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Steyr Pro Hunter, Hawke Scope and the .260 Review
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<blockquote data-quote="Laguna Freak" data-source="post: 1036362" data-attributes="member: 87188"><p>Reports of the original Pro Hunter's stock being problematic are greatly exaggerated & may even be due entirely to a single bad production run. I purchased my Steyr Pro Hunter in January 2000, chambered for the venerable .30-06 cartridge. My rifle was a true tack driver right out of the box and that with a variety of factory ammo in a variety of weather conditions ranging from freezing cold to hot Texas summers. My Pro Hunter shoots 0.5 MOA at 200 yards in a 20 mph cross wind with 180 gr factory ammo from Winchester, Remington, and Hornady. </p><p> </p><p>For a production rifle, the Steyr Pro Hunter leads the market in accuracy, safety and reliability, IMO. Plus the ergonomics are well conceived and practically implemented. There is a reason that original Steyr owners are reluctant to sell these beloved rifles.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Laguna Freak, post: 1036362, member: 87188"] Reports of the original Pro Hunter's stock being problematic are greatly exaggerated & may even be due entirely to a single bad production run. I purchased my Steyr Pro Hunter in January 2000, chambered for the venerable .30-06 cartridge. My rifle was a true tack driver right out of the box and that with a variety of factory ammo in a variety of weather conditions ranging from freezing cold to hot Texas summers. My Pro Hunter shoots 0.5 MOA at 200 yards in a 20 mph cross wind with 180 gr factory ammo from Winchester, Remington, and Hornady. For a production rifle, the Steyr Pro Hunter leads the market in accuracy, safety and reliability, IMO. Plus the ergonomics are well conceived and practically implemented. There is a reason that original Steyr owners are reluctant to sell these beloved rifles. [/QUOTE]
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