A used BR rifle will be more accurate than the Savage, easier to shoot well, teach you more about how to shoot, and hold its resale value much better. Here's a couple in your price range, and with the competitive season (nearly)at an end for the year there will be even more good deals on the way:
http://www.benchrest.com/cgi-bin/cl...esults_format=long&db_id=8500&query=retrieval
http://www.benchrest.com/cgi-bin/cl...esults_format=long&db_id=8513&query=retrieval
That's what everyone says at first.
Let's say you shoot a couple of thousand rounds a year of 6BR (or similar). That's about $1/shot if you count consumables and barrel life, so $2K a year. In other words, the up-front cost of a rifle is rather quickly dwarfed by the ongoing costs of shooting it, so why not start with something that won't have to replaced later in the search for ultimate accuracy?
BTW, most of us started the same way you are planning to do, and ended up spending more than necessary by the time it was all over. Don't reinvent that wheel.
If there is a local BR event in your area, pay the shooters a visit. Very likely someone will give you a little trigger time, and you will see what the fanfare about custom actions/triggers/stocks/etc. is all about.
Toby Bradshaw
baywingdb@comcast.net
Toby,
All your arguments for the used quality custom rifle make sense, and the resale is one reason I was looking at the Savage. They depreciate fast, and I can get a used one cheap. But, buying a used custom may be even better for the reasons stated, but also because depreciation may have largely bottomed out.
Still, the Savage, if purchased used, can almost assuredly outshoot me, and costs little and is a gentle step into the shooting game. If used, I would not loose much if I resold. Still I recognize the superiority of the custom guns. I have shot a NBRSA heavy gun in a match and also a light gun a few times for practice. The actions are very slick and the triggers outstanding. There are things I do not like about longer range benchrest (mainly, no feedback on shots), but do wish to shoot off the bench with pinpoint accuracy, and one of the BR rifles is clearly the best way to achieve that, whatever competition it may be used in (yes, I know I will be sucked into it, sooner or later).
The two links I have already explored, but I understand 6PPC to be time consuming and costly to load. At this juncture, I would just like to use the simpler 6mmBR. I guess I could have the 6PPC rechambered at a low cost for 6mmBR? The ads speak a language for equipment that I am still struggling to understand, making it difficult for me to fully appreciate how suitable it is for me.
I checked on
www.6mmbr.com and picked one of their loads and the costs were not nearly as high per round as I thought. Please let me know if I have any of this wrong. These prices are from
www.grafs.com, and should include shipping.
Lapua Brass: $69.59/100. Used 5 times before discarding.
CCI BR4 Primers: $42.99/1000.
Hodgdon H4895 Powder: $145.99/8 lbs. + $27 Hazmat and handling charges.
Hornandy A-Max 105 grain bullets: $20.99/100
This all calculates out to $0.48/shot. According to 6mmbr.com, the 6mmBR barrel can expect to last 2500 rounds with good accuracy. A barrel from Krieger is $280. I do not know the cost to chamber and crown, but I will call it $250. That is $0.21 a shot.
All total, about $0.69 a shot. Not cheap, if one practices a lot to be sure. And there is the cost of cleaning supplies, gas, tolls, entry fees, etc. I am aware of all of this.
I am willing to spend the dollars, now, for the right things. I am a firm believer in "cry once, buy once", not "buy twice and cry twice".
- Phil