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Hunting
The Basics, Starting Out
What youth rifle for my son?
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<blockquote data-quote="Alfred Crouch" data-source="post: 738390" data-attributes="member: 13464"><p>Do you hand load ? You would be hard pressed to beat a 260 for a beginner. A little more whump with virtually no more recoil and better downrange performance (study ballistic tables for the two). Added downrange performance becomes more and more important as he starts reaching out futher with it as he gains experience, and this will happen much quicker than you think if he shoots very much. If you don't hand load and 260 ammo isn't stocked in your locale you can always order it. It is much more readily available than most think.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Alfred Crouch, post: 738390, member: 13464"] Do you hand load ? You would be hard pressed to beat a 260 for a beginner. A little more whump with virtually no more recoil and better downrange performance (study ballistic tables for the two). Added downrange performance becomes more and more important as he starts reaching out futher with it as he gains experience, and this will happen much quicker than you think if he shoots very much. If you don't hand load and 260 ammo isn't stocked in your locale you can always order it. It is much more readily available than most think. [/QUOTE]
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The Basics, Starting Out
What youth rifle for my son?
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