disappointed in Sako

hawk-i

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Was going to drop the coin to buy a Sako 85 finlight 7 rem mag today.
Mounted a Leupold 3-9x40 scope in Leupold med. Sako rings. This rifle with scope had a 100% failure to eject on spent cases. Every time the case would hit the windage knob on the scope a fall back into the chamber...wtf 2300.00 and it won't eject a fired case?
Very disappointing.
 
The problem is current Sako ejects straight up. A known design flaw yet ppl put up with it.

Can't put up with crap like that from a 2300.00 rifle
. The rifle is still in the store and my cash is in my pocket. ..maybe Sako should buy a few savage axis rifles and take notes on case ejection.
 
Would that make a difference?

I don't believe so. unless you can find some European mounts that give you an offset to the left. It s a really really poor engineering practice from Bretta. My Norc 223 bolt can kick the case to the right like it should. I almost bought a sako 85 but this issue killed it and I have seen it does that at the range.
 
I have a model 85 in 6.5se with sako extra low rings and bases with a 30mm tube scope never had any issues or marks on the bottom of my scope. Also had the same set up with leupold rings mounts and still no issue, guess i got lucky
 
The Sako 85 ejector is at the 6 o'clock position. Brass pivots about the 10 o'clock position extractor on the way out. No issues with my .375 H&H Mag. Kodiak (Leupold VX-2 1-4x20mm) or .300 Win. Mag. Grey Wolf (Leupold VX-2 Ultralight 3-9x33mm). Glad because these are very fine rifles. :d

However, ejected brass can hit the windage turret if it's long enough causing brass not to clear the action properly.

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Sako's response to this issue -

Occasionally, we receive customer complaints regarding Sako rifles ejecting spent cases that either strike the scope or strike the scope turret and fall back inside the action of the rifle. This situation is predominately caused by both the scope mounts and type of scope (particularly scopes with extended turrets) installed on the rifle. A secondary consideration is how rigorously the bolt is operated by the user.

Beretta will not consider rifles that exhibit the condition above to be a warranty issue. Provided that the rifle fully extracts and ejects the spent casing, the rifle will be considered functional and serviceable. Sako Arms cannot anticipate every possible scope mounting configuration when designing their rifles. Since the selection and installation of the scope and mounts are determined by the owner, it is the owner's responsibility to ensure that the system will not interfere with the operation of the rifle.

An extremely small number of rifles have been returned for service for this issue and our analysis has indicated that the combination of scope mounts, scope type and scope turret location in relation to the ejection path of the spent casing have been the proximate cause creating this condition. In order to alleviate this condition, we recommend that the owner try various scope mounting options to find the one that works best.
 
The Sako 85 ejector is at the 6 o'clock position. Brass pivots about the 10 o'clock position extractor on the way out. No issues with my .375 H&H Mag. Kodiak (Leupold VX-2 1-4x20mm) or .300 Win. Mag. Grey Wolf (Leupold VX-2 Ultralight 3-9x33mm). Glad because these are very fine rifles. :d

However, ejected brass can hit the windage turret if it's long enough causing brass not to clear the action properly.

35666273650_bda6047ede_b.jpg


35246701963_c14a72e4d0_b.jpg


35225270474_c69222d3f6_b.jpg


Sako's response to this issue -

Occasionally, we receive customer complaints regarding Sako rifles ejecting spent cases that either strike the scope or strike the scope turret and fall back inside the action of the rifle. This situation is predominately caused by both the scope mounts and type of scope (particularly scopes with extended turrets) installed on the rifle. A secondary consideration is how rigorously the bolt is operated by the user.

Beretta will not consider rifles that exhibit the condition above to be a warranty issue. Provided that the rifle fully extracts and ejects the spent casing, the rifle will be considered functional and serviceable. Sako Arms cannot anticipate every possible scope mounting configuration when designing their rifles. Since the selection and installation of the scope and mounts are determined by the owner, it is the owner's responsibility to ensure that the system will not interfere with the operation of the rifle.

An extremely small number of rifles have been returned for service for this issue and our analysis has indicated that the combination of scope mounts, scope type and scope turret location in relation to the ejection path of the spent casing have been the proximate cause creating this condition. In order to alleviate this condition, we recommend that the owner try various scope mounting options to find the one that works best.

What a crock...the scope and ring height combo works on all my other rifles just fine but not this Sako.
Easy fix, buy something other than a Sako 85 .
 
SAKO began going downhill when they changed the design of their L61 series rifles. Sorry to say, but today they are poorly designed and way overpriced remnants of what was once the finest available.

Imagine telling a customer who has just spent over two grand on his SAKO rifle, even if using SAKO rings, that he can only expect certain scopes to be mounted without compromising the reliability of the rifle.

Clearly the result of cost-cutting efforts in engineering.

Ted
 
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Never experienced and or heard of this issue on any model or Grade of Husqvarna...and I install all of my scopes as low and snug to the action as possible...
 
I have only owned two Sako 85s, but neither has this problem. A hunting partner also has as 85, and it is flawless as well. It makes me wonder why it is an issue with some rifles and not with others.
 
I have only owned two Sako 85s, but neither has this problem. A hunting partner also has as 85, and it is flawless as well. It makes me wonder why it is an issue with some rifles and not with others.

I have friends with 85s and they don't have problems either, but it comes up quite often on the forum and has for a number of years. There clearly is an issue of some sort. It usually is an issue with 2.5" long cases, as it's pretty rare to hear someone complain about it with a short action cartridge or a full length 2.85" class cartridge.

If you have a Leupold (They have pretty darn small windage turrets on hunting models ) in medium rings, and it won't extract, the rifle is defective/garbage. Sorry Sako.
 
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