DartonJager
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Apr 1, 2016
- Messages
- 1,010
I have stumbled on a killer deal on a LNIB stainless Tikka T3 Light in 300 WSM. I have ever since Winchester first came out with the caliber wanted a rifle chambered for it, now I have a great opportunity to get one. I have literally NEVER fired a single round of factory ammo through any of my CF bolt guns, only reloads, and it would be the same for any 300 WSM I would buy.
My only concern is except for extremely expensive Norma or Nosler brass costing btwn $1.70-$2.00+ each I can not find any less expensive brass made by Winchester, Federal, or Remington in stock anywhere and I have tried every online and OTC source I could find.
What I need to know is if this difficulty in finding reasonably priced 300 WSM brass for sale is a forever thing or only temporary? Even factory ammo is averaging close to $40 per box making for a quite expensive way to obtain brass. Does anyone think the 300 WSM rifle or brass is in danger of going out of production?
lastly does anyone reading this feel in the long run (I hang on to my rifles forever) I would be better served by 300 WM instead?
I plan on using it for elk and deer hunting and picked the Tikka line for it's excellent rep for accuracy quality.
Thanks,
Arthur.
My only concern is except for extremely expensive Norma or Nosler brass costing btwn $1.70-$2.00+ each I can not find any less expensive brass made by Winchester, Federal, or Remington in stock anywhere and I have tried every online and OTC source I could find.
What I need to know is if this difficulty in finding reasonably priced 300 WSM brass for sale is a forever thing or only temporary? Even factory ammo is averaging close to $40 per box making for a quite expensive way to obtain brass. Does anyone think the 300 WSM rifle or brass is in danger of going out of production?
lastly does anyone reading this feel in the long run (I hang on to my rifles forever) I would be better served by 300 WM instead?
I plan on using it for elk and deer hunting and picked the Tikka line for it's excellent rep for accuracy quality.
Thanks,
Arthur.