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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Before I sell this gun...
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<blockquote data-quote="Mike 338" data-source="post: 1504222" data-attributes="member: 41338"><p>Well, before you sell the thing, call Ruger and send it in. Nobody likes to pass off their gun to the mailman for an indeterminate amount of time, and I do mean "indeterminate", however, your gun may be a total stinker, and for good cause. Always give the company a reasonable chance to get it right. I see guys spend years and countless dollars, trying to fiddle with a gun that just won't shoot. Generally speaking, I've never had a Ruger anything that was awesome in the accuracy department but that doesn't mean a guy shouldn't make a phone call and buy a stamp to get it shipped back. Lot's of guys love their American's. Me... I got some Hawkeye's that are lame and a RPR that's inconsistent in 243. Still, if a guy isn't willing to put it in a box and send it back cause it stinks, then he hasn't done the most obvious and cost effective thing to rectify the problem. Seriously... stop spending countless hours and dollars trying to finess a gun that's crap. Just make a phone call, get a email shipping label and throw the turd in a box and send it away to it's birth mother. Chances are, you'll be totally screwed in the keister but maybe not.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Mike 338, post: 1504222, member: 41338"] Well, before you sell the thing, call Ruger and send it in. Nobody likes to pass off their gun to the mailman for an indeterminate amount of time, and I do mean "indeterminate", however, your gun may be a total stinker, and for good cause. Always give the company a reasonable chance to get it right. I see guys spend years and countless dollars, trying to fiddle with a gun that just won't shoot. Generally speaking, I've never had a Ruger anything that was awesome in the accuracy department but that doesn't mean a guy shouldn't make a phone call and buy a stamp to get it shipped back. Lot's of guys love their American's. Me... I got some Hawkeye's that are lame and a RPR that's inconsistent in 243. Still, if a guy isn't willing to put it in a box and send it back cause it stinks, then he hasn't done the most obvious and cost effective thing to rectify the problem. Seriously... stop spending countless hours and dollars trying to finess a gun that's crap. Just make a phone call, get a email shipping label and throw the turd in a box and send it away to it's birth mother. Chances are, you'll be totally screwed in the keister but maybe not. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
Before I sell this gun...
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