Stevens 200

andycal

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A month ago i bought Stevens 200 and I topped it with Burris 3-9 40 scope. Yesterday i went to gun range for the first time and i was surprised how god shooter this gun is. All groups were between .500 to .750 for 5 shoots for 100 yards. This is the cheapest new gun on market but it is very accurate.
 
Did you shoot factory or reloads? BTW, you bought it a month ago and shot it yesterday....my God man, what are you made of ???? :D

Good to hear though...:)
 
A month ago i bought Stevens 200 and I topped it with Burris 3-9 40 scope. Yesterday i went to gun range for the first time and i was surprised how god shooter this gun is. All groups were between .500 to .750 for 5 shoots for 100 yards. This is the cheapest new gun on market but it is very accurate.

Shhhhh..............be vewy, vewy quiet! :D

We don't want that dirty little secret to get out [about them being so accurate despite the meager cost outlay for them]..... With some dealers currently retailing them out for just under $300 right now it makes sense for every gunrack at home to have at least one Stevens 200 in it. ;)
 
With all that is said online about the Stevens 200, I am surprised that anyone who buys one is surprised at how accurate they are.
 
Forgive my ignorance, but I've never seen a Stevens close up. I've been hearing a lot of good things about them. But considering its a cheap rifle, what's the down side? When a company makes rifle that inexpensive, somethings gotta give.
 
Forgive my ignorance, but I've never seen a Stevens close up. I've been hearing a lot of good things about them. But considering its a cheap rifle, what's the down side? When a company makes rifle that inexpensive, somethings gotta give.

downsides:
-blind magazine (no hinged floorplate, no DM)
-sometimes feeding problems due to the follower/spring although Savage customer service will express courier you replacement parts in 1-2 days for any problems.
-cheap looking, so not much in the way of pride of ownership
-cheap stock with side-side forend flex... so no using a sling as a shooting aid
-no accutrigger

upsides:
-will take Savage aftermarket parts (cheap and widely available)
-easy barrel change with just a barrel wrench, GO guage, vice/pieces of 2x4
-accurate
-wicked service from Savage, they fedex stuff to you immediately
-cheapest bolt gun out there
-stock can be painted, or replaced with a Boyds or Richards Microfit stock and still cost less than other bolt guns.

i may have missed some things, by all means add to the lists.
 
I am not sure it you could convert it easily without replacing the stock and at that point, you might as well pay the extra 200 and buy a Savage with the mag and accutrigger. If you did the job at home, it would probably look exactly like that.

I have a couple 200's. They are a good value, if you buy them and shoot them as they are. If you start spending money on upgrades and stock replacements, you are way further ahead buying a different rifle to start with. Spending a couple hundred bucks on your Stevens takes away the great value that they intitially are.

Its kind of like spend 2000 bucks on wheels for your KIA, it will always be a KIA.

The downside is while being accurate, their fit and finish and the quality of the stock is low. The bedding is poor, they tend to rock in the stock until you clamp it down with the screws.
 
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Spending a couple hundred bucks on your Stevens takes away the great value that they intitially are.

Well stated.

Personalize it by possibly bedding, maybe paint. The Steven's line are simply a lost cost value rifle that are remarkable shooters. Thats the only reason I own one is that I couldn't justify spending $700 - 800 on a dedicated varmint rifle. I also know that should I wish to upgrade, it won't last long on the EE forum.

Hakx
 
Glass bedding kit is fairly cheap. A bedding kit will do a few firearms, so the cost is low and will still keep the Stevens as a good deal.
 
Glass bedding kit is fairly cheap. A bedding kit will do a few firearms, so the cost is low and will still keep the Stevens as a good deal.
My understanding was that the factory pillar bedding was usually good and that further bedding wasn't needed. YES/NO?



.
 
yeah, IMO if you are going to start spending significant money on several upgrades, then you should just step up to the Savages and get the Accutrigger.

most i would do on a Stevens personally is shave off the mould edges on the stock with a razorblade, prep it and give the stock a camo paintjob, and install an oversized bolt handle for $20.

once you start getting into DM conversions, stock upgrades, trigger upgrades, etc you may as well start with a Savage.
 
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