OntarioHunter
Well-known member
- Joined
- Sep 11, 2020
- Messages
- 5,980
Look on the used shelves and Gun Broker. I'm betting you can find a very nice older used .308 or 30-06 for a fraction of the cost of new Tikka, Vanguard, etc. Most of the new guns in affordable range leave me cold. They may shoot the lights out but synthetic, laminate, stainless, creakote, and rough machining don't do it for me. And beware the lightweight gun if you are recoil adverse. Who makes a gun these days that isn't "lightweight"?
This old WWII Springfield is easy on the eyes, smooth as silk (now), comfortable to shoot, and will kill anything in the ranges you're considering. I see sporterized Springfields up on Gun Broker all the time nicer than mine for $500-$600. But the ugly real deal original military configuration ones go for three times that much. Two years ago I passed on a very lightly used Sako Finbear in a Kalispell, MT shop for $900 (negotiable) and I don't think a finer rifle was ever made. A 375 H&H is not what you need but it's just one example of what's available if you shop used. Then you'll have enough money left for a really good scope. Truth be told, good optics can be MUCH more important for hunting success than rifle model or sub-MOA groups. Good luck
This old WWII Springfield is easy on the eyes, smooth as silk (now), comfortable to shoot, and will kill anything in the ranges you're considering. I see sporterized Springfields up on Gun Broker all the time nicer than mine for $500-$600. But the ugly real deal original military configuration ones go for three times that much. Two years ago I passed on a very lightly used Sako Finbear in a Kalispell, MT shop for $900 (negotiable) and I don't think a finer rifle was ever made. A 375 H&H is not what you need but it's just one example of what's available if you shop used. Then you'll have enough money left for a really good scope. Truth be told, good optics can be MUCH more important for hunting success than rifle model or sub-MOA groups. Good luck