No. The “straight” stocks also work with irons if the rifle was stocked correctly. All my Blasers align perfectly with either, as do my Sako’s, Rigby, etc. I have seen a couple of new .22 Rugers where there would have been an issue, But not with the quality of the rifles you are considering.Yeah, but those straight stocks are rubbish with iron sights. Isn't that what the hogsback stocks were designed for?
The Browning BLR comes in a take down model. Also a lot of different calibers.
none likely in Europe unless the blr is distributed there?
BLR is available in Europe, but I’ve no idea if there are any gunsmiths knowledgable about them. As for repairs I’m guessing they might be made in Portugal, so would probably be serviced there. The repair centres web page on browning.eu lists the dealers’ details, I don’t think they would have dedicated smith’s service available for them.
We can not get the true synthetic in America.I couldn't find a true synthetic K95...
The only one that is available in synthetic is a carbon fiber stock that @JanP mentioned earlier in the thread. At a cost of $11,000 USD, £7,800 or €9000...if one could be found, it's out of the OP's price range of £2K.
Please correct me if I'm wrong.
Som profesionálny poľovník zo Slovenska. Mal som možnosť strieľať zo všetkých 3 zbraní na strelnici hoci Merkel bola K 3. Blaser K 95 a Krieghoff Hubertus som využíval aj pri love. Všetko sú to kvalitné a pekné zbrane. Záleží na tom, ktorá Vám sadne najlepšie. Ja som ostal pri Krieghoffe má priamejsiu pazbu, čo mne viac vyhovuje. Taktiež Krieghoff pri vystreleni a prebiti ostane napnuty, takže netreba znova naťahovať ako pri K 95 a K 3. Kaliber by som doporučoval R kovy čiže s okrajom nie len kvôli okraju ale aj tvaru nabojnice a ľahšiemu prebijaniu. Prajem šťastnú ruku pri vybere a veľa poľovníckych úspechov.Ahoj všetci,
Uvažujem o kúpe kvalitnej jednoranovej pušky na bušový a vysokohorský lov na Novom Zélande. Veľa cestujem pešo (a príležitostne verejnou dopravou), takže by som chcel kompaktnú, ľahkú pušku, ktorú by som mohol rozložiť a uložiť do batohu.
Momentálne sa prikláňam k Merkelovej K5 (čo je v podstate to isté ako Blaser K95 - len trochu iné esteticky).
Stretnem sa s dlhotrvajúcimi vlhkými, blatovými (a niekedy ľadovými) podmienkami. Zaujímalo by ma, či by to zvládla jednoranová puška?
Aký je príbeh týchto jednoranových pušiek, na rozdiel od pušky so skrutkovým mechanizmom, ktorú je možné úplne odstrániť z poľa (pre prístup k úderníku, spúšťovému mechanizmu atď.)? Môžete sa dostať do útrob týchto pušiek (v teréne), aby ste všetko vysušili? Alebo to zahŕňa veľa malých kolíkov a nemotorných skrutiek?
Existujú nejaké ďalšie problémy so spoľahlivosťou, o ktorých by som mal vedieť?
Ak jednoranová puška nie je vhodná, dám si na mieru vyrobenú nerezovú/syntetickú pušku so „snímačom“.
Na zdravie.
@CombatEngineerI've learned a lot from reading all of your posts, thank you so much! I have been using a Blaser K95 in .270 Win with a shortened 20" barrel to hunt hogs over the past year to 18 months. I go hunting around once a month, and it's in hot, dusty, bumpy road conditions. I switch between daytime Swarovski and nighttime Pulsar thermal scope.
The K95 is probably the my favorite rifle I've ever hunted with. Hunting wild hogs in the Texas brush, I've never failed to have instantaneous, excellent kills at both day and night with the K95, using the fantastic .270 Federal Ascent factory load.
I am very sad, however, to discover that the K95, in my sample size of one, isn't quite as rugged as I'd like it to be. I go over rugged roads for 30-60 miles every month, where the rifle bounces around a bit in a case. I've had problems ranging from the forend coming loose, to having the forend touching slightly on one side, to having the drag problem on the primer pocket (easy fix). Long story short, despite this being my favorite rifle ever, I think I'm going to go back to my Blaser R8 in a synthetic stock. A very fine rifle, but it doesn't feel quite as good in the hand. I don't like having to mess with my K95. The point of impact shifts quite a bit if the forend isn't set just right, I'm going to take it apart this week again (after major adjustments last week) to see if I can adjust the forend.
Anyways, do any of you experienced K95 hunters have any experience with this? In rugged conditions? Mine is a 2006 model. Are the newer ones better? Is mine acting up because of a lack of loctite or other fix to keep it all tightened up? Should I just transition back to the absolutely reliable R8, or should I send mine in to Blaser to get set back to its proper settings? I'm going to post this over on Blaserbuds also.
It's been a few years now, how'd the K5 hold up to wet weather mountain work?Thanks for all the suggestions and insights.
I ended up purchasing a Merkel K5 in .308, with a Leica Magnus 1.5-10x42 (rail mount).
Shoots very well and is nice to carry (especially without a scope mounted on top - which can make these light Kipplaufs quite top-heavy, and reduces your ability to wrap your hand right around the rifle).
The irons are perfectly sufficient for shots at <100m, and the scope lives in the pack until it's required. Despite the VERY shot sight radius, I was able to manage 2-3" groups at 100m, and around 1.5" at 50m.
The rifle can in fact be 'field stripped', in the sense that the recoil pad can be removed to access an Allen screw deep inside the butt. This allows you to remove the butt section of the firearm, which gives you access to the rifles innards (cocking mechanism etc, etc). Very easy to do, and it provides some extra peace of mind when hunting in wet weather.
It was a toss up between the K95 and the Merkel K5. Not much between them other than aesthetics, and the Merkel was immediately available.