Rudolphus Cervus
Member
Hello all,
I'm new to this site having signed up yesterday (after "lurking" and reading for a while). In my posts on the "Introductions" part of the site, I was asked about the rifles I was looking to buy with my newly-issued FAC - I've stalked before but had decided to take the plunge and get my own FAC/rifles etc to take it further & learn about the fieldcraft involved... If any of you have any thoughts or suggestions, I'd love to hear - as much of things to avoid as things to go for! Any guidance as to places that will let you do a "test drive" on a gun before buying would help too - I live in central London so obviously gun shops round here aren't able to do so!
Below are the relevant paragraphs from the Introductions thread...
I said....
For deer I went for .243 and .308, both with mods.
I’ve also got slots for .303 and .22LR though both with the intention of shooting targets. The .303 for some vintage open sights stuff (eg SMLE but you can even get Martini Henry in that); the .22LR for some gallery rifle, turning targets etc.
Can use .303 for deer as well but thought I’d get modern .243/.308 for that.
Still a major quandary as to what to get for deer though. I’ve been recommended everything from Blaser R8 to CZ and all points between!
bfltd0 replied...
Take your time to have a look at the different makes/models around the place. Get something that you are confident in, rather than something that just looks good or is trendy. Try and get hands on before you buy, either at an RFD or if F2F, see if the seller (hopefully a stalker) will be able to meet up with you and let you fire the rifle first.
My own deer/vermin rifles are Steyr Scouts (.308, .243, .223) - a minority sport these days but they are reliable, accurate and robust. No doubt I could replace them with something trendier or in a more sought-after/modern calibre, but I know what they are capable of doing and they do it well.
To which I replied...
I know what I want for the .22LR and .303, it's the deer ones - .243 and .308 - that I'm faffing with.
Being in London and living in a flat means storage space for a gun cabinet is at a premium, hence the modular aspects of the likes of Blaser R8 or Sauer 404 appeal as they mean I'm effectively keeping one "rifle" plus one "small bit of metal tube" sitting next to it (if you excuse the oversimplification). I already have this with one of my shotguns which has a spare barrel (one is 30", good for high pheasant, the other 25", good for lower flying partridge or grouse).
On the other hand, I know R8 is a bit "trendy" at the moment and that it's not the cheapest bit of kit compared to numerous other makes that will lob a bit of lead (oops - copper) at a deer pretty much just as well.
I'm inclined towards the gun-for-life approach as well, given that I'm now working and earning whereas when I retire (perhaps 10 years' time) my income will drop significantly. Though on the other hand, I'm also wary of the "all the gear but no idea" look!
I'm new to this site having signed up yesterday (after "lurking" and reading for a while). In my posts on the "Introductions" part of the site, I was asked about the rifles I was looking to buy with my newly-issued FAC - I've stalked before but had decided to take the plunge and get my own FAC/rifles etc to take it further & learn about the fieldcraft involved... If any of you have any thoughts or suggestions, I'd love to hear - as much of things to avoid as things to go for! Any guidance as to places that will let you do a "test drive" on a gun before buying would help too - I live in central London so obviously gun shops round here aren't able to do so!
Below are the relevant paragraphs from the Introductions thread...
I said....
For deer I went for .243 and .308, both with mods.
I’ve also got slots for .303 and .22LR though both with the intention of shooting targets. The .303 for some vintage open sights stuff (eg SMLE but you can even get Martini Henry in that); the .22LR for some gallery rifle, turning targets etc.
Can use .303 for deer as well but thought I’d get modern .243/.308 for that.
Still a major quandary as to what to get for deer though. I’ve been recommended everything from Blaser R8 to CZ and all points between!
bfltd0 replied...
Take your time to have a look at the different makes/models around the place. Get something that you are confident in, rather than something that just looks good or is trendy. Try and get hands on before you buy, either at an RFD or if F2F, see if the seller (hopefully a stalker) will be able to meet up with you and let you fire the rifle first.
My own deer/vermin rifles are Steyr Scouts (.308, .243, .223) - a minority sport these days but they are reliable, accurate and robust. No doubt I could replace them with something trendier or in a more sought-after/modern calibre, but I know what they are capable of doing and they do it well.
To which I replied...
I know what I want for the .22LR and .303, it's the deer ones - .243 and .308 - that I'm faffing with.
Being in London and living in a flat means storage space for a gun cabinet is at a premium, hence the modular aspects of the likes of Blaser R8 or Sauer 404 appeal as they mean I'm effectively keeping one "rifle" plus one "small bit of metal tube" sitting next to it (if you excuse the oversimplification). I already have this with one of my shotguns which has a spare barrel (one is 30", good for high pheasant, the other 25", good for lower flying partridge or grouse).
On the other hand, I know R8 is a bit "trendy" at the moment and that it's not the cheapest bit of kit compared to numerous other makes that will lob a bit of lead (oops - copper) at a deer pretty much just as well.
I'm inclined towards the gun-for-life approach as well, given that I'm now working and earning whereas when I retire (perhaps 10 years' time) my income will drop significantly. Though on the other hand, I'm also wary of the "all the gear but no idea" look!
