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Hunting
Long Range Hunting & Shooting
810Y one-shot kill Lazz WARBIRD
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<blockquote data-quote="Mike 338" data-source="post: 865040" data-attributes="member: 41338"><p>It seems to me the real advances in hunting rifles lately haven't been in rifles at all but rather in range finding equipment, portable ballistic solutions and bullets. Assuming you have a rifle and the skill that's up to the task, ultra flat shooting chamberings that shoot light to medium weight bullets, carry less of a premium than they used to. Once you hit the $4000 mark, you can get into just about anything you want but you'll have to wait and usually it's a one man show. If there's a problem, it could be half a year just to get him to look at it, if he's still in business. I don't have any problem with the price of Lazz rifles. Apparently they're accurate, reliable and well made. Placing your product at a price point where cost really isn't an issue because your customer can afford anything he wants makes sense in many regards. I can't afford the rifle or to shoot it but that's not a Lazz problem. That's a me problem. That said, I definitely don't think I'm ill prepared for the "hunt of a lifetime" because I'm not toting a Lazz rifle although if I was, I think I'd be confident it wouldn't misfire, have cycling problems and could punch a hole into what I was aiming at assuming I was within my capable range, I called the range/wind correctly and didn't yank the shot. My personal opinion is that at the sales price point, Lazz rifles should never be compared with factory offerings but rather high-end customs. I think the kind of guy that buys a Lazz rifle is the guy that's always wanted one.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Mike 338, post: 865040, member: 41338"] It seems to me the real advances in hunting rifles lately haven't been in rifles at all but rather in range finding equipment, portable ballistic solutions and bullets. Assuming you have a rifle and the skill that's up to the task, ultra flat shooting chamberings that shoot light to medium weight bullets, carry less of a premium than they used to. Once you hit the $4000 mark, you can get into just about anything you want but you'll have to wait and usually it's a one man show. If there's a problem, it could be half a year just to get him to look at it, if he's still in business. I don't have any problem with the price of Lazz rifles. Apparently they're accurate, reliable and well made. Placing your product at a price point where cost really isn't an issue because your customer can afford anything he wants makes sense in many regards. I can't afford the rifle or to shoot it but that's not a Lazz problem. That's a me problem. That said, I definitely don't think I'm ill prepared for the "hunt of a lifetime" because I'm not toting a Lazz rifle although if I was, I think I'd be confident it wouldn't misfire, have cycling problems and could punch a hole into what I was aiming at assuming I was within my capable range, I called the range/wind correctly and didn't yank the shot. My personal opinion is that at the sales price point, Lazz rifles should never be compared with factory offerings but rather high-end customs. I think the kind of guy that buys a Lazz rifle is the guy that's always wanted one. [/QUOTE]
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810Y one-shot kill Lazz WARBIRD
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