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Hunting
Long Range Hunting & Shooting
Bone to pick with new rifle owners - 100 yards out of the box
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<blockquote data-quote="Turpentine21" data-source="post: 2953435" data-attributes="member: 124909"><p>I know this one has been a while back. I agree. There are a lot of rifles today straight from the factory that are capable of 1 moa and in many cases much better. My problem with many of those rifles boils down to plain old shootability. The stocks are terrible. Cheekweld for the setup can be even worse. Triggers are hit and miss. Scope mounts, parallax. Grip and reach to the trigger. I shoot all the time and can usually adapt to these things when zeroing someone else's gun but there are some of them that I find very difficult to shoot accurately. And the problem there is I'm zeroing the rifle for someone that may only shoot 3 bullets a year and isn't even proficient enough to verify zero after I have set it. Ergonomics and fit plays a large factor.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Turpentine21, post: 2953435, member: 124909"] I know this one has been a while back. I agree. There are a lot of rifles today straight from the factory that are capable of 1 moa and in many cases much better. My problem with many of those rifles boils down to plain old shootability. The stocks are terrible. Cheekweld for the setup can be even worse. Triggers are hit and miss. Scope mounts, parallax. Grip and reach to the trigger. I shoot all the time and can usually adapt to these things when zeroing someone else's gun but there are some of them that I find very difficult to shoot accurately. And the problem there is I'm zeroing the rifle for someone that may only shoot 3 bullets a year and isn't even proficient enough to verify zero after I have set it. Ergonomics and fit plays a large factor. [/QUOTE]
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Bone to pick with new rifle owners - 100 yards out of the box
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