Good Evening,
I have been lurking on this forum for about a year now absorbing information and getting more and more excited about precision shooting. I have a savage semi-auto .22 that I plink with but have very little experience with center fire rifles and I would like to change that.
Of course I dont have a lot of money to put towards a gun and scope combo right now but at the same time I really want to destroy some paper (and gophers) before the summer is done. I have come up with what I think is an economical way to get into the sport while still having a piece of equipment that can grow with me and I am interested in hearing some input on it.
First off I am thinking I should start off with a .223 caliber as it is cheaper to feed, low recoil, and is accurate to at least medium range.
My first step would be to buy a stevens 200 put cheap rings/bases and a cheap scope so that I could get out there and fire off some rounds. The stevens 200 appeals to me because it is cheap (whats the best price you guys have seen for a new one?), it has multiple upgrades available, and it seems like a hands on person could do many of the upgrades themselves (I would love to be able to rebarrel it myself when funds are available to something heavier with maybe a faster twist to accommodate those 90gr bergers I spent 2hrs reading about).
Once funds permitted I would want to upgrade the scope to the rifle's permanent optic. I like the idea of a quality fixed power unit with tactical turrets such as the Sighton SIII, Bushnell Elite, or Super Sniper.
My next upgrade would be trigger and stock or barrel based on how comfortable the gun feels and which item I feel would make the biggest difference. The not chosen option would then be the next upgrade I would attempt.
At this point I would hope that I could say that I have a precision rifle with the ability to shoot sub MOA, one or two thousand rounds of once fired brass and a twinkle in my eye for a reloading kit.
So anything in the above sequence of events that should be changed? Any glaringly obvious uniformed assumptions that are making you shake your head and say to yourself "Why dont people stop asking where they can sign up to be a sniper?"
Thanks for read,
Dave
I have been lurking on this forum for about a year now absorbing information and getting more and more excited about precision shooting. I have a savage semi-auto .22 that I plink with but have very little experience with center fire rifles and I would like to change that.
Of course I dont have a lot of money to put towards a gun and scope combo right now but at the same time I really want to destroy some paper (and gophers) before the summer is done. I have come up with what I think is an economical way to get into the sport while still having a piece of equipment that can grow with me and I am interested in hearing some input on it.
First off I am thinking I should start off with a .223 caliber as it is cheaper to feed, low recoil, and is accurate to at least medium range.
My first step would be to buy a stevens 200 put cheap rings/bases and a cheap scope so that I could get out there and fire off some rounds. The stevens 200 appeals to me because it is cheap (whats the best price you guys have seen for a new one?), it has multiple upgrades available, and it seems like a hands on person could do many of the upgrades themselves (I would love to be able to rebarrel it myself when funds are available to something heavier with maybe a faster twist to accommodate those 90gr bergers I spent 2hrs reading about).
Once funds permitted I would want to upgrade the scope to the rifle's permanent optic. I like the idea of a quality fixed power unit with tactical turrets such as the Sighton SIII, Bushnell Elite, or Super Sniper.
My next upgrade would be trigger and stock or barrel based on how comfortable the gun feels and which item I feel would make the biggest difference. The not chosen option would then be the next upgrade I would attempt.
At this point I would hope that I could say that I have a precision rifle with the ability to shoot sub MOA, one or two thousand rounds of once fired brass and a twinkle in my eye for a reloading kit.
So anything in the above sequence of events that should be changed? Any glaringly obvious uniformed assumptions that are making you shake your head and say to yourself "Why dont people stop asking where they can sign up to be a sniper?"
Thanks for read,
Dave