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Shooting Gear Reviews
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50% of 2 votes
The Winchester Model 21 was the last of the great American doubles, surviving into the ’80s long after WWII killed off its peers.
Price: $15000
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75% of 4 votes
There were other bolt-action slug guns before the 220F. The Browning A-Bolt was the right gun at the wrong time
Price: $505
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100% of 9 votes
It is an inexpensive gun, and there is not an original idea in it, but oh boy is it a good gun. If the Marlin designers are not original thinkers, they are definitely sound thinkers.
Price: $341
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100% of 2 votes
Forget the eye-popping accuracy and strange-looking spiral-flute barrels. What gets the Mark VII on this list is the fact that it represents the way rifles will be made in the future.
Price: $675-$1000
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67% of 3 votes
Over a quarter century ago, commercial .50-caliber rifles redefined long-range shooting.
Price: $4495
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100% of 2 votes
The latest incarnation of Beretta’s successful 300 series of semiautos, the 391 succeeded the 390.
Price: $975
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100% of 1 vote
In designing this rifle, Savage went to cutting-edge custom gun builders for their input.
Price: $1273
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100% of 1 vote
Only a few featherlight upland semiautos have ever been made, and all attracted cult followings: the Model 59 Winchester, the Franchi 48 AL, the Browning Double Automatic Twentyweight.
Price: $1539
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100% of 2 votes
Truly, the M16/AR-15 has come a long way to arrive at this point. Stripped down to the bare essentials, devoid of multiple high-tech sights and rails, this is a big-game rifle, pure and simple.
Price: $1055
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100% of 2 votes
When Browning introduced the Cynergy, it had the lines of a concept car and was almost too ugly to be taken seriously.
Price: $2489