Kevin Peacocke
AH ambassador
- Joined
- Feb 10, 2018
- Messages
- 6,209
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- 22,818
- Location
- Harare Zimbabwe
- Media
- 111
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- 2
- Member of
- Cleveland Gun Club
- Hunted
- Zimbabwe, SouthAfrica
I have made a few pretty dumb emotional purchase decisions over time, a couple in guns and firearms and others in cars etc. Being an engineer one is trained not to do this, but it happens all the same. So I have put a little assessor in place to make sure my next rifle purchase is as subjective as possible.
FUNCTIONALITY
The engineering design, execution, faults like feeding problems, lockup on a double, etc. Also suitability of calibre for intended purpose.
FIT
Pretty obvious, it either fits or it doesn't.
But there are nuances like comfort of grip and palm swell, forend shape. Also look at weight and balance here. Recoil tolerance is a big one - there are calculators to even quantify this and although fit will mitigate recoil somewhat it wont turn a bull into a kitten.
AESTHETICS
Again pretty obvious, but admit if there is a definite minimum of embelishment you want, or is it plain clean simplicity that appeals to you? Also important here is the form and line.
LIKE
I normally jump straight here and that is the root cause of a silly emotional decision. You can grow to like a rifle that consistently shoots well, feels good and never breaks, but you are likely to quickly fall out of love with a biting dog.
Assessment: score each category out of 10 and add them up. If there is a red line item in there, like forget the reliability, looks and general like because you neck just couldn't tolerate the recoil, that rifle goes back on the shelf. Obvious, right? But we do these things and regret it later. Conversely, if some score is low, like fit, then it need'nt be a spoiler if it is relatively easy to correct.
i have just done the FFAL index on my Marlin 336 30-30, it gets a 36. My Ruger no1 Tropical 375H&H gets a 35 off the shelf but has grown to a 37 with me altering the safety so it doesnt snag ejected cases and will reach a perfect 40 when I add the custom stock with red recoil pad and recoil reducers. Heym 89b Africa in 450/400 gets a perfect 40 assuming it is fitted.
Note price hasn't featured. A red line dog at any price is a waste of money, and the top end may well be worth saving for if it is your perfect 40.
FUNCTIONALITY
The engineering design, execution, faults like feeding problems, lockup on a double, etc. Also suitability of calibre for intended purpose.
FIT
Pretty obvious, it either fits or it doesn't.
But there are nuances like comfort of grip and palm swell, forend shape. Also look at weight and balance here. Recoil tolerance is a big one - there are calculators to even quantify this and although fit will mitigate recoil somewhat it wont turn a bull into a kitten.
AESTHETICS
Again pretty obvious, but admit if there is a definite minimum of embelishment you want, or is it plain clean simplicity that appeals to you? Also important here is the form and line.
LIKE
I normally jump straight here and that is the root cause of a silly emotional decision. You can grow to like a rifle that consistently shoots well, feels good and never breaks, but you are likely to quickly fall out of love with a biting dog.
Assessment: score each category out of 10 and add them up. If there is a red line item in there, like forget the reliability, looks and general like because you neck just couldn't tolerate the recoil, that rifle goes back on the shelf. Obvious, right? But we do these things and regret it later. Conversely, if some score is low, like fit, then it need'nt be a spoiler if it is relatively easy to correct.
i have just done the FFAL index on my Marlin 336 30-30, it gets a 36. My Ruger no1 Tropical 375H&H gets a 35 off the shelf but has grown to a 37 with me altering the safety so it doesnt snag ejected cases and will reach a perfect 40 when I add the custom stock with red recoil pad and recoil reducers. Heym 89b Africa in 450/400 gets a perfect 40 assuming it is fitted.
Note price hasn't featured. A red line dog at any price is a waste of money, and the top end may well be worth saving for if it is your perfect 40.