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Hunting
Long Range Hunting & Shooting
sub 1000$ Gun (Not Custom)
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<blockquote data-quote="MudRunner2005" data-source="post: 847756" data-attributes="member: 12995"><p>The Senderos are just outside the $1K mark, usually around $1,100-1,200 from what I've seen lately.</p><p> </p><p>Yeah, I wish I could buy one of everything and try them out too, and compare, but unfortunately, like you, money stops that from happening. LOL</p><p> </p><p>Glad we could see eye-to-eye on a number of things. Just remember, there's always gonna be dicks in every sport that ruin things for the rest of us, or leave us with a disdain about certain things. But I usually just ignore that crap...Or try to atleast.</p><p> </p><p>When I posted that response, I was just wanting the OP to get a fair representation for comparison, as any and all rifle brands will have shooters and lemons. Anything man-made has the potential for failure. Which is why I put almost all factory rifles on a similar level, simply because any mass produced rifle will never be quite as capable or have the precision advantage as a custom-built rig. Tolerences in the custom are always gonna be tighter, unless you happen to get a fluke rifle that ends up perfect from the factory. Luckily for me, I ended up with several 1-hole factory shooters. Is that a common occurance, I wouldn't say so, but I also believe the nut behind the trigger has alot to do with it. I think alot of your average folks out there who claim their rifle won't shoot good, aren't capable of shooting groups like they think they should. Just my personal opinion. All rifles have to pass a test from the factory, and if it won't shoot then it gets sent back to be fixed till it will.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MudRunner2005, post: 847756, member: 12995"] The Senderos are just outside the $1K mark, usually around $1,100-1,200 from what I've seen lately. Yeah, I wish I could buy one of everything and try them out too, and compare, but unfortunately, like you, money stops that from happening. LOL Glad we could see eye-to-eye on a number of things. Just remember, there's always gonna be dicks in every sport that ruin things for the rest of us, or leave us with a disdain about certain things. But I usually just ignore that crap...Or try to atleast. When I posted that response, I was just wanting the OP to get a fair representation for comparison, as any and all rifle brands will have shooters and lemons. Anything man-made has the potential for failure. Which is why I put almost all factory rifles on a similar level, simply because any mass produced rifle will never be quite as capable or have the precision advantage as a custom-built rig. Tolerences in the custom are always gonna be tighter, unless you happen to get a fluke rifle that ends up perfect from the factory. Luckily for me, I ended up with several 1-hole factory shooters. Is that a common occurance, I wouldn't say so, but I also believe the nut behind the trigger has alot to do with it. I think alot of your average folks out there who claim their rifle won't shoot good, aren't capable of shooting groups like they think they should. Just my personal opinion. All rifles have to pass a test from the factory, and if it won't shoot then it gets sent back to be fixed till it will. [/QUOTE]
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Hunting
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sub 1000$ Gun (Not Custom)
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