How many and what kind of mods can you do and still call (say) Tikka a Tikka?

what does this have to do with the make of the firearm it's still a tikka
I chose to reply to you because you put it in a pill what must are saying.
In my eyes, it's no longer a Tikka. It's a rifle that is based on Tikka receiver.
Factory stamp? So, if I took a barrel from my old Marlin and managed to put it on a different receiver, would it be a Marlin? Heck, why just a barrel. The stock and the barrel and the action and, IIRC, some other components on my 30/30 Marlin that is about as old as I am bears factory stamps with matching numbers! Mind you, that's a piece well from before lawyer button times... God forbid that if any of these pieces was used on anything else, it validate the resulting contraption to be called a "Marlin". Sure, call me at purist or crazy or whatever. To me (not necessarily to you), Marlin ended the day Remington took it over. It could be nostalgia speaking through me but I do remember times when Remington and Tikka were best known for their sewing machines...
 
I chose to reply to you because you put it in a pill what must are saying.
In my eyes, it's no longer a Tikka. It's a rifle that is based on Tikka receiver.
Factory stamp? So, if I took a barrel from my old Marlin and managed to put it on a different receiver, would it be a Marlin? Heck, why just a barrel. The stock and the barrel and the action and, IIRC, some other components on my 30/30 Marlin that is about as old as I am bears factory stamps with matching numbers! Mind you, that's a piece well from before lawyer button times... God forbid that if any of these pieces was used on anything else, it validate the resulting contraption to be called a "Marlin". Sure, call me at purist or crazy or whatever. To me (not necessarily to you), Marlin ended the day Remington took it over. It could be nostalgia speaking through me but I do remember times when Remington and Tikka were best known for their sewing machines...
If you took the barrel off your Marlin and put it on a Rem. It be what the reciever is.

Changing the stock, trigger etc doesn't change the fact its a tikka. Called Customizing.

My No4 didn't become a M31 suomi because I used a barrel off one.
 
Looks like most everyone thinks that the defining element is the one that has virtually the least impact on accuracy and performance. Personally, I find it odd and kind of amusing to hear such things from the same people who get angry at burocrates who impose laws based on scary looks...
That is because items such as the barrel, stock, and trigger are the least defining elements of identifying what a firearm "is" or "was". The receiver/action, along with their design, markings, and mechanics, are what clearly identify the firearm.
 
OK, I get it. Everyone wants to have a perfect rifle.I got a Tikka T1x and put a scope on it. Heck, after all, it doesn't even have provisions for iron sights.
I put on it Tikka pistol grip and forearm. Added a picatinny rail to mount a tripod. Going to add a check raiser. May add a bolt shim to control the headspace. Oh, also added a muzzle break just because I didn't like the plastic thread protector. All in all, these were all additions, not replacements so; I think that my rifle is still a Tikka T1x.
Now; I see some "T1x" (or whatever other brand) with a replaced trigger assembly, barrel, stock/chassis. In effect, all what's (usually) left from the original is the receiver and the bolt... To me, it's no longer a Tikka or whatever brand that Frankenstein started as.
Once again; I'm not questioning why. I simply wonder, at what point it's no longer a Tikka or whatever other brand it started as...
My questions is... does it shoot any better?
 
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