Someone used the term "machine gun" parts swapping earlier in this thread. That's literally what our "weapons techs" ( I use that term loosely ) do with our sniper systems. They aren't properly trained on precision weapon systems. It's not their fault. It's the Army's fault.

Ouch, I can scarcely imagine the thought of swapping parts between precision rifles... it hurts my head to think that people believe that can work... pretty darn big difference between automatic firearms and precision crafted bolt guns.
 
You know, I wonder what Ian is thinking now ? He must be mightily peeved that rather than achieving the desired result, there has been an outpouring of support for this company - including from people like swissin who, unlike most of us, actually handle these rifles professionally and in harms way.
 
Back
Top Bottom