Well, I've read through most of this thread now, so I'm chiming in. In my opinion, Sako Quality is fact.
Having been luck enough to grow up shooting many Sako's in my fathers collection, and now having my own collection of Sako's I love everyone of them.
The newest model one I have is a M85 in 260 Remington, and yes the stock is different than the older model ones, in my opinion it looks "thin" if that's the right term compared to the older models, but saying that, it is one of the nicest balanced and pointing of the bunch. I currently own 8 Sako's and working on closing the deal on another.
If I had the money, I would have a room full of them. Never owned one that wasn't an excellent shooter, and never had a single problem with any of them.
My father used to tell me, you could go out and buy a cheaper rifle, have the trigger re-worked or replaced, install a custom barrel, bed the action on an upgraded stock, and then have a rifle that is close to what you get from the factory in a Sako.
So why not start with quality.
My 2 cents

Having been luck enough to grow up shooting many Sako's in my fathers collection, and now having my own collection of Sako's I love everyone of them.
The newest model one I have is a M85 in 260 Remington, and yes the stock is different than the older model ones, in my opinion it looks "thin" if that's the right term compared to the older models, but saying that, it is one of the nicest balanced and pointing of the bunch. I currently own 8 Sako's and working on closing the deal on another.
If I had the money, I would have a room full of them. Never owned one that wasn't an excellent shooter, and never had a single problem with any of them.
My father used to tell me, you could go out and buy a cheaper rifle, have the trigger re-worked or replaced, install a custom barrel, bed the action on an upgraded stock, and then have a rifle that is close to what you get from the factory in a Sako.
So why not start with quality.
My 2 cents

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