Which .22 for silhouette?
- dwl
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Damn! I musta fell offn the truck cause this conversation's gone somewhere else and I'm standing on the side of the road. I thought LH2 wanted an affordable gun for a beginner!
Dont' listen to me, buy the Anshcutz. You'll skip wasting all that money buying stuff you'll replace later anyways, can't loose. I oughta know.
dwl
Dont' listen to me, buy the Anshcutz. You'll skip wasting all that money buying stuff you'll replace later anyways, can't loose. I oughta know.
dwl
- GeoNLR
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...
You know the funny thing is these guys TYPICALY are the ones that not only skip 1-2 years worth of trials but seem to START at the top of A and make AA quickly.... I went through COUNTLESS set-ups and mutiple years before I purchased my annie and then went from A to AAA in hunter in just about 12 months or so...
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For what it's worth...
For what it's worth....
I saw a beautiful Anschutz 1416 at the local gun shop today. It was a very lightly used rifle which was traded in on something new. The rifle had a nice scope and rings setup. The shop was asking $625 for the whole setup.
I saw a beautiful Anschutz 1416 at the local gun shop today. It was a very lightly used rifle which was traded in on something new. The rifle had a nice scope and rings setup. The shop was asking $625 for the whole setup.
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Gotta be one oddball in every crowd, guess that'd be me, so pleased to meet ya.
Desiring an "American Made"? obvious $$ range in initial post, but quickly became interested in the 17xx's series at way over a grand new.
So here's my thoughts on the idea. First off if you're starting out and are unsure of future interest, resale of investment must be considered. However, too timid an approach in terms of equipment can cause a less than exciting beginning in the sport which could kill your interest (for some people: I started with pure junk, a Sears single shot, made by Marlin back in '62 or so that I hacked up the stock on and a .308ADL for HP). Year or so later picked up an Anshutz 54MS from a BR shooter, lasted a few years, and will soon have it up for sale to finance my current line of thinking. Think in terms of evolutionary development, you will change everything about everything if you stay on the learning curve long enough.
My vote is for none of the above. Since the CMP has put a few hundred 40Xs on the market prices have dropped from a grand to $750 or so for rifles. The action will fit in any SA 700 stock, will you have future plans to try HP? Training with the same gun has major benefits, Jewel triggers fit, rebarreling will probably be necessary unless you luck into one of the lighter contoured barreled versions, but even so, get burned out in a year or so barreled action will still sell for $750 or so, good Sil stock for 700 will always sell and you're out with min loss, and just when you though all the options were soooo clear!!! Enjoy the journey.
Carroll
Desiring an "American Made"? obvious $$ range in initial post, but quickly became interested in the 17xx's series at way over a grand new.
So here's my thoughts on the idea. First off if you're starting out and are unsure of future interest, resale of investment must be considered. However, too timid an approach in terms of equipment can cause a less than exciting beginning in the sport which could kill your interest (for some people: I started with pure junk, a Sears single shot, made by Marlin back in '62 or so that I hacked up the stock on and a .308ADL for HP). Year or so later picked up an Anshutz 54MS from a BR shooter, lasted a few years, and will soon have it up for sale to finance my current line of thinking. Think in terms of evolutionary development, you will change everything about everything if you stay on the learning curve long enough.
My vote is for none of the above. Since the CMP has put a few hundred 40Xs on the market prices have dropped from a grand to $750 or so for rifles. The action will fit in any SA 700 stock, will you have future plans to try HP? Training with the same gun has major benefits, Jewel triggers fit, rebarreling will probably be necessary unless you luck into one of the lighter contoured barreled versions, but even so, get burned out in a year or so barreled action will still sell for $750 or so, good Sil stock for 700 will always sell and you're out with min loss, and just when you though all the options were soooo clear!!! Enjoy the journey.
Carroll
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- stsbuyer
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Remington 40x
Take a look at one of my 40x 22's. It has a Brown Precision. stock, Lilja barrel and Jewell trigger. I have shot some good scores with it but still end up using my Anschutz 1712 in a Mark Pharr stock. Just another option like CB was suggesting.
Remington 40x
Remington 40x
- genphideaux
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Re: Remington 40x
Is that something that must be built, or are these sold complete?stsbuyer wrote:Take a look at one of my 40x 22's. It has a Brown Precision. stock, Lilja barrel and Jewell trigger. I have shot some good scores with it but still end up using my Anschutz 1712 in a Mark Pharr stock. Just another option like CB was suggesting.
On another note, is there any reason to believe the Sako Quad, with .22lr barrel shouldn't be a very accurate rifle?
- genphideaux
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- stsbuyer
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40x
My 40x was built by Butch Hongisto a BR gunsmith out of Missouri. I bought the action and barrel from him. I sent the stock to him for bedding. I installed the trigger and had it painted local. This project took the better of 9 months to complete. I am in the process of building another 40x in a Mark Pharr stock carved out of a nice piece of maple. I am right at 8 month along on this one. Here is a picture of the stock, can't wait until it is done.
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Just curious
STSbuyer:
Just curious - what is it about the 1712/Pharr rifle that you prefer over the 40X/Brown Precision rifle. Is the new Pharr maple stock a replacement for the Brown Precision stock, or is it for a different 40X action altogether? You must have some difficult decisions to make when it comes to selecting a rifle for a silhouette match. LOL.
SteveM.
Just curious - what is it about the 1712/Pharr rifle that you prefer over the 40X/Brown Precision rifle. Is the new Pharr maple stock a replacement for the Brown Precision stock, or is it for a different 40X action altogether? You must have some difficult decisions to make when it comes to selecting a rifle for a silhouette match. LOL.
SteveM.
- stsbuyer
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Re: Just curious
I like the Anchutz/Pharr combination because of the two stage trigger and the fact that it is a repeater. The repeater makes it possible to work the wind and to not have to break position for the next shot. The Pharr stock has a higher check and better palm swell.Jetmugg wrote:STSbuyer:
Just curious - what is it about the 1712/Pharr rifle that you prefer over the 40X/Brown Precision rifle. Is the new Pharr maple stock a replacement for the Brown Precision stock, or is it for a different 40X action altogether? You must have some difficult decisions to make when it comes to selecting a rifle for a silhouette match. LOL.
SteveM.
The maple stock is for another 40x, I just wanted it. Nothingto do with need, and yes I have several smallbore sporters. But as I said the 1712 is old reliable. It holds zero and seems to be what I shoot the best scores with.
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40X versus 1712.
I had either forgotten or didn't realize (the mind is a terrible thing to lose) that the Rem 40X were single shot actions. Did they ever make a 40X repeater?
I have seen pics of your red, white, and blue 1712/Pharr creation on other threads. Simply beautiful.
SteveM.
I have seen pics of your red, white, and blue 1712/Pharr creation on other threads. Simply beautiful.
SteveM.