SidecarFlip
Well-Known Member
A fiar statement. Far as value received for the cash spent, it's hard to beat Savage Arms.
I was a Ruger buyer for many years, I just got tired of reworking triggers and fiddling with bedding to get a rifle to consistently group. I'm still quite fond of my Ruger No.1 in 300 Wby Magnum but it took a lot of fiddling to get it to group.
Not so with Savage (other than insuring the barrel is completely free floating as in Accustock). I've had to remove the action and sand a bit of the stock away to achieve a true free float in the past, not every one, but a couple.
Savage has spoiled me with their trigger group, especially the red tang benchrest trigger. I see others copying Savage now but I'll stick with the original.
I was a Ruger buyer for many years, I just got tired of reworking triggers and fiddling with bedding to get a rifle to consistently group. I'm still quite fond of my Ruger No.1 in 300 Wby Magnum but it took a lot of fiddling to get it to group.
Not so with Savage (other than insuring the barrel is completely free floating as in Accustock). I've had to remove the action and sand a bit of the stock away to achieve a true free float in the past, not every one, but a couple.
Savage has spoiled me with their trigger group, especially the red tang benchrest trigger. I see others copying Savage now but I'll stick with the original.