Tikka never had the warmth Sako's had IMO. As stated above too much plastic... floor plate, clip, trigger guard, etc. All of my Sako's are from the 70's and 80's and reek with quality. Modern Sako's sadly don't seem to be finished as well as the older models IMO.
Old Sako's all the way for me X2Tikka's shoot very nicely, and even feel relatively good. However, they don't have the same attention to detail and craftsmanship that the Sakos (especially older ones) have. There are lots of cast and plastic bits, and the design screams 'mass production.'
They're both equally functional; the difference boils down to whether you want a gun that was built by robots on a production line, or lovingly designed and crafted by proud workers. And this comes through in the details.
That was the only caliber Tikka I owned that didn't shoot! I suspect it was a dud though. I have had a few other 22-250's since and they have all shot fine.I can't give you a side by side review, but my Tikka in 22-250 is awesome. I have the lite, with syn stock in stainless and it shoots great. Best group is 0.5" with whitebox ammo.
IMO, why pay more when you can get quality for less. No sense splitting hairs if its going to cost you another 2-300 bucks
The barrel (and its quality) is the single most important factor affecting accuracy. Tikka barrels are all match-grade, cold-hammer forged; that is, they are the same barrels made for the legendary SAKO rifles - same steel, same machinery, same manufacturing process and same impeccably-tight tolerances. Tikka barrels are also totally free-floated to ensure that even the roughest usage won't affect the rifle's accuracy.
IMO, why pay more when you can get quality for less. No sense splitting hairs if its going to cost you another 2-300 bucks
Depends what your idea of quality is. A barrel that shoots straight is only 1 piece of the puzzle...![]()




























