Quality Question
#14
Nontypical Buck
Joined: Aug 2010
Posts: 1,672
Likes: 0
From: Anne Arrundle County, Maryland
Don't mind me fella's. I'm just a cheap skate and would like people like me to be aware that there are affordable and accurate options to the high dollar line of muzzle loaders.
Last edited by pluckit; 06-01-2012 at 02:38 AM.
#17
Nontypical Buck
Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 3,732
Likes: 0
From: Rapid City, South Dakota
If you are a cheap skate by nature, you need to change. You need to experience the feeling one gets when one handles a fine rifle, or tool. To me there are many better feeling than gazing at, or holding a fine rifle, but a fine rifle is is a fine rifle. My life has consisted of using fine tools on the job, and seeing and appreciating how they worked, endured, and felt. The abuse a fine tool takes on the job, shouldn't be, but is. In my eyes and hands, a fine rifle is the same as a fine tool. It feels better than a cheap tool. It looks better than a cheap rifle. It endures.
Few things are prettier, or feel better, than an old worn, well built, tool/rifle.
#19
Nontypical Buck
Joined: Aug 2010
Posts: 1,672
Likes: 0
From: Anne Arrundle County, Maryland
[QUOTE=ronlaughlin;3941476]If by necessity this is just fine.
If you are a cheap skate by nature, you need to change. You need to experience the feeling one gets when one handles a fine rifle
It is not by necessity.
It is by nature.
And I'm sure you are right about the feeling one gets when holding a fine (expensive) rifle.
But I am a hunter at heart and I have been one long before I could hold a rifle. I just don't see how a more expensive rifle with better fit and finish could add to the satisfaction and excitement I get when I harvest a deer with the less expensive rifles I own. As a matter of fact, the 2 deer I harvested last year with my $275 Traditions Pursuit were just as rewarding to me as the countless number or deer I have taken with my twice as expensive Thompson center Hawkins.
If you are a cheap skate by nature, you need to change. You need to experience the feeling one gets when one handles a fine rifle
It is not by necessity.
It is by nature.
And I'm sure you are right about the feeling one gets when holding a fine (expensive) rifle.
But I am a hunter at heart and I have been one long before I could hold a rifle. I just don't see how a more expensive rifle with better fit and finish could add to the satisfaction and excitement I get when I harvest a deer with the less expensive rifles I own. As a matter of fact, the 2 deer I harvested last year with my $275 Traditions Pursuit were just as rewarding to me as the countless number or deer I have taken with my twice as expensive Thompson center Hawkins.
Last edited by pluckit; 06-01-2012 at 02:42 PM.



