The Savage Palma is a good rifle, but there are better ways of achieving the same results. There has been a certain amount of discussion in the DCRA about a class called "affordable rifle". The Marksman journal on the DCRA website has those articles. There is some discussion (as I recall) about which models are meeting the cut for accuracy. But I don't recall if the Savage Palma made the list.
Do I know who has any? No. But the Savage distributor in Canada may know and be able to answer that question. Let your fingers do the walking.
Does the savage palma rifle require that you turn the front barrel for the sights to fit?
I'd like to get into palma this year, but really have no idea where to start with the sights.
I made a custom front sight for a Savage Palma rifle and the barrel was 1 inch. The sight was a massive hunk of aluminum. I know Ric had the barrel turned down on the ORA target rifle to fit one of my 3/4" front sights. Is Savage now turning the end of the barrel down before they leave the factory?
... Both front and rear sights will need inserts or irises, try Range Sports in Kamloops. Expect to pay circa $200 for the pair.
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Epps have a Savage Palma in stock, so there are at least some north of the border. If I was starting out in Palma shooting today, it would be an easy decision to go for the Savage Palma over a custom rifle. The savings are huge. My estimate is a Savage Palma is on the range fully fitted for $3,000, a Savage 12 FTR for $2,300 (but the balance for sling shooting is not as good) or a custom rifle like an RPA or Barnard for $4,500+
I have decided to go with my F/TR for now.
Hmm, buy less rifle to start out? This is where I don't recommend going cheap. A good TR rifle will last a lifetime. Buying a used one with all the bullseyes shot out isn't setting a new shooter up for success. Nor is necessarily choosing a suboptimal competitive rifle the road to winning.