Ok, so I know I'm going to ruffle a lot of feathers but I feel as though I have to rant about this.
All the firearms I have are passed down to me from my grandfather. They all have nice walnut stocks on them and feel like a gun should.
I was in the local gun shop yesterday and decided to kill some time looking at new guns. I asked to see a tikka hunter but the guy only had a t3 lite in stock. He handed it to me and I thought he had handed me a kids BB gun. What the $%*@ is wrong with you people that like those POS "synthetic" stocks?
Synthetic is just a glorified term that they have marketed that means light plastic. In my opinion cheap synthetic stocks have no place on a store shelf until toys R us gets a license to sell firearms. I also was dually unimpressed with the tikka action that I had heard people raving about but that is a whole other matter.
Anyone else feel the same way? or have you all been brainwashed into believing that a synthetic stock is far superior for it's weight and "weather resistance"?

Amen brother!![]()
Anyone else feel the same way? or have you all been brainwashed into believing that a synthetic stock is far superior for it's weight and "weather resistance"?
Says he who was just showing off his new synthetic .260...![]()

I don't care what anyone uses, but I'll say this. If there were NEW rifles available that had anything close to nice figured walnut, your argument would be valid. The junk that manufacturers pawn off as walnut these days is no better than a quality synthetic, and is no nicer to look at either.
p.
As much as I appreciate a finely polished walnut stock, there are some major advantages to synthetic stocks. Firstly, they do not need maintenance, and do not shrink, expand or crack. Secondly, ounce for ounce, they can be stronger than wood stocks. Polymers have come a long way in the past 50 years, they are becoming more durable and lighter, literally the perfect material for a stock. Thirdly, you do not have to harvest or dry polymer stocks. They can be manufactured from a mold in a few minutes. This can greatly decrease the price of a rifle.
Again, it's not that I don't like wood stocks (I do), it's just that I think they both have their place in the firearms world.
Your jealousy is shining through again![]()
Synthetic is just a glorified term that they have marketed that means light plastic. In my opinion cheap synthetic stocks have no place on a store shelf until toys R us gets a license to sell firearms. I also was dually unimpressed with the tikka action that I had heard people raving about but that is a whole other matter.
Anyone else feel the same way?



























