MOOSE39465
Well-Known Member
Last rifle that was built for me only took 3 weeks. 2 weeks of that time was shipping.
This is a good question and not easy to answer as there are so many different reasons people are into the hobbie of shooting guns. some want benchmark accuracy without hunting in mind, some want light weight accuracy for hunting, some want speed, some want a show piece for their friends, some want tighter chambers or custom chambers to account for magazine issues, some want looks of the gun, some want a special twist rate to shoot particular bullets, some just want custom to say they have one. ive heard many people talk about custom creeds being built for them who are just going to go deer hunting (and nothing wrong with that). could go on and on and its all good stuff if you the owner are happy in the end. for the most part, for me, its not worth it. I enjoy the load testing process in making factory rifles shoot and can usually be almost .5 moa (300 yd) in the end. For some this isn't good enough and it would definitely be worth their wait if they required tighter groups. one things for sure, its a fun thing to do and thoughts may change as time with it either makes you wiser or more confused.Started pondering a 2020 project. When it comes down to it I have the knowledge base and can obtain/borrow tools to build my next long gun.
Had a conversation with my custom builder and decided to go that route.
My question for you ladies & gentlemen, what does your builder provide you that makes you willing to wait 9 months to a year-and-a-half for that build?
I like your posts, you say things that need to be said well!I would wait that long, even longer when I ordered classic rifles that had custom wood, rust bluing, specific metalwork, etc. The craftsmanship and beauty was justified, and well worth the wait for a unique work of art. For a contemporary build in which the bulk of the work is truing,chambering, bedding with +90% supplied components, for labor, I won't wait more than one to three months. Not always, but often, when long lead times are quoted, the degree of error for delivery has much more variability, usually erring on longer. There is also the possibility that the shorter lead times are reserved for existing, repeat customers which extends the lead time for new customers. Big name gunsmiths cater, and give priority to big name competitors. My approach to hiring a "first time" gunsmith is to ALWAYS rely heavily on trusted referrals, and choose based on "observed" quality of the work, and reasonable lead times on labor. IMO.
I had a well known BR smith promise me I would have the custom rifle back in 6 months. It actually took 18 months. I later learned that he completed work for his regular customers ahead of mine. I found a new gunsmith.
I would never wait that long and now with the actions that are out there and pre-fit barrels why wait, get a bighorn action a proof pre fit shoulder barrel a vice and torque wrench and what ever stock you want and be shooting in less then 4 weeks. , do a carbonfiber barrel or a S.S. oneStarted pondering a 2020 project. When it comes down to it I have the knowledge base and can obtain/borrow tools to build my next long gun.
Had a conversation with my custom builder and decided to go that route.
My question for you ladies & gentlemen, what does your builder provide you that makes you willing to wait 9 months to a year-and-a-half for that build?