The price of the Sig and a scope is right at $500. Even much cheaper than they were, they are $350 for the basic rifle, without a scope. I did not say it did not have a decent trigger. I did not say it wasn't accurate. What I said it is two pounds heavier, the triggers on the competition are fine, and at that price point the Sig isn't even on my radar.
I purchased this one as a refurb from Midway for $99.
The SIG may be a wonderful rifle. It is down to what you use them for. I have no interest in stacking pellets, and if I did, there would be an HW 55 purchased. Maybe a 34 to keep a little more power. I have to carry it through the Ozark woods, and shoot squirrels out of trees with it. The extra poundage the Sig is carrying means I might as well just carry the Trail I already own.
The power and trigger sound good. Now put it on a diet, add a feed mechanism that works, and cut the price in half.for me.
I understand not caring about the magazine system. I did not want one of the ugly mechanisms, but then I shot a gun with one of them. Should the feed system fail, remove it and you have the same kind of rifle you think is best because of your fear it might fail. It makes enough difference to make hardcore PCP people want a break barrel again.
The Sig might be a wonderful rifle, and from all reports it is. We have different needs. I will go hang a squirrel target shortly, and then have my grandson take one shot from each of a number of positions today. We won't be trying to shoot any little bitty groups off a rest, and every shot will happen with us holding both rifles. No solid rest allowed.
Different strokes.
I purchased this one as a refurb from Midway for $99.
The SIG may be a wonderful rifle. It is down to what you use them for. I have no interest in stacking pellets, and if I did, there would be an HW 55 purchased. Maybe a 34 to keep a little more power. I have to carry it through the Ozark woods, and shoot squirrels out of trees with it. The extra poundage the Sig is carrying means I might as well just carry the Trail I already own.
The power and trigger sound good. Now put it on a diet, add a feed mechanism that works, and cut the price in half.for me.
I understand not caring about the magazine system. I did not want one of the ugly mechanisms, but then I shot a gun with one of them. Should the feed system fail, remove it and you have the same kind of rifle you think is best because of your fear it might fail. It makes enough difference to make hardcore PCP people want a break barrel again.
The Sig might be a wonderful rifle, and from all reports it is. We have different needs. I will go hang a squirrel target shortly, and then have my grandson take one shot from each of a number of positions today. We won't be trying to shoot any little bitty groups off a rest, and every shot will happen with us holding both rifles. No solid rest allowed.
Different strokes.
Upvote 0