Brand loyal BS.
Taken as a whole, these guns all shoot the same. Some from a particular brand shoot well, some shoot poorly and the majority shoot somewhere in between. The gun is only a small part of the equation when shooting at 500 meters. Precision reloading and the ability to read conditions are all essential. ...if you have to ask.
Buy something you like and remember that more money does NOT mean more accurate.
If you have to ask "what can I hunt with out to 500 yards", you generally have no business shooting at those distances...

Brand loyal BS.
Taken as a whole, these guns all shoot the same. Some from a particular brand shoot well, some shoot poorly and the majority shoot somewhere in between. The gun is only a small part of the equation when shooting at 500 meters. Precision reloading and the ability to read conditions are all essential. ...if you have to ask.
Buy something you like and remember that more money does NOT mean more accurate.
Who has the best gun out of the box and reasonably priced that I can do a little reloading and get some good groups for hunting out to 500 yds.
Before I opined on which rifle best suits your needs, I would need to know what it is you intend to hunt. There is a world of difference between a 500 yard prairie dog and a 500 yard moose. The prairie dog rifle by necessity would need to shoot half-minute groups to stay on the target at 500 yards, but the moose rifle would only need to stay within 4 MOA to get the job done.

That my friend, is simply not even true. Turrets and a range finder are absolutely meaningless without a rifle that can shoot 1/2 MOA (if shooting gophers and the like). If it can't do it, all the fancy lasers and glass in the world won't help you hit the target, and 500 yards is a hell of a long shot to be able to group decently at without an inherently accurate rifle. I wouldn't be trying it too often with a basic 700 nor a Vanguard (unless it's the sub-MOA model) as in my experience, they just don't get it done without a lot of customizing. Remember we're talking about a 2.5" group at 500 yards, not just hitting a 20" gong.
If you have to ask "what can I hunt with out to 500 yards", you generally have no business shooting at those distances...
Before I opined on which rifle best suits your needs, I would need to know what it is you intend to hunt. There is a world of difference between a 500 yard prairie dog and a 500 yard moose. The prairie dog rifle by necessity would need to shoot half-minute groups to stay on the target at 500 yards, but the moose rifle and shooter would only need to stay within 4 MOA to get the job done.
been there done that with off the self rifles with nothing done but the triggers. work up a good load and run it over the crony make a drop chart dian in and shoot. most times you have to tweak the chart or load but then your good.



























