Paul Homsy
AH veteran
- Joined
- Jun 17, 2017
- Messages
- 249
- Reaction score
- 216
Yes Toby, that makes more sense. I misread. The base isn't mentioned, just the rings.
But $123 is still high even if it was the rings and base combined! There's no way a ring and base set should be $400.00. Not sure why they charge so much, perhaps they figure if you're willing to pay big bucks for the rifle, what's another $400?Yes Toby, that makes more sense. I misread. The base isn't mentioned, just the rings.
Yes I'm sure it returns to zero. But then again, so does Talley, Warne, Leupold QRW, Sako Optilock and probably others that cost much less. To me, steel rings and bases are steel rings and bases. As long as they are precision built of course. I just don't know what they could do to them to make them $400. And I also don't know what they could do to a rifle barrel to make it worth over $2K. I guess to me, the versatility of these guns is their selling point, but due to the overpriced barrel and scope mounts, it would be less expensive to just buy a new rifle for each caliber, and stick with more affordable rifles at that. But that doesn't keep me from wanting one!I agree, it's high. One of the rifles I should have never sold was a Steyr Mannlicher in 375 H&H that I bought in the mid 1980s. I had a set of detachable rings for it. Once installed, the two piece base stayed on the rifle, the system worked very well and returned to zero with the help of a fouling shot or within 1/2 to 3/4 of an inch in the field which at the time was excellent. It cost $250.00 then and the mounts were rare...I felt it was worth it for the versatility it brought and it was one of very few systems that allowed scope removal without tools, still very pricey for so long ago.
Sako is more reasonable but still expensive.
The Blaser mount is a newer, perhaps more sophisticated system but still quite expensive. It does return to zero and I guess you pay for that.
With the R8 the simplest drill is to use a dedicated scope with each barrel. Mine never require an adjustment when shifting from one barrel to the next.DChamp, mine do require minor adjustments from one barrel to the next. The reason why I try to dedicate a scope and mount to a barrel within limits. Depending on what I shoot more at any given time.
DChamp, mine do require minor adjustments from one barrel to the next. The reason why I try to dedicate a scope and mount to a barrel within limits. Depending on what I shoot more at any given time.
With the R8 the simplest drill is to use a dedicated scope with each barrel. Mine never require an adjustment when shifting from one barrel to the next.
With the R8 the simplest drill is to use a dedicated scope with each barrel. Mine never require an adjustment when shifting from one barrel to the next.
do these blazers have the extraction camming power on a ma98 or win70?
bruce.
I would second that. I have a receiver and stock designed for "semi-weight" barrels which are fairly heavy. With the steel receiver, even the .300 makes it a fairly stout rifle. I hardly ever use it. My Sporter weight rifle with classic stock handles "sporter" profile barrels up through .375 creating a light quick rifle that is a joy to carry and shoot in any caliber.What I got was the equivalent of this in green as my preference: https://www.eurooptic.com/blaser-r8-professional-savanna-big-bore-complete-rifle.aspx. $5,773 for everything
One lock, one stock, one barrel.
Unless you know you will eventually want a larger caliber I would not get the Big Bore. A .375 can be had for much less in other versions. With one in each hand, the stock alone is very comparable in weight to my Christensen .300 Win Mag.