Foremost, I'm no David Tubb or Jake Vibbert. In fact, I'm just getting into the PRS world, and this was strictly due to my attraction to the Ruger Precision Rifle. Call me a Fanboy, but I'm objective and unbiased, and know the limitations of the system. The RPR is massed produced, with mediocre quality control, frequent manufacturing defects, and various demons that make each RPR different from another. But I also think its one of the most ergonomic and well balanced rifles I've used, and have tried many, including Tac-21, Cadex, MacMillan, etc. I'm also a tinkerer, and trust me when I say the RPR takes a fare bit of massaging to get it where you want it.
I Love my RPR's, but, it's been a journey. IMVHO, it's a great entry level rifle, if you're thinking about trying a precision match. Out of the box, it's generally a 1/2 moa rifle, but this varies wildly, depending on your setup and skill level. My first 308 shot +1 moa groups. Returned that and got the Creedmoor, which was hilariously accurate; like same-hole-at-100-yards accurate, running Hornady factory ammo. The problem was, once the barrel got past 300 rounds, all that went to hell, and no amount of cleaning, tinkering and refouling could bring it back below 1/2 moa; luck of the draw, I guess.
In the field.
At a recent PRS match, I watched experienced shooters with S&B scopes, mounted to gorgeous rifles from Cadex, MacMillan, etc, flounder during several simple stages. It was blatantly obvious that the rifle was not the issue. There was also a competitor from China, who won the production class, with an RPR & Nightforce NXS combo, beating some rather disgruntled high end gun owners. So yes, in good hands, the RPR can shoot, and hold its own. If I'm grouping over 1/2 moa, I know its not the rifle, its me.
If you like the aesthetic of any rifle, and it feels good under you, go for it, RPR or otherwise. Spend the time shooting rather than shopping, and you'll see that your skills can make up for most deficiencies in the gun, if there actually are any.
Some issues I had with mine, were as follows:
1) stock Samson hand guard mount was GARBAGE, and lends nothing to stabilizing this. Being round, it is difficult to stabilize and brace on rails, fenced, barrels, etc. Upgrade this if you decide to stay with the RPR. these sell quickly on CGN as they do work VERY well on AR platforms, and are a perfect 3-gun hand guard.
2) Trigger is strange with the blade setup. I removed mine, trimmed the spring, then cranked the tension and gave the sear a little polish. Much nicer, breaks cleaner and does so at about 2 3/4 pounds, which IMHO is safe for competition.
3) Bolt. I used a sharpie on the lugs to check seating, then, after finding one was not setting, used a small amount of 800 and 1200 grit lapping compound to smooth them out, by putting tiny dabs on the suspect lug, and cycling the bolt about a hundred times, re-checking every dozen or so iterations.
- I also took the time to buff the bolt with some very light compound, and did the same with the upper and its internal surfaces, using a dremel. It's actually pretty impressive now. When you first cycle the RPR's bolts, out of the box that is, you can usually hear the machining grooves of the bolt and rear shroud rubbing, which sounds like a very fine zipping sound. Polishing completely eliminated this, and it glides seamlessly now.
4) Stock. Once set, it works well, but adjustment is clunky and awkward. Replaced it with a PRS from Ellwood Epps, works great.
5) Barrel. I did like the original gen 1 barrel, but it was just not consistent, and found that it fouled heavily and quickly, regardless of the ammunition. After a long chat with JC from JC Custom barrels, who is a really nice guy, we worked together to develop a competition 4R 1:8 barrel, in 6.5X47 Lapua. I was so happy with it, I ordered another 6.5X47, and a 6.5 Creedmoor, which I'm now building. I had posted the development thread up here, but it was removed after it was found to violate the R&D clause of the forum. A few fellas here are running the JC barrels, and now other companies are importing some aftermarket RPR barrels. For the record though, a hand lapped, F-Class, stainless, bored after contouring, Rifle cut, hand machined barrel, is about as good as it gets.
Value
The Ruger RPR lets you shoot in the production class right out of the box. Add a respectable optic, and shoot away. The low price point for a complete rifle lets you supplement other gear that is very much a necessity for a PRS match, which can include, but is not limited to:
Rangefinder $300-800
Scope $500-unlimited
Bipod $100-400
Shooting bags (set of 3)- plump, medium & stock rest $200-600
Muzzle brake- $100-300
Range bag $60-300
Extra Magazines $50-500
Tripod & Head $100-500
Spotting scope or Binos $100-unlimited
Accessories- Flags/dope book/practice target sheets/etc $50-200
Cleaning Kit $50-400
Shooting Matt- $60-300
Ammunition- $.70-$4 per round.
Tally that up, and a $1500 ready to shoot rig is a pretty good deal. Once you've grown comfortable, you can then upgrade just about everything on it, as you see fit:
Barrel- JC Custom Barrels(Canadian) makes unbelievable stainless, hand lapped barrels for the RPR, in 308, Creedmoor, 6.5X47 Lapua and more. $600-700 IMHO this is the best upgrade barrel on the market; I have three.
Stock- Magpul PRS is an excellent option $300
Handguard- Seekins Precision V3 RPR in 12" or 15", $200USD
Trigger- Timney is releasing a single and two stage competition version for the RPR, est $150USD
Bipod- Harris or Atlas with Swivel & Cant $200-600
Scope- Vortex PST or Razor gen 1, Bushnell Elite, or similar in the 5-25X range(rarely will you use past 20X in PRS) $1200-2000
Magazines- AI style steel Magazines with the MPA floor extensions $80-150
Brake- Cadex MX1 or APA Fat Bastard or Little Bastard.
There's also the new bolts from PTG, stocks and numerous upgrades in the aftermarket pipeline.
So, grab an RPR in 6.5, 400 rounds of good ammo, like Hornady 129, 140 or 143 eld, add an entry level Mil/Mil scope, check out some great PRS tutorials on Snipers Hide etc, and go shoot.
I know that Bullseye in London has a bunch of Gen 2's and everything else you'll need to get started. There's active links to most vendors here; check them out.
I Love my RPR's, but, it's been a journey. IMVHO, it's a great entry level rifle, if you're thinking about trying a precision match. Out of the box, it's generally a 1/2 moa rifle, but this varies wildly, depending on your setup and skill level. My first 308 shot +1 moa groups. Returned that and got the Creedmoor, which was hilariously accurate; like same-hole-at-100-yards accurate, running Hornady factory ammo. The problem was, once the barrel got past 300 rounds, all that went to hell, and no amount of cleaning, tinkering and refouling could bring it back below 1/2 moa; luck of the draw, I guess.
In the field.
At a recent PRS match, I watched experienced shooters with S&B scopes, mounted to gorgeous rifles from Cadex, MacMillan, etc, flounder during several simple stages. It was blatantly obvious that the rifle was not the issue. There was also a competitor from China, who won the production class, with an RPR & Nightforce NXS combo, beating some rather disgruntled high end gun owners. So yes, in good hands, the RPR can shoot, and hold its own. If I'm grouping over 1/2 moa, I know its not the rifle, its me.
If you like the aesthetic of any rifle, and it feels good under you, go for it, RPR or otherwise. Spend the time shooting rather than shopping, and you'll see that your skills can make up for most deficiencies in the gun, if there actually are any.
Some issues I had with mine, were as follows:
1) stock Samson hand guard mount was GARBAGE, and lends nothing to stabilizing this. Being round, it is difficult to stabilize and brace on rails, fenced, barrels, etc. Upgrade this if you decide to stay with the RPR. these sell quickly on CGN as they do work VERY well on AR platforms, and are a perfect 3-gun hand guard.
2) Trigger is strange with the blade setup. I removed mine, trimmed the spring, then cranked the tension and gave the sear a little polish. Much nicer, breaks cleaner and does so at about 2 3/4 pounds, which IMHO is safe for competition.
3) Bolt. I used a sharpie on the lugs to check seating, then, after finding one was not setting, used a small amount of 800 and 1200 grit lapping compound to smooth them out, by putting tiny dabs on the suspect lug, and cycling the bolt about a hundred times, re-checking every dozen or so iterations.
- I also took the time to buff the bolt with some very light compound, and did the same with the upper and its internal surfaces, using a dremel. It's actually pretty impressive now. When you first cycle the RPR's bolts, out of the box that is, you can usually hear the machining grooves of the bolt and rear shroud rubbing, which sounds like a very fine zipping sound. Polishing completely eliminated this, and it glides seamlessly now.
4) Stock. Once set, it works well, but adjustment is clunky and awkward. Replaced it with a PRS from Ellwood Epps, works great.
5) Barrel. I did like the original gen 1 barrel, but it was just not consistent, and found that it fouled heavily and quickly, regardless of the ammunition. After a long chat with JC from JC Custom barrels, who is a really nice guy, we worked together to develop a competition 4R 1:8 barrel, in 6.5X47 Lapua. I was so happy with it, I ordered another 6.5X47, and a 6.5 Creedmoor, which I'm now building. I had posted the development thread up here, but it was removed after it was found to violate the R&D clause of the forum. A few fellas here are running the JC barrels, and now other companies are importing some aftermarket RPR barrels. For the record though, a hand lapped, F-Class, stainless, bored after contouring, Rifle cut, hand machined barrel, is about as good as it gets.
Value
The Ruger RPR lets you shoot in the production class right out of the box. Add a respectable optic, and shoot away. The low price point for a complete rifle lets you supplement other gear that is very much a necessity for a PRS match, which can include, but is not limited to:
Rangefinder $300-800
Scope $500-unlimited
Bipod $100-400
Shooting bags (set of 3)- plump, medium & stock rest $200-600
Muzzle brake- $100-300
Range bag $60-300
Extra Magazines $50-500
Tripod & Head $100-500
Spotting scope or Binos $100-unlimited
Accessories- Flags/dope book/practice target sheets/etc $50-200
Cleaning Kit $50-400
Shooting Matt- $60-300
Ammunition- $.70-$4 per round.
Tally that up, and a $1500 ready to shoot rig is a pretty good deal. Once you've grown comfortable, you can then upgrade just about everything on it, as you see fit:
Barrel- JC Custom Barrels(Canadian) makes unbelievable stainless, hand lapped barrels for the RPR, in 308, Creedmoor, 6.5X47 Lapua and more. $600-700 IMHO this is the best upgrade barrel on the market; I have three.
Stock- Magpul PRS is an excellent option $300
Handguard- Seekins Precision V3 RPR in 12" or 15", $200USD
Trigger- Timney is releasing a single and two stage competition version for the RPR, est $150USD
Bipod- Harris or Atlas with Swivel & Cant $200-600
Scope- Vortex PST or Razor gen 1, Bushnell Elite, or similar in the 5-25X range(rarely will you use past 20X in PRS) $1200-2000
Magazines- AI style steel Magazines with the MPA floor extensions $80-150
Brake- Cadex MX1 or APA Fat Bastard or Little Bastard.
There's also the new bolts from PTG, stocks and numerous upgrades in the aftermarket pipeline.
So, grab an RPR in 6.5, 400 rounds of good ammo, like Hornady 129, 140 or 143 eld, add an entry level Mil/Mil scope, check out some great PRS tutorials on Snipers Hide etc, and go shoot.
I know that Bullseye in London has a bunch of Gen 2's and everything else you'll need to get started. There's active links to most vendors here; check them out.



























































