Damn...
Or, "tagged" lol
Damn...
Or, "tagged" lol
Schrödinger's Gat - The logical paradox which posits that a firearm, stored safe in the home, is at the same time On The Streets
lots can afford it,but they're just not inclined to spend that much on non collector K98,but to each his own,,i'm sure there's some that will be happy with it,but for that kind of money,if your buying this for the perceived accuracy,there are A LOT of better riffles out there,and easily available from this reputable vendor,
I like the idea ... a LOT !!
but, for that price tag, I'm wondering if it's not cheaper to change the barrel and accurize (blueprinting the bolt, bedding the stock, etc) of a non-collectible K98k (a RC for exemple...)
I get why it costs what it does. Any vintage military bolt action rifle would be very costly to build today to even a "rack grade" standard, let alone one with the accuracy guarantee.
What I don't get is that the two calibre options that anybody would actually want are extra cost options. A K98 in 8x33 Kurz just doesn't make any sense to me.
The non-refundable deposit doesn't seem reasonable to me, either, when we have no idea when they will actually arrive. If I wanted one, I would wait until they are in country.
way too expensive although it does make a Tikka CTR more attractive
beautiful. but very expensive. I mean, I can hunt around and find a WWII K98K for less than a 1000$. Sure it might not be sub-MOA, but I mean, who's using a K98K for some sort of precision shooting anyways?