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Hunting
The Basics, Starting Out
First Rifle questions
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<blockquote data-quote="Kiowa Cowboy" data-source="post: 3027571" data-attributes="member: 127211"><p>I agree with this. I hunted with a Sako A7 for a long time in the original plastic stock. It shoots great with the factory stock. It's basically a Tikka. The advantages of the plastic stock are its resistance to weather and durability. Big deal if you scratch them. Big deal if they get rained on. I hate scratching a nice piece of wood. And wood can swell in the rain. I recently put my Sako in a Bell a Carlson stock. I really like the B&C. But the new stock has not noticeably improved accuracy. The gun still shoots great. I think this will also be your experience with the TIKKA. They shoot great right out of the box. If you decide to upgrade the stock it will be more of a preference thing. The plastic stock is not necessarily the worst thing, because it won't affect function or accuracy.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Kiowa Cowboy, post: 3027571, member: 127211"] I agree with this. I hunted with a Sako A7 for a long time in the original plastic stock. It shoots great with the factory stock. It's basically a Tikka. The advantages of the plastic stock are its resistance to weather and durability. Big deal if you scratch them. Big deal if they get rained on. I hate scratching a nice piece of wood. And wood can swell in the rain. I recently put my Sako in a Bell a Carlson stock. I really like the B&C. But the new stock has not noticeably improved accuracy. The gun still shoots great. I think this will also be your experience with the TIKKA. They shoot great right out of the box. If you decide to upgrade the stock it will be more of a preference thing. The plastic stock is not necessarily the worst thing, because it won't affect function or accuracy. [/QUOTE]
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