Until a month ago, I owned 3 Kimber rifles. (
I recently sold a Montana M84).
Of the 2 Kimbers I still have, the workhorse is a long action Montana L84 chambered in .25-06, a true 'feather-weight',
and the other is a short action Stainless Classic, with a pretty AA-walnut stock and with 2 barrels: .243 and .308, and surprisingly light.
Before I purchased Kimbers, I tried going the custom route (
M700 with a PGW barrel, and a composite stock),
but the weight was still to much for a comfortable all-day carry.
The Montana solved the problem, in an affordable factory package ..
incredibly light in weight, superb balance, excellent field accuracy (
if you learn how to shoot a mountain rifle).
And by the way, for a mountain rifle, the .25-06 round is close to ideal for most small to medium sized game:
it's 120 gr bullet provides a flat trajectory and significant killing power with almost no recoil.
Unlike our custom rifles that we tend to piece together from bits and pieces,
the entire Montana package is designed to go together perfectly ..
engineered from the ground up to be as good or better than anything else out there in its category.
Yes, apparently many of the early Kimbers (
Kimber of Montana Inc.) had problems,
but the current versions (
Kimber of America Inc.) have an enviable record for quality and acc
I do like mine.