brands of rifles

84studebaker

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I am looking for a new rifle and am having a hard time deciding which brand to buy. I have settled on a 300 mag calibre, but cannot decide on the make. Which of the manufacturers offer the best bang for your loonie? Canadian gun nuts pls help me with your playful banter...!?!
 
Go to a gun shop and fondle them.....
Maybe one will jump out at you?
Kind of looking for a pooch at the SPCA.
Something will peck at yur heart........
 
i have read Savage rifles are like the ugly girl at the dance, not much to look at but will do anything you want exceptionaly well.
I bought my son a .243 savage youth pkg. & the accuracey is incredible.he continualy embarasses & pisses of my friends by effortlessly outshooting them.I know its an accurate cart. to begin with but dam that rifle is a shooter.with a larger cal like the win-mag I would deffintaly go with the accu-stock for the pillar bedding.
its fav. -
RL -19 / 43.5 GR
87 GR. /Hollo point
from a bench @ 100 yrds its 1 raggy hole for 3 shoots ,this is from a rifle & scope pkg that was less than $500.00
 
Can't go wrong with Winchester in the Model 70 and Ruger, excellent values. Avoid Remington, Marlin, and go to Savage etc if looking to save $. Now after my piece below I'll bow out because this thread with become a sh1t show, all personal opinion. :) So kamlooky likely has it right, go to a shop, see what you like.

Here's a breakdown of features people consider desirable:

-Stainless, if you hunt rainy locations, likely as you're in BC: Winchester, Ruger, Savage, Remington, Tikka, Kimber etc etc have options.

-Synthetic stocks: same as above.

-Wood stocks, much classier, more soul: Winchester, CZ and Ruger do these best for low-cost hunting rifles, Ruger and CZ the better of the three. Kimber does nice stocks for a little more $.

-Controlled Round Feed, think Mauser style claw extraction, means the round is captured and guided into the chamber through the whole feeding process by the extractor. Your can push the bolt half forward on a loaded magazine, back it up, go forward again, do it upside down, etc and it will still function normally. A Push Feed, means the round is rather unceremoniously just shoved into the chamber, not controlled by the extractor, backing up part way on the bolt and starting again will cause a jam, and operating upside down or at extreme angles can often be a problem too. In practice, push feed works just fine, but controlled round feed is preferred and desired for hunting dangerous game for obvious reasons. You won't be doing that with your .300, but why not have the better system? Options in reasonable price ranges for controlled round feed are: Winchester, Ruger, CZ, and some others. Kimbers are also CRF. Remington, Savage, Tikka etc are push feeds.

-Integral scope mounts, less parts to cause issues in your zero, less expense in the case of Ruger as excellent rings are included free (or you've already paid for them at purchase, you pick how you view it). It's a better system, period, not a fan personally of screwed on bases though again, they work. Options are Ruger and CZ for integral bases among the common offerings, Ruger's come with the rings and are a bit more scope friendly.

-Weight, if you hunt or shoot at the range in normal fashion, not a consideration. If you hunt sheep at 7500', definitely important. At the range or deer fields, a little weight in a .300 is welcomed and softens the recoil impulse. For climbing mountains, you'll want something very light like a Kimber.

-Construction quality, some guns are built primarily to be cheap to manufacture, for instance the Remington 700, Tikka T3, etc. Round stock receivers, meaning less machining operations are required, and to use the Remington 700 in particular as an example, a bolt that is soldered together from three pieces. The bolt handle is one of the soldered on parts. Again, works OK, but there are better choices, Winchester, CZ, Ruger all have one piece bolts with integral handles. They also are free of plastic junk parts and pot metal junk parts (my Rem 700's pot metal trigger guard broke on me years ago, didn't leave me pleased). Kimber has a plastic follower, and MIM (metal injection molded, they use it in Formula 1, pretty decent), not a fan of the plastic follower but good guns otherwise.

So, there's my opinionated short rundown, missing a lot of stuff I'm sure too. But it's a start. :)
 
Best $ value on the market at this time is the T.C. Venture will stack up against any rifle at any price for accuracy. Don't get to taken in by the control feed its fine but not the end to the means.
 
I do agree with this gentleman and if i may add the TC Icon Precision Hunter in 243,308 or 6.5 Creedmoor is the closest you will get to a custom rifle in accuracy under 1000.00... Those are sleepers but now that i own them i would not get rid of them for any reasons... JP.
 
I think if you gave everyone your budget it would weed out a lot of rifles.

Ardent, I see you mentioned Marlin as one of your "stay away from" choices, and though I agree there has been some QC issues going on right now, it seems to be from their levers.

I have yet to hear someone complain about their bolt actions like the XL7, or XS7. I think if your on a budget, they are a better bang for the buck than the Savages since they come with a real recoil pad and adjustable trigger, and have great out of the box accuracy.
 
At the range i handle a lot of Marlin some new one are pityfull but some are nice and shoot good,i think if you can handle then prior to buy you can pick a sound one... JP.
 
Go to a gun shop and fondle them.....
Maybe one will jump out at you?
Kind of looking for a pooch at the SPCA.
Something will peck at yur heart........

I can't ever remember seeing a gun shop with anything there I would like to fondle!
 
A lot of good choices out there but out of good quality, in decent price ranges, my three choices would be;
  • Winchester model 70 - Tried tested and true.
  • Ruger - Equally good quality and good dollar value.
  • Savage - Inexpensive but a good performer and great 'bang for the buck'.
Somewhat of a side issue but with an 'inexpensive' Savage 112 BVSS I have in 25-06, so far I've probably shot tighter groups with it than I have with anything else that I have in the gun safe.
 
Cuties can be made into "Babes" with a little ingenuity and by being handy. (Follow Red Greens advice). All jesting aside, you cannot beat the Stevens 200 for what you get. You can doll them up with trigger upgrades and stock upgrades cheaper than what you pay for in higher end models. A cheap date for about $300 on CGN when they come up. Saw one on Epps for 275.......you just cannot go wrong there.
 
A 300 mag you say....
I agree with all the comments. I have heard from a local smith that the Remingtons have quality issues at this time and are very hard to get parts for service. What do you currently own?
In the past I did have a model 77 in 338 and it was a great rifle, I now own Winchester's and Ruger's as far as bolt actions a concerned in both push and control round feed.
I would suggest you have a look at all the 300's you can and pick the one that fits you the best and shoot it and when you are tired and soar shoot it some more.
Good luck on your adventure and let us know what you decide.
257Roberts
 
Savage Model 111fcns with accustock. They prettied it up a bit with smooth barrel nut and put bolt release in front of trigger guard. Accustock, fullbed aluminum block, and accutrigger. If your looking for a great hunting tool that you won't worry about "hunting", that's my choice, and what I use! Your milage may vary ;)
 

I can't resist:), here's my favorite,'Tikka':p.

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