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Hunting
The Basics, Starting Out
Mountain rifle
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<blockquote data-quote="tknuts103" data-source="post: 2682932" data-attributes="member: 119653"><p>My vote is a Seekins Precision element chambered in 300 win mag. Light weight, 22 inch barrel so you can run a suppressor no problem if needed, trigger tech elite hunter trigger, and what I think is one of the best carbon composite stocks out there. I have a Seekins PH2 and the Element and I can honestly say I don't think there is a better rifle out there. If you look around you can find them 2300-2500 for the Element and around 1700 for the ph2. Both rifles are easy submoa rifles and there is almost zero movement while shooting them with a Browning recoil hawg muzzlebrake. It says it reduces the recoil up to 75 percent depending on the caliber and trust me...it does. Feels like I'm shooting a 243 when I'm shooting a super light 300 win</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="tknuts103, post: 2682932, member: 119653"] My vote is a Seekins Precision element chambered in 300 win mag. Light weight, 22 inch barrel so you can run a suppressor no problem if needed, trigger tech elite hunter trigger, and what I think is one of the best carbon composite stocks out there. I have a Seekins PH2 and the Element and I can honestly say I don't think there is a better rifle out there. If you look around you can find them 2300-2500 for the Element and around 1700 for the ph2. Both rifles are easy submoa rifles and there is almost zero movement while shooting them with a Browning recoil hawg muzzlebrake. It says it reduces the recoil up to 75 percent depending on the caliber and trust me...it does. Feels like I'm shooting a 243 when I'm shooting a super light 300 win [/QUOTE]
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