I shoot way way better with my brothers MK10 / G1 than I do with my own gun and he reminds me all the time, he brought it S/H for less than 1/3 the cost of mine :(
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I think this is a good deal for over here in the land of OZ
Did that link work , or does it just take you to their homepage ?
I'm actually going to NZ next year , but I'll be to busy carrying my own firearms to go lugging stinky old Miroku's through airports :)
I think you would be way better off to get fitted by a Blaser Guru overseas and just get Blaser to make you a stock made to fit your F3 . They will even match as best as they can the new stock to the timber in your old for-end , or you could take the opportunity to upgrade both to a higher grade and sell off the old ones to cover some of the costs .
Ken
Link worked fine mate. It is a good site. I have looked at it for a while. Bit risky its seems, as there is no come back if you get screwed on a deal?
Yeah you are probably right on the blaser. I do love my F3. Best of all it has no hair on it, like those greasy Italian guns:D
What about a full size mirror and stand behind person with gun (person pointing ,customer pointing at mirror)shop assistant behind checking fit that mite work and look safer
How can it not be safe pointing an unloaded gun at someone(doing this)
In the specific case that you have both clearly ensured that the gun is not loaded and it is being done for a specific purpose, it's not.
In general, it's a very bad habit to have though and should only be done with clear communication, purpose, and certainty that it's unloaded.
Treated every firearm as loaded
Never point a gun at something you don't want to shoot
Etc.
When a gun fitter gets a person to point the gun at his eye he doing so to determine if the shooters eye ( pupil ) is correctly positioned both in the vertical and horizontal in relation to the front bead and rib of the gun .
what annoys me about the backyard , gun shop experts is that even if they vaguely know what they are doing in regards to stock adjustments to centralise your eye horizontally with the rib , they assume that everyone shoots with the same sight picture between barrels and target in regards to height .
Everyone is different in what they prefer in regards to sight picture at time of the shot being triggered .
I personally shoot with a reasonably high gun so that I never lose sight of the bird and the target is always above my barrels , some people blot the target out as the slap the trigger .
There is no right or wrong way to do it , its just up to the individual .
No one can properly fit a gun to a person without confirming the height of comb settings by actually shooting some targets and patterning the gun on a board .
Its possible to get a very close fit in the shop but not perfect , if someone tells you otherwise treat it with suspicion .
I personally have no problem with the whole pointing a gun at someone in this situation when its in a very controlled environment and everyone present is made aware repeatedly of the safe condition of the firearm . I also understand those who have an issue with it and admire their total adherence to the letter of the law and if it makes them uncomfortable I would never push them to participate in such an activity.
I probably would feel uncomfortable myself to see this done over the counter at a gunshop which is full of customers , and performed by some salesman who's shooting experience is shooting one Sunday a month ( that's if he shoots shotguns at all , and isn't a rifle expert who likes to dabble in things he knows little about ) .
Ken
The personification of a piece of steel is amazing. It is a inanimate object with no thought pattern, conscious or ability to act on its own. Its the numpty operating it that does the damage.
In a situation like this where all parties concerned are aware its in a safe arrangement then sure.
Its a totally different case, such as at a shoot, when its been loaded and used for its purpose to then swing it in a direction aimlessly where it sweeps through pointing towards people.
We have it happen at our rifle range from people with years of experience who should know better, sure the rifle may have been cleared and bolt removed but its a habit that shouldn't be slipped into. And not always have the safety checks been done before this happens.
" Life's to short to shoot cheap guns "
:D
Nah, get a cheap one and out shoot someone who has spent mega bucks on their rig. I've seen that at the range, someone has been looking at someone else's target sheets and wanders across, "You shooting an Annie?" "No." "A BRNO or a CZ?" "No, it's a Norinco JW-15. $150 second hand including the scope."