M 92 cooper 6.5x284 Vortex razor 3-15 24" braked with javelin bipod and brass adaptor fitted. i wouldn't want it any lighter when it comes to shooting from compromised positions, ie a lot of hunting situations.
"You'll never find a rainbow if you're looking down" Charlie Chaplin
Boring old T3 7mmRM. It does have a fancy dan 3D printed titanium cocking piece shroud though
What @sneeze said about shooting weight. This is light enough.
Experience. What you get just after you needed it.
'Ultralight' is often percieved as some kind of panacea. Sprinkle that shit everywhere. On your rifle. Your shoes. Your breakfast cereal. Your bank balance (woops - I went too far).
As said earlier, to have a light rifle you have to start with a light action.
The Winchester 70 is an heavy action, as well as the Howa and the tikka 595 or worse 590.
Kimber, Forbes , Remington 7 and the old anschutz/krico are good base for starting a lightweight rifle build.
Tikka t3 and Remington 700 are in between. The older Sako 579 were good as well.
Viva la Howa ! R.I.P. Toby | Black rifles matter... | #illegitimate_ute
My 260 is 3.5kg all up with dpt, vx3 and rings. A real dream to carry and shoot
^^^This.
I’ve tried the lightweight thing, like sub-6lbs bare rifle in 7mm and .30 cal, and didn’t get on with it.
In .223 or similar it’s ok, but for me accurate field shooting of more powerful cartridges from iffy positions needs more weight.
I guess my 6mm and 6.5mm chassis rigs don’t really count as lightweight, at 13.5lbs... bloody accurate though!
Just...say...the...word
yea I only have lightweight 243s and below
a suppressor or brake will help a ton
kimbers make a fantastic carry gun and it will often come with me when I would have left a heavier rifle at home
there is no such thing as too light, Its just a skill to shoot a really light rifle as its quite a bit harder than a porky sako to shoot freestanding
kind of like driving a car with fucked shocks
Last edited by Bill999; 16-04-2020 at 10:02 AM.
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