I've been down this road a number of times in the past and the only advice I can offer is use a standard off the shelf caliber that you can get in any town like 7mm rem mag, use a good standard action(lots of extra goodies avalible), strong carbon fiber stock and quality barrel. Any reputable smith should be able to put together a good light shooter that will last
Thanks for the comments guys it’s pretty cool how you can jump on here and within the space of a Sunday arvo you can have all this feedback from people who know what they are talking about. A lot to think about go down this custom building road but some of the adivce will defdently help. I think no matter what calibre I choose it sounds like a good action and a quality barrel and the key to success here so that will be a good start
Not bad advice with that Gimp, modern rifles are way better built on the most part these days.
I've had more trouble with expensive factory rifles.
A lot of it is psychological, I think. The more $$ you spend, the higher your expectations tend to be, and the easier it is to forget/overlook the 'human element' in shooting, and become disappointed when the rifle doesn't magically stack rounds on top of one another.
Then again, I'd never build a custom. I'd let someone else take the hit and buy it for half the price.
Obviously people do well with both customs and factory offerings, so it's got more to do with knowing what you want from a rifle first, and then choosing your options based on that.
I'm completely impractical, and value aesthetics and craftsmanship over absolute accuracy, so the only way I could be truly satisfied was to purchase a custom (albeit second-hand) with walnut stock, checkering etc - attention to detail you simply do not (usually) get in factory rifles.
Last edited by Frodo; 04-03-2018 at 10:13 PM.
I use a Browning Mountain Ti with currently a Swarovski Z8i 1.7-13.3x42 in 7 mm WSM.
Just over 6.5 lb good to go.
140 gr Nosler AccuBond home load doing 3200 fps almost in the same hole 3 shots at 100 yards.
Used it on the range out to 700 yards out shoots me checking the bullet drop but would not recommend it as a range rifle as the barrel gets rather warm no issue for my hunting.
Issues in the last 9 years.
Damaged crown smashed the muzzle on a rock jumping about on the tops, purchased a re-crowning kit shoots like new again.
Trigger was a bit heavy even when adjusted replaced the trigger return spring with a section of spring from a pen instant 2 lb crisp trigger 8 years ago.
Bolted the rifle to a Nightforce NXS felt like the scope doubled the weight and bulk of the set up.
Soft touch camo stock finish melts if you have Deet on your hands.
Great rifle easy trigger fix no plans to change.
Deet melts anything!
Real guns start with the number 3 or bigger and make two holes, one in and one out
I use a Browning Mountain Ti with currently a Swarovski Z8i 1.7-13.3x42 in 7 mm WSM.
Just over 6.5 lb good to go.
140 gr Nosler AccuBond home load doing 3200 fps almost in the same hole 3 shots at 100 yards.
Used it on the range out to 700 yards out shoots me checking the bullet drop but would not recommend it as a range rifle as the barrel gets rather warm no issue for my hunting.
Issues in the last 9 years.
Damaged crown smashed the muzzle on a rock jumping about on the tops, purchased a re-crowning kit shoots like new again.
Trigger was a bit heavy even when adjusted replaced the trigger return spring with a section of spring from a pen instant 2 lb crisp trigger 8 years ago.
Bolted the rifle to a Nightforce NXS felt like the scope doubled the weight and bulk of the set up.
Soft touch camo stock finish melts if you have Deet on your hands.
Great rifle easy trigger fix no plans to change.
Still has 1000 ft-lb energy at 900 yards.
Warm Barrels!
270 is a harmonic divisor number[1]
270 is the fourth number that is divisible by its average integer divisor[2]
270 is a practical number, by the second definition
The sum of the coprime counts for the first 29 integers is 270
270 is a sparsely totient number, the largest integer with 72 as its totient
Given 6 elements, there are 270 square permutations[3]
10! has 270 divisors
270 is the smallest positive integer that has divisors ending by digits 1, 2, …, 9.
Nothing lowly about a 270 though it would be a long action and probably not weigh 6.5 lb good to go with a scope, still a great calibre the 270
My DTA 338 Lapua / S&B with ASE UTRA SL7 has 1000 ft-lb at 1600 yards but I would not carry it up top either without a small pony as gun bearer .
The original post was for a discussion in relation to a light weight 7 mm, cost vs weight I have not seen a better factory set up than the Browning Mountain Ti, what would a custom build bring other than more cost and delays? (what would a custom Titanium receiver and light weight composite bolt cost these days)
Just my humble opinion
Last edited by xtightg; 06-03-2018 at 10:37 PM.
@MSL Details?
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