You always were a masochist.I have a Custom 280AI With a Wild Cat stk 24 “ weights 7 lbs 6 oz and it’s pretty Barky .
You always were a masochist.I have a Custom 280AI With a Wild Cat stk 24 “ weights 7 lbs 6 oz and it’s pretty Barky .
7.5 to 8 lbs . I had a browning xbolt SS stalker chambered in 7 mm RM and it was perfect at just under 8 lbs scoped.
Easy to carry and fast and easy to shoot offhand.
Key was a great recoil pad.
A light rifle is an advantage to a hunter who climbs mountains or walks many miles. As for myself, I'll never hunt with a light rifle; they are to flighty to shoot, pound the shoulder on the bench, not as accurate as a heavier rifle. I walk about 5 miles per day while hunting deer and my 9.5 lb. rifles never seem to bother me.I am building a 280ai rem 700. I got a 24" stainless barrel no muzzle break on it. I am looking at stocks for it. A bell and Carelson is about 1.8-2.2 lb. Is it worth to spend double the money on a stock that is 1-1.3lb. Also if you have one of the lighter stocks how do they feel to shoot?
Yes , I’m no browning xbolt fan, but whatever they use was about the best recoil pad I’ve used.Forgive me. I am so far from being a part of this crowd but if the rifle is a quality build, is the only concern of the lightweights the recoil?
If so, may it prudent to consider what most call a ‘sissy’ pad? Recoil absorbed at the shoulder seems, to me, to be a great thing in this pursuit.
Yes, of course you need trigger time using it.

This^^^Key was a great recoil pad.
Yes and no, if shooting a heavy hitting calibre in a lightweight recoil can be an issue, even a 30-06 in a sub 6lb rifle can be unpleasant. The other factor is lightweight rifles are more difficult to hold steady while shooting offhand and are what many call whippy.Forgive me. I am so far from being a part of this crowd but if the rifle is a quality build, is the only concern of the lightweights the recoil?
If so, may it prudent to consider what most call a ‘sissy’ pad? Recoil absorbed at the shoulder seems, to me, to be a great thing in this pursuit. Even the gel holster/bra style.
Yes, of course you need trigger time using it.
Are carbon fibre wrapped barrels really lighter?I remember stopping in at Prairie Gunworks in 1998 or thereabouts. They had a little 308 on their titanium action sitting in a Wildcat stock. If I remember correctly, it was 5lb 4oz without a scope. It was unbelievably light in the hands. Not sure how much heavier a long action would have been, but also keep in mind that was before the days of carbon wrapped barrels, which likely would have shaved a few ounces as well. Could you get the whole package done and loaded for 6lbs? I'm not sure, but in a well-mannered cartridge like the 280, it would be an awfully nice rifle to pack around.
Are carbon fibre wrapped barrels really lighter?
Yeah, I can’t get on the carbon fibre barrel craze. I think if you’re looking for the absolute lightest barrel on the market it will be steel.Some yes. I believe one of the carbon barrel makers says something like “lighter than a steel barrel of similar profile” so if it’s varmint contour it will be lighter than a varmint contour not a #2 or #1.
Edit - it’s Proof Research and they say “Up to 64% lighter than traditional steel barrels of similar contour.”
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I bought a weatherby backcountry, brought it to the range about 3 times and sold it at a huge loss. After that I had a pretty good idea of what I wanted and like you said, a couple years later I had exactly what I wanted… except I ended up with an extra stock I couldn’t sell so I decided to put together a twin in 7mmThe trouble with building rifles is you agonize over every part going into it, take it to a guy who can turn on a lathe and hold a popsicle stick and then you get what you get.
Its going to shoot about as good as the barrel, work about as good as the action, weigh the same as the sum of the parts, The stock is going to fit the only way the stock you picked can fit you and the trigger will pull about the same as the trigger you bought.
After a wait of between overnight and 2 years from next Thursday you pick up your unique creation that probably is between 7 and 8 mm, between 7 and 8 pounds and throws a bullet between 140-200 grans between 2800 and 3100 fps.
What you don’t know is how its going to balance, how its going to feel, hell how it sounds when you work the bolt might bug you. Some rifles just feel special to some people and about the only way to get that for sure is to copy someones elses build that you like. Or twist the guys arm until he sells it to you..
A bricklayer knows exactly what his project is going to look like before he starts, the precise location of every brick and why it would be wrong or look stupid done another way. He doesn’t just stack bricks hoping it all works out. We should be more like the bricklayer.![]()
You're probably right, but a pencil profile barrel is more inclined to wander as it warms up. They can be a real bastard off the bench when you're developing loads. The last three big game animals that I have shot were with carbon wrapped barrels in 28 Nosler. To get a 26" barrel of the same profile would be a boat anchor. I built my 300WM before carbon wrapped barrels were particularly available, and it's a chunk of rifle...12 pounds plus I believe, and that might have been before I swapped scopes on it. That same rifle with a carbon wrapped barrel would be significantly lighter and far more fun to carry.Yeah, I can’t get on the carbon fibre barrel craze. I think if you’re looking for the absolute lightest barrel on the market it will be steel.



























