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Hunting
The Basics, Starting Out
300 rum
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<blockquote data-quote="Timber338" data-source="post: 1099272" data-attributes="member: 33822"><p>There are some guys on here that really know how to build a great rifle on a tight budget. Maybe they can chime in give some advice. </p><p></p><p>Is the action/barrel on your 300 RUM blued or stainless? I'm not a fan of blued rifles for the same reasons I don't like wood stocks. If it's blued, which I'm guessing it is, I would sell the rifle and use the money to fund a nice long range setup. I personally would buy a custom action and send it off to have a good 28" barrel plus brake installed. I would bed the action into a nice synthetic stock and put on a good aftermarket trigger. That's obviously going to be the more expensive side of things. </p><p></p><p>I've got a coupe ofcustom rifles and I will likely never bother with factory actions again. I would rather spend the money up front and save more time starting out with a rifle that shoots great right out of the gate.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Timber338, post: 1099272, member: 33822"] There are some guys on here that really know how to build a great rifle on a tight budget. Maybe they can chime in give some advice. Is the action/barrel on your 300 RUM blued or stainless? I'm not a fan of blued rifles for the same reasons I don't like wood stocks. If it's blued, which I'm guessing it is, I would sell the rifle and use the money to fund a nice long range setup. I personally would buy a custom action and send it off to have a good 28" barrel plus brake installed. I would bed the action into a nice synthetic stock and put on a good aftermarket trigger. That's obviously going to be the more expensive side of things. I've got a coupe ofcustom rifles and I will likely never bother with factory actions again. I would rather spend the money up front and save more time starting out with a rifle that shoots great right out of the gate. [/QUOTE]
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Hunting
The Basics, Starting Out
300 rum
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