Good day all,
I was recently at the CHAS gun show and met one or two of the long range shooters on this forum. I have been thinking that i want to dabble in the long range shooting, learning the ins and outs. So that means looking at a long range rifle that will do all and more than i ask of it. I have been admiring some stuff on the internet (and on here). I admit i really like the look of the M200 intervention but really, the price is too much to choke down. i want a rifle i can shoot into, meaning a rifle that is far enough above my skill level that i can grow into it. the big reason is expense. For the money, i want to be comfortable with the feel of the rifle by the time im reaching out 1000+m and not feel like i want or need something bigger or better.
My skill level might as well be nil. Most of my shooting has happened on the range from 7m to 100m (pistols and ars) and hunting. I am a left handed shooter and i'd like to try to keep it that way.
Any and all recommendations are warmly accepted, thank you.
Welcome to CGN and the wonderful sport of LR shooting. i will offer some tips to succeed and allow you to stop this journey with the least amount of risk
In LR shooting, the only things that matter are wind reading, shooting skill, reloading skill, quality optics and LASTLY rifle.
So if you want to experience LR shooting and learn alot about shooting and wind reading, grab a Savage MkII or CZ452/455 or other quality used rimfire bolt (CIL anschutz are gems) in 22LR with a stock that fits. Find which match ammo works (SK, RWS, Eley, Lapua) - price will be around $7/50 rds. Mount a quality LR scope and go shoot. There is no better teacher on gun handling AND wind reading then the 22LR.
Yes, I did say gun handling
Shoot at 200 to 300yds and you will simulate 500m and 1000 yds respectively. There is little reason the rifle will not be MOA or better at 200yds so you can practise on a ICFRA 500m target (can send no problem).
After shooting through a case of ammo, you should have gained as much skill and experience as just about anyone on this forum. Total investment minus optics around $1000/1200
Concurrently, you can look and start with a centerfire rifle. I strongly recommend the 223 and 6BR. Given your lack of shooting experience, recoil is not your friend. Neither is wearing out a bore in 800rds.
Learn to reload and I have lots of info on my website. Shoot at 300yds/m and learn and learn and learn. When you can consistently score well on the ICFRA 300m 5 ring (just under MOA), you will again know plenty about putting a bullet on a target at LR.
Anytime the opportunity arises to shoot out to 1000yds, it is only 25 to 30mins more up on your scope.
There is no magic to distance. All the work has already happened by the time the bullet passes 3 football fields. distance only makes your errors larger and more painful/frustrating. If you are sub MOA at 300yds, you will be sub MOA at 1000yds once you figure out the added wind drifts.
There is no magic to large boomers. The larger the bullet, the better the ballistics (to a point), the higher the cost/recoil and most often wear. BUT you don't need a boomer to reach out to even a mile. 6BR's and 223's have no issue even out to 1500yds (1 mile is doable but setting up the scope is a pain)
As for a centerfire rifle, I would just lean you to a heavy barrel factory rifle of your choice that you like the style of and allows you to evolve as your desires grown.
I am a huge Savage fan, Many love Rem's. Tikkas are wonderful too and a $1100 HB will take you accurately to 1000yds no problem Biggest issue is finding a stock that fits. Here you want to climb behind as many rifles as possible. There is a reason why F class rifles and BR rifles look the way they do.
If the stock and trigger are not to your liking, the metal parts that launch the bullet are not going to do their best work. The Accuracy difference between a good factory rifle and a top tier comp rifle is many times LESS then most shooters ability to read the wind at distance.
Worry less about the rifle and chambering and more about your ability to steer.... On a 10K budget, 2 to 3 K on the rifle and support gear. The rest sending lead downrange
Many people want to own a fast car. Far fewer want to learn how to drive fast....
Jerry