irony?
Howdy!
The way it is for me, is that with a family, and the economy down, I am too broke to do much. However, I don't intend to be broke forever, at least I hope not. I am trying to learn as much as I can now, so that when I do get the chance to get into competition, I will hopefully have some base of knowledge to work with.
If a guy wants a good rifle bad enough, he can probably swap/sell his way into something to start with. I don't golf, but I hear guys talk about the cost. Just speaking for myself, I would rather have the trigger time. I have swapped/sold my way into a decent rifle or two, and I know I will get stomped into the ground for a while when I get to the point where I can afford to get into competition. But that's ok. I like to shoot, and I like shooters. I also like to learn. I am convinced that you could probably spend a lifetime learning about rimfires, and it is interesting.
Gambler, it seems to me, and maybe I am wrong, that the push for factory rifles is a poor attempt to stop an equipment race. Trouble is, there will ALWAYS be people with more money than others to invest in better equipment. I don't begrudge them, I am happy that they are in a good financial position. But it seems to me that for what that guy with the 40x probably paid for it, he could have bought a good purpose built br gun. I guess there is the irony.
I like the run whatya brung idea. I also like finding stuff that shoots all out of proportion to what it costs. May not work as easily in rimfire competition, but there are deals out there. I have had more fun with Swedish Mausers than you can shake a stick at. Finding someone at a range that is being cocky about how good and expensive his rifle is, and outshooting him with a Swede, all the while being humble about it, is BIG fun. The more humble you are, the more it eats them alive that they got beat with what they think is just an old surplus "clunker".
Regarding Swedes, if they don't know, they just don't know. NEVER make fun of a guy with a Swedish Mauser!
I have a Remington 37 built by Eric Johnson with one of his barrels. Frankly, it doesn't look too good. I did not buy it for it's looks. It shoots good. Pretty is as pretty does, and it does pretty! Trouble is, I would not be allowed to shoot it in a factory class shoot because of the barrel and the Canjar trigger. I am not really interested in a straight factory gun. I am interested in the most accurate rifle I can come up with.
Isn't benchrest rimfire about ultimate accuracy? If people are only allowed straight factory guns in a competition, are they really get the ultimate accuracy?
Greg