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Hunting
The Basics, Starting Out
Top 5 hunting rifles at/under $1K
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<blockquote data-quote="Tom Wright" data-source="post: 2004966" data-attributes="member: 108611"><p>Two suggestions and I own both. Look at Browning Xbolt and Christiansen Arms rifles. Both are easy carries, and can handle most US game. I have the Xbolt in 300WM and the Christiansen Mesa in 308. My "go-to" is the Browning as I can load from 150 to 220 grain bullets. I have used if for animals from Steenbok to Kudu and Eland, as well as fallow deer, red stags and Ibex, and it works well at home on 300 pound mulies and whitetails. I started reloading almost 60 years ago at 12, but the high quality of factory loads and the cost/availability of components has me usually going for factory ammo now. I kind of figure that if a gun and factory ammo can be accurate out to 450+ years, that's not a bad combination.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Tom Wright, post: 2004966, member: 108611"] Two suggestions and I own both. Look at Browning Xbolt and Christiansen Arms rifles. Both are easy carries, and can handle most US game. I have the Xbolt in 300WM and the Christiansen Mesa in 308. My "go-to" is the Browning as I can load from 150 to 220 grain bullets. I have used if for animals from Steenbok to Kudu and Eland, as well as fallow deer, red stags and Ibex, and it works well at home on 300 pound mulies and whitetails. I started reloading almost 60 years ago at 12, but the high quality of factory loads and the cost/availability of components has me usually going for factory ammo now. I kind of figure that if a gun and factory ammo can be accurate out to 450+ years, that's not a bad combination. [/QUOTE]
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The Basics, Starting Out
Top 5 hunting rifles at/under $1K
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