usajon
.30 Stingray
Posts: 326
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Post by usajon on Oct 13, 2013 16:19:34 GMT -5
well/I am new /but them stag grips never did a thing 4me..I remember holding one and it did not feel good. I saw an old new ajax single action unit on ebay and was surprised at the price auction of like $250 something...and rising can you shoot a big cannon using them?
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caryc
.375 Atomic
Posts: 1,040
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Post by caryc on Nov 12, 2013 14:41:02 GMT -5
well/I am new /but them stag grips never did a thing 4me..I remember holding one and it did not feel good. I saw an old new ajax single action unit on ebay and was surprised at the price auction of like $250 something...and rising can you shoot a big cannon using them? While shooting a big boomer, I would prefer smooth grips. It only takes a minute to remove one little screw and change grips on a gun. Shoot with the comfortable grips, then change to the pretty ones for fondling the gun while watching a western on TV.
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Post by contender on Nov 13, 2013 23:00:30 GMT -5
I own exactly ONE pair of stags. Ruger factory ones. As Cary has said,, stags with bark are great for looking purty,, but for serious shooting,,, smooth stocks!
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Post by Gary @ R&G on Nov 14, 2013 11:03:02 GMT -5
Next to Elephant Ivory stag are my favorite. I have a couple sets for 1911, 1 Colt SAA, 1 Colt Cobra and a couple on Ruger SA's. Heavy barked stag wouldnt be my choice for heavy calibers though. But I dont shoot heavy calibers that often.
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Post by Ken O'Neill on Dec 21, 2013 6:22:24 GMT -5
I'm a sucker for well fitted stags on .22's through .44's.
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