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So since starting this, I’ve been researching whenever I have time. Fortunately I don’t plan on buying this rifle for about another year. One rifle that’s intriguing is the savage 110 LRH. It has an adjustable muzzle break, so if the recoil is a bit much for my wife, We have the option of using it. I’ve looked at the 7mm mag and 280 AI in that rifle. The 280AI definitely has less bullet offerings, but has enough, and I do have the reloading equipment if needed. I’ve looked into the tikkas, brownings, and rem 700’s(it’s hard for me not to go this route since I’ve always had these). Calibers I like so far are 7mm mag, 280 ai, 270 wsm, and 308 and 7mm-08. It’s fun stuff learning this, but it’s made me realize I have a lot to learn.
I have the Savage LRH in 300 WM. I went through this exact same conundrum last year - except my wife doesn't hunt. I narrowed it down to Tikka and Savage. Savage won out due to a few factors. 1. I could order it from Savage in a different configuration than "stock" (stainless action and barrel, tighter barrel twist, larger bolt knob, etc...). 2. With the barrel nut and free floating bolt head I can easily change barrels to a different caliber and still use the same action. IT takes about 5 minutes on the bench to swap. Savage Prefit barrels are easy to find. Also, their Accustock is nice. Being a larger variety of human ive finally found a rifle that fits me. Regarding recoil, there isn't as much as with other 300 WM rifles. The stock has a nice recoil pad, and the brake really does it's job. I can confidently say that it kicks less than my Remington 700 in 30-06. I topped it with a leupold VX3 4-14 (watch Optics Planet for after xmas specials!). The first time out with it I sighted at 200 and then proceeded to consistently (90%) hit a 10" plate at 450 yards. Not shaprshooting by any means, but it was the first time I'd taken a shot past 200 yards since my days shooting National Match at Camp Perry 20+ years ago.
Anyway, I have one, love it, and don't see myself buying another rifle for a long time. Hope that helps. Good luck with the decision!
I would have to agree with this reasoning. As others have said, the 270 "anything" will have less bullet and range options.Yeah, I don’t particularly like the idea of using a brake, and my wife will probably use it only a couple times. That’s the main reason I like the idea of the savage 110 adjustable break or browning with the removable brake, so I don’t have to use it, but she can use it for the few hunts she might need it. I’m definitely leaning toward the 7 mag for the variety of ammo options.
Browning I feel makes a very solid gun and with the right optics you can do long range shooting on that platform no problem. Practice also helps and can really build the skills for that 500-600 yard shot.I’m looking at getting a new rifle in the next year, and I’m looking at increasing my shooting distance. This would be mostly for elk, and when I say long range, I mean around 500-600 yard max. I’m well aware that good ammo, lots of shooting practice, and good optics are as important as anything. That being said, any recommendations for the best rifle in the $1000ish price range. I’ve looked into the browning stalker and hells canyon long range, particularly the .300 win mag w/muzzle break, as my wife will be shooting too. I’ve always been a Remington fan too, but I’m open to different rifles and calibers. Any thoughts?
Just a little update on this one since a lot of these posts don’t get much for updates. If you read 2 posts up, that’s the setup I settled on. First off, it’s a nice shooting rifle. I changed the trigger immediately to a trigger tech and that’s the only change made. Recoil was a bit of a concern because the plan was for my wife to use it when she draws elk tags too. She’s only shot it a few times, but the recoil doesn’t bother her and she shot it well. It was a bit fussy finding a load, but not terrible. I’ve found good accuracy with H4831 about 40 thousandths off the lands. 2 straight groups with 60 grains are right at about 1/2“ at 100 yds. 61 and 62 grains were nothing special, but then 63 grains was again right at 3/4” I’m going to shoot that charge one last time and then make a decision on powder charge. I don’t have a chronograph, but using a ballistics calculator Shows 60 gr at somewhere around 2700-2750 FPS and 63 gr being around 2850-2900. Curious what other guys here would do if the higher powder charge repeats the results from the first attempt. 1/2” at 2700ish FPS or 3/4” at 150-200 FPS faster approximately?