How much money to get in to precision rifle shooting?

Make no mistake, there is a big difference in practical long range precision shooting, and reckoning that there is a direct correlation between the money you drain out of your bank account per rifle and its assumed performance.

I still have the first 308 I bought with the intention of having something able to 'reach out'. Its a Winchester 70, 1970's vintage, on which someone, at some point in time, put an aftermarket barrel. No idea what the twist or round count is. On it, I put a 20 min EGW rail, and mounted a Buckmasters scope with Warne rings. Paid more for the scope rings and base than the rifle, and have less than $1000 into the whole setup.

Naturally, handloading is the best way to hedge against sloppy manufacturing tolerances, so I picked up a Lee Classic Loader in 308 for $30, some powder, non-match primers and 178 grain bullets. Put it all together and give it a shake, and it shoots under minute accurate every day of the week. I've had it out to 550 on paper and 800 at rocks and it performs. Handily doubles as a hunting rifle too.

When I really decided to get adventurous, I bought a Lee hand press and a Factory Crimp Die and my groups went from sub-minute to half minute. Not bad for a $400 rifle.

If you have to ask 'what does it cost?' or 'whats the best rifle?' or how do i...?', don't bother dropping any more than $1500 on a complete setup. Get a trusty used Savage or Tikka (highly recommended, these things are worth every penny in the accuracy dept), put a rail and Nikon scope on it for a couple hundred bucks, some simple reloading gear, and you'll spend the next two or three seasons catching up to the rifle's capability. Then you'll be in a great position where you're ready to drop a couple grand on a rifle and be informed enough that you'll know exactly what you're after. My rig isn't the most stylish stick out there, but the performance exceeds all expectations.

Regarding operating cost: reloaded match ammo in 308 arena will run $1 a round, 223 about half that, Magnums a little more. The only amortized cost is the brass, running about a dime a loading for the Laupa or Norma flavors if you save FL sizing for every third or fourth reload and neck size between. If you're handy with a screw driver and an allen key, maintenance runs on the basis of parts cost only. Learning how to do your own trigger work goes a long way, but the first try is a little nerve racking. Barrel cost depends very much on velocity- shoot lightning fast loads, and you'll erode a barrel in short order; lob slower, heavier, more efficient rounds, and your barrel will thank you in turn. Based on 1000 rounds per year, a 6.5x284 might last three years or less, whereas a 308 shooting 175gr+ could go a decade.



well said:p
 
I have seen used Rem 700P on EE for 800ish, woukd this be a good gun to start off with?

It entirely depends on what you want to use it for, and what you are prepared to spend on the rest of the kit required to get into the "precision" flavour of choice. It also depends on the caliber of this gun, what results they have achieved and how many rounds are down the barrel already.

These are well-made guns with a superb action. They can be readily improved to make them accurate enough to be used in F-Class competition.

There is no black and white answer. For what it is worth, I would keep an eye out for a chap named Bob Raymond on CGN here... he hosts introductory clinics for the Ontario Rifle Association. I would Sooooooo recommend that you pop out and try one of their clinics before dropping a grand on a used gun that may - or may not - stroke your short hairs.

Above all, as a fellow shooter, I want to see you succeed and be happy within your means. There may be other ways to skin a cat.
 
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