interested in getting a TIMBERWOLF. anyone have a review?

I was lucky enough to get a private tour of PGW's manufacturing facility, and all I can say is WOW!

I was blown away by their buisness.

Steve and Ross are incredibly nice guys, and showed me and my buddy the entire process in detail, from square and round bars of steel, to finished product, and every step in between. From making muzzle brakes to the stocks, and the folding hinges, to the actions and bolts, it boggled my mind to get a chance to see the inner workings of such a company.

It is an incredibly detailed and precise process, done on some incredible CNC equipment, with talented (and friendly) guys running the equipment.


I obviously did not take any photos of any part of the manufacturing, for security reasons, and for keeping their manufacturing secrets... well... a secret. I did however get two photos with Ross's approval. Sorry in advance for the crappy cell cam photos, but I think you guys will enjoy them.

A big batch of coyotes waiting to be put into the stocks and further assembled.



A batch of their finished LRT-3's waiting to go to their customer, and I got to hold one of them with a big ol' suppressor on it. IIRC, all of these are going to the customer with a full deployment kit including suppressors and maintenance kit. I have covered up the masking tape that has the client info on them at Ross/ Steve's request, so that is what the green blotches are. Had the pleasure of shooting one of these a few times now, and they are a top quality gun, very capable of extreme long range hits, as myself and DGphotography have seen.




Anyways, that's just a quick blurb from me, but if anybody is wondering if the guns are worth it, they more than are, you are getting an awesome piece of kit for your money.
 
I was lucky enough to get a private tour of PGW's manufacturing facility, and all I can say is WOW!

I was blown away by their buisness.

Steve and Ross are incredibly nice guys, and showed me and my buddy the entire process in detail, from square and round bars of steel, to finished product, and every step in between. From making muzzle brakes to the stocks, and the folding hinges, to the actions and bolts, it boggled my mind to get a chance to see the inner workings of such a company.

It is an incredibly detailed and precise process, done on some incredible CNC equipment, with talented (and friendly) guys running the equipment.


I obviously did not take any photos of any part of the manufacturing, for security reasons, and for keeping their manufacturing secrets... well... a secret. I did however get two photos with Ross's approval. Sorry in advance for the crappy cell cam photos, but I think you guys will enjoy them.

A big batch of coyotes waiting to be put into the stocks and further assembled.



A batch of their finished LRT-3's waiting to go to their customer, and I got to hold one of them with a big ol' suppressor on it. IIRC, all of these are going to the customer with a full deployment kit including suppressors and maintenance kit. I have covered up the masking tape that has the client info on them at Ross/ Steve's request, so that is what the green blotches are. Had the pleasure of shooting one of these a few times now, and they are a top quality gun, very capable of extreme long range hits, as myself and DGphotography have seen.




Anyways, that's just a quick blurb from me, but if anybody is wondering if the guns are worth it, they more than are, you are getting an awesome piece of kit for your money.


:cool::cool::rockOn:
 
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