Your going to have to put money into any 30+ yr old vehicle. The difference is I get that money back in enjoyment whenever I take it for a ride. I can't say I'd feel the same about a Chevy Citation or Doge Omni. 

Lumpy - I've got a SA 700 Remington, 30", 22-250 Ackley Improved with a laminated stock, 1:9 Pac-nor 3 grove Palma contour rifle that just eats up 75 grain bullets that ..... alas ...... hasn't seen the light of day in 5 years. The old girl (baby really) isn't even had a decent load worked up for her yet. Sitting right next to her is a very similar SA Remington 223 Ackley Improved that has been shot. These are Prairie Dog Silhouette guns that other than setting the barrels I built with my own little hands. Money and reality stopped that hobby cold in it's tracks. Not to far away is my Remington 3200 Skeet gun. I try to think of them as resting......![]()
as if i need another expensive hobby. i want!!!!:drool:I use this with a Nightforce 5-22X56mm NXS scope.
The Crusader
Have the same deal in .338 Lapua.
Ate beans and rice for sometime after buying those two.
LG
Hondo - There is so much to true long range accuracy that makes the sport worth pursuing. The equipment really is only a small part of it. For instance, I have almost always reloaded ammunition. Generally reloading makes a better product than most factory loads. But the difference between everyday reloading and true accuracy reloading is like the difference between a 1966 Ford Falcon and a 1966 Ford Mustang ..... Well maybe more like a full race Shelby 350 Mustang. Then there is the soup the bullet travels through from the muzzle to the target. Hot air, cold air, rotation of the earth, sun and the ever changing wind. I'd dial in my up's at daylight for the first round of firing, by 10:00 the first few shots were pure a SWAG. That's at 600 yards, push out to 1,000 and .... well I've never shot at 1,000 yards. The real 1,000 yard guys are working with nothing short of magic. This has been said of deer hunters and it applies to the great 1,000 yard shooter. "He is one of the luckiest SOB's I've ever met, but have you noticed how often he gets lucky?"
And where is the joke in the previous paragraph? The first Ford Mustangs were basically a re-bodied Ford Falcons.
Didn't say I didn't like the Rock Chucker, got one and a Junior. I haven't graduated beyond then yet. The super serious guys use arbor presses, inline presses and the Forster Co-Ax single stage. It's all about being perfectly straight, no stresses, as close to perfection as is possible. The closest I ever got was to mix my dies a Redding collet neck sizing dies and a 0.250" neck and a Hornady sleeved bullet seating die for my 22-250 AI. The necks are turned just enough to clean 1/2-3/4 of the neck.
When you are reloading the bigies like 50 BMG you are more serious than I am my friend. Powder by the ounce......
I spent $600 for my CJ7 back in......the mid-90s I think. Yes, it's rusted in a lot of places it shouldn't be. Yes, it's got a set of wheels on it that cost as much as I paid for it (15x11 Shelby aluminum slots). Yes, it's now got an engine that's worth.....well, a lot more than the Jeep will ever be worth.
It hasn't seen a lot of "road-time" over the past 4.5 years, due to my medical issues. But this past Summer, I spent as much time as I could outside replacing pretty much everything under the hood - rebuilt engine, new clutch, the whole deal. My first time doing a project of this scope, too.....which boosted my morale to no end, especially since I did it "right" (aka "nothing broke").
So is my ride a money pit? Probably. Do I care? Nope. It's my CJ7 , and while it may not be a super-capable rock-crawling bending-everywhere machine......it's still worth every dime I've spent on it.
To me.
My 2A is a money maker, used to be my DD, then I was rear ended (by a Wagoneer) and got paid for it.
The 7 is another story, since I have not got it going just keep buying things for it, and now I have to either get rid of them or moved by the end of the month. Or tagged or a fence-shelter-carport, damn nosey neighbors complained to the city. Said it was a junk yard.
Your going to have to put money into any 30+ yr old vehicle. The difference is I get that money back in enjoyment whenever I take it for a ride. I can't say I'd feel the same about a Chevy Citation or Doge Omni.![]()
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