Sako full stock is back!

Link worked for me. It looks like a one piece stock this time. I had one with the two piece stock and it gave me nothing but trouble. Nice looking gun.

It sure does look like a two-piece one to me. I did use 200% magnification to have a good look. A two piece one is supposed to be more accurate....... don't quote me... just repeating what I just read on some other forums (lots of discussion on full stocked rifle on the Internet and very interesting reading).

Duke1
 
Just a beautiful rifle. To my eye, all of the lines are... perfect. Except its not a leftie.

As to why buy that Sako when you can buy a synthetic stocked remmie 700 in 30-06..cause I can and because I want to.

Its different, its original, its old school, its my solution with a twist to a problem that you may not care about.

I don't understand why people still ask this question. Its all about choice.

Cheers

O'Kelly's Boys
 
Why would any serious shooter opt for a full wood stock? We all know how humidity affects shooting accuracy on guns with normal wood stocks and I can just imagine what it would be with a full stock that is not completely free floating?


There is more to accuracy via barrel harmonics then just free floating.
Case in point the Swedish Mausers, and Fin Mosins, among many others.

As long as the contact point does not change then ones barrel harmonics should stay the same. More wood generally means more support.
 
The Bavarian goes for $1999 from wholesale sports...hopefully the full stock won't be any more...have a receiver peep sight or little 1-4x scope tossed on...beautiful
 
I have four fullstock rifles, I may need to add just one more....
About the accuracy comments, all of mine shoot very well. It has to do with how carefully the action and barrel are bedded, and what quality of wood was used. Sadly, too many common rifles are bedded poorly and use indifferent wood, so accuracy and consistency suffer. Old world quality and craftsmanship can produce very accurate rifles with full stocks. But all the details must be right. I have confidence in Sako. My fullstock rifles are an Anschutz 1418 .22LR, Anschutz 1433 .22 Hornet, Brno 22f 7x57, and Sako L61R 30-06. I think a M85 Bavarian fullstock carbine in 9.3x62 would complete that collection nicely. Waidmannsheil!
 
Sako85RecoilLug.jpg
 
Interesting that people are still trying to pass judgement on the "tiny" recoil lug and the wood screws on the M85 recoil lug bracket.
The bracket is VERY well seated in a deep mortise and the screws are only there to keep it from falling out. The area under the bracket has at least as much contact with solid wood as most any other system. The only departure from "normal" is that the recoil lug system is in two parts, but that's too much innovation for a lot of folks it seems.
The proof is in the function, and M85's do not come with a MOA guarantee for no reason. They shoot very well.
 
Interesting that people are still trying to pass judgement on the "tiny" recoil lug and the wood screws on the M85 recoil lug bracket.
The bracket is VERY well seated in a deep mortise and the screws are only there to keep it from falling out. The area under the bracket has at least as much contact with solid wood as most any other system. The only departure from "normal" is that the recoil lug system is in two parts, but that's too much innovation for a lot of folks it seems.
The proof is in the function, and M85's do not come with a MOA guarantee for no reason. They shoot very well.

I don't know that I'd call it innovative. Some of us have seen similar designs over the years in different guns. Some held up, some didn't.
It seems like an afterthought. The receiver is a 75 that has been altered.
On a gun in this price range it would be nice if they would bed it into the stock.


Here is a nice little 6.5x55....

100_2516b.jpg
 
Back
Top Bottom