Looks cool and Defiance make a great receiver especially their controll feed version. To be honest I thought the Ruger build you were shooting earlier was very interesting. I've got Remington 700 and their clones but prefer larger extractors found on the Winchester classic, Ruger, Mausingfield, Defiance, and Mauser recievers.
Love what you guys are doing giving away an awesome build like this but I have the opposite feeling. I don’t understand how in this day and age you can justify building a new build in 300 WM.
Any chance I can get list of your tools? Barrel vise etc. action wrench for the defiance action? Parts list would nice if you have time! I live in Montana! This channel must be based in north west Montana! I live in southwest Montana. Thank you great information
Great build. I've been fortunate to build a few rifles myself. It's been fun learning a few tricks on how to squeeze out as much accuracy as possible on light weight rifles. I have the sporter style Peak 44 stock on a 308 I built. It has been a great stock for me. I'm curious why you didn't bed the rifle to the stock?
Thanks! And to answer your question we honestly wanted to see how the gun would shoot without any bedding before we decided to do it. We should have a follow up video on how the gun shoots when we get to it.
Okay is it seriously that easy to build this rifle? I honestly thought there would be more to it but I guess they do the hard work in the machine process. Very interesting for sure
A lot of high quality stocks for HUNTING these days dont require bedding. I have a CF stock on a 300 PRC HUNTING build that shoots well beyond realistic HUNTING accuracy requirements. That gun also nails plates at 1k, in high wind, all day but I’m not competing with it. They never claimed this to be a F-Class or BR or PRC rifle. It is a perfect hunting rifle build, no bedding necessary. Well done gentlemen.
@@scitum sure, I see what you’re saying. If. I was building it, just like other guns that I’ve built, I’d remove the variable and bed it. Why wouldn’t you?
Nice bit of cnc , nice to see single parts picked, just have to go down to the local pharmacy pic up a shaver some nivia go in to prada store pick up a dress pop down gucci get some shoes buy a standalone scope and and go do some vermin extraction fire maybe 60 shots down the range to bullet Mill the rifel so it's snug but not to snug vantage point might be windy and don't want a clean shot want a bit of insert tare so they go looking for a used gun don't want to give them to much of an easy ride I'm a posh whore
It doesn't require it but often bedding will help increase accuracy. We wanted to see how the gun would perform without any first before we decided to bed or not to bed the rifle.
Im just starting to research long range setups and here I am 🤣 Am I ridiculous for wanting ti start here? I tend not to want to waist money in buying lower end while learning, go straight to the top, 10k plus rifle 🤣
If you're serious about it, it often pays to buy once, cry once. That said it would be good to get some level of basic training/knowledge before you drop that kind of money on a gun. You'd hate to drop 8-10k and then realize you bought something that didn't fit you right or doesn't get you the results you'd hoped for.
@@stoneglacier9636 agreed. I have a CGS Hyperion K that I think I want to do a lightweight 16” 308 folder. Great for hunting and out too 500/600? Get initiated. But I may go after that can in the build now, 8.3 oz or something is crazy light!
Defiance action appears with black nitride: $1845 Proof barrel: some sites have sale price at $650 Bottom metal BDL style around $200-250 TT Trigger: $215 Stock: $800 avg $3740-$3775 total parts. Gunsmith fees vary I did not include scope, rings/mount. Those prices vary greatly
Probably between 6 and 7k. Scope is ~1800, action is ~1900, stock is probably 1000-1200, trigger is 200, suppressor is I think 800 or so, scope rings are ~200, barrel is 850-950. You could do the same for a lot less it would just weight more like 8.5-9 lb vs 6.5-7.5 lbs.
Them carbon barrels Trap heating inside the barrel. Just because u can't feel it outside, don't mean its cooling the barrel.... u need gap and space in-between the carbon and barrel to cool it..
@snakeriverstickbow6233 fire rounds from one and check the internal temp of the barrel and get back to me if it's cooler than a normal barrel by much...lmfao.. just because u can hold the barrel on the carbonfiber nd feel little to no heat don't mean nothin....