now you just need a decent scope![]()
Gary
Why, have you got one for sale???
willie_gunn
now you just need a decent scope![]()
Well, what an interesting thread
I have just put a down payment on a new R93....in fact if I'm totally honest I paid the money on Saturday and then came back and thought I'd see what helpful advice I could glean from the site
Little did I realise that buying a Blaser was making such an overt statement about my logic, my bank balance, my perceived status as a stalker or my virility
For those who care to know, I bought one for a number of reasons.
First, those people I know who use them already are people whose advice I respect, who have shot a lot of deer (four are professional or semi-professional stalkers), and who happily explained the R93's plus and minus points. In all cases they now seem to use R93's exclusively, which I found quite telling.
Second, on the occasions I've had the chance to shoot an R93 they have consistently produced cloverleaf groups regardless of ammunition, whether factory or homeload. Recently I've been having problems with my own Sako 75 in .308 (that's a different story that I will relate at some point) so to reduce some of the variables we shot my homeloads through an R93...and produced a ragged single-hole group. We then tried some of the factory ammo I'd brought along...and produced a ragged single-hole group. Results like that give you confidence in your kit.
Third, whilst a custom/semi-custom rifle is attractive, a wait of several months for a rifle that will lose a chunk of its value before I've fired a shot is not attractive. That is why a second-hand custom rifle is a good buy. If you buy second-hand then what your getting is not your rifle, it's someone elses, and you trade off the lower price for compromising on your ideal. If you sell a custom rifle, you have to accept that you will lose money. Having spent the best part of six months looking for a second-hand Blaser I quickly came to the realisation that buying new was, for me, an affordable option. I can get exactly what I want, built to my spec, and should I subsequently decide to sell it, I can get back the majority of my investment.
Fourth, the takedown capabilities of the rifle are not without their benefits. Maybe it's just me, but I don't particularly care to be wandering through hotels and airports with something that is so obviously a cased rifle. At a more practical level, getting my cased Sako into the car for trips to Scotland and elsewhere can be a pain as the only place is across the back seats. Can't really leave it there in full view to pop into somewhere for a pie & pint (of course the three dogs are a useful deterrent).
The fact that people who use Blasers consistently disassemble/re-assemble the components with no loss of zero says something about the quality of the engineering. Yes, £350 for a set of saddlemounts is expensive, but if they enable you to re-assemble your rifle and optics with no loss of zero then that is what you are paying for, not the cost of the metal itself. The only mounts I've seen that offer anything similar are Apels, and set of those for my Sako would cost the same as saddlemounts. If you don't want that capability then Optilocks and bases for a Sako are £120. You pay your money and take your choice.
Fifth, call me idiosyncratic (I've been called a lot, lot, worse) but I like the fact that the Blaser is different. The other rifle I'd like is a Ruger #1 for heaven's sake!
Finally, as for being a hairdresser's rifle....co-incidentally I am currently about half-way through reading Vidal Sassoon's autobiography. The man was born into poverty in the East End of London, was placed into an orphanage at an early age, fought fascists in the streets of London, fought in the Arab-Israeli war, dated (and married) some of the most beautiful models in the world, partied with Michael Caine and Terence Stamp, oh yes, and along the way built a multi-billion dollar empire. Not bad for a hairdresser.
Once the rifle turns up I'll happily post my experiences, both good and bad.
willie_gunn
Now all I needed was someone to tell me that the R93 might cease production![]()
The main reason i swapped, other than i just wanted too, was because my 93 had a short barrel and when firing from the bipod i was unable to see the reaction of the beast through the scope due to the slight increase in muzzle flip.
......the detachable mag of the r8 is an improvement, you can lock it in if you wish and it would perform in the same way as the r93 but with one more round capacity.
Regards steve

Dom, why not get two magazines and join them together with a piece of string threaded through the sleeves of your stalking jacket? Gary![]()
Dom, why not get two magazines and join them together with a piece of string threaded through the sleeves of your stalking jacket? Gary![]()
Marginally better off than in Swindon but again, marginally.

Sorry to be late on to this thread, but did someone say Blaser R93 ......??
![]()
Sorry to be late on to this thread, but did someone say Blaser R93 ......??