- Location
- Saskatchewan coastline
Tell me ol’experienced fellows, are the packaged rifles that we read so much about really good rifles? All I read about is how sub MOA these $200.00 to $400.00 rifles are and that price might even include a scope. If it has plastic I tend to look the other way….I just don’t get the cozy feeling from them.
By that I mean, from the old school here, I like the blued and wood rifles like the Browning medallion A-bolts, BLR’s, BBR’S, BAR’S, Winchester M70’s, 88’s, 100’s Remington 700’s, Model 7’s, Ruger 77’s, Savage 99’s, Weatherby’s Mark IV's etc. from back before they made plastic stocks and even stainless barrels on them. All these rifles cost $700.00 >> $1700.00 +/- when they were new in the earliy 80's.
For example how can a used Ruger 77 hold a value of say $600.00 when a person can walk into WSS and get a new plastic Weatherby for about $500.00 with a scope or a Stevens 200 or a Savage Axis or a Tikka T3 that all have reports of being very accurate. That old Ruger 77 should be only worth $20.00, but I would still pay more for it than any plastic rifle. A scratch in a plastic stock is just not the same as a character mark in a Win 94!
I guess there is a place for the cheap packages because it tends to make it more affordable for new hunters/shooters to enter the sport, but how are they affecting to market for what I call the real rifles.
Are there other fellows that shy away from the plastic stocked rifles, or do you just pay your $200.00 >> $400.00 and learn to bragg it up?
By that I mean, from the old school here, I like the blued and wood rifles like the Browning medallion A-bolts, BLR’s, BBR’S, BAR’S, Winchester M70’s, 88’s, 100’s Remington 700’s, Model 7’s, Ruger 77’s, Savage 99’s, Weatherby’s Mark IV's etc. from back before they made plastic stocks and even stainless barrels on them. All these rifles cost $700.00 >> $1700.00 +/- when they were new in the earliy 80's.
For example how can a used Ruger 77 hold a value of say $600.00 when a person can walk into WSS and get a new plastic Weatherby for about $500.00 with a scope or a Stevens 200 or a Savage Axis or a Tikka T3 that all have reports of being very accurate. That old Ruger 77 should be only worth $20.00, but I would still pay more for it than any plastic rifle. A scratch in a plastic stock is just not the same as a character mark in a Win 94!
I guess there is a place for the cheap packages because it tends to make it more affordable for new hunters/shooters to enter the sport, but how are they affecting to market for what I call the real rifles.
Are there other fellows that shy away from the plastic stocked rifles, or do you just pay your $200.00 >> $400.00 and learn to bragg it up?


















































