Long range .338 Edge rig value?

johnl

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Hey guys, what a fair market value for a nice rifle? Trying to help out friend.

Everything is 100% New

Rifle components.
· Scope. Leupold Mark 4 Riflescope 8.5-25x50 Long Rang, M1 Mil Dot 54690
· Rings. TPS HRT 40571 30mm steel medium
· Base. Ken Farrell, INC. G-Force F-GF-REM-7L-1-20
· Action. Remington 700 SPS 300 RUM rifle was used for action.
· Barrel. Shilen Stainless Steel/Select Match Grade #7 Standard Varmint to finish at 30” .338 SS Match 1-10 twist.
· Brake. Defensive Edge Brake.
· Stock. Bell and Carlson Medalist A5 stock tan with black spider web 2098-30.

Gunsmith Work.
Everything was done by Dennis Sorensen.
· Action Truing.
· Bolt Bumping.
· Thread and Chamber.
· Bead blasting barrel finish.
· Trigger tune to 2 1/4 LB.
· Bedding action to stock.

Accessories to go with rifle.
· Cleaning rod. Dewey MFG 30C44.
· Redding Dies. 338/300 Ultra (338 EDGE) 80924.
· 50 Rounds of 300 RUM Remington brass, loaded with Sierra 300 gr HPBT, and CCI 250 Primers. loads are 25 Rounds with 92gr H1000, 25 Rounds with 91gr Reloader-25. Brass is never fired


Thanks.
 
To paraphrase John Barsness, a quick check to see if you are a good candidate for building rifles is to make a large stack of 100s. Carefully divide it into two and set one of them on fire. :( It quickly simulates an emotion that you might as well get used to. Plan on losing half.

If it happens to be something much out of the ordinary, or an odd-ball chambering light up both piles. ;)

First thing you do is pull the scope and mounts off and sell those separately.
 
To paraphrase John Barsness, a quick check to see if you are a good candidate for building rifles is to make a large stack of 100s. Carefully divide it into two and set one of them on fire. :( It quickly simulates an emotion that you might as well get used to. Plan on losing half.

If it happens to be something much out of the ordinary, or an odd-ball chambering light up both piles. ;)

First thing you do is pull the scope and mounts off and sell those separately.


I told buddy if you’re spending big money, it’s alway better to buy a known brand, ie Accuracy International, Sako, Blaser, etc etc than to sink money into a parts gun, albeit high end parts gun if you want to sell it down the road. I learnt that lesson years ago:(:p:p Now so did heLaugh2 :p:p
 
I told buddy if you’re spending big money, it’s alway better to buy a known brand, ie Accuracy International, Sako, Blaser, etc etc than to sink money into a parts gun, albeit high end parts gun if you want to sell it down the road. I learnt that lesson years ago:(:p:p Now so did heLaugh2 :p:p

At least if dealing with prefits, you can recoup a better portion of the cost breaking it down into parts.
Ask me how I know!...
 
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