What about not buying the kit form, and buying the completed rifle from them? It’s only a couple hundred more than a K. Do they do a good job putting their own kits together?
I would not be here but for Kibler. I’ve handled some rifles made from kits, and import rifles, and I was always really disappointed in the fit, finish, and function. I don’t have a “wood shop”, nor is it a vocation for me. I have a lot of hobbies and many things going at once. If I had known about the kits when he started doing them I would have jumped immediately the moment I heard someone was finally making a CNC kit. I’ve been waiting 15 years for someone to do it. It’s revolutionized every other area of the gun industry, and this was bound to happen. I wish someone would have done it a long time ago. Hell, I have two clients who are one or two man custom furniture makers who have a wood CNC. They’re a lot more affordable than one that cuts metal. It’s probably just a rarity that someone
A hand made rifle is always going to command a higher price than a CNC one, but the CNC rifle puts a percision made rifle in the hands of double or triple the audience. My woods runner was had only two days of shooting before I ordered a SMR. No doubt it takes 1/20th the skill to put it together so you’re completely happy with the result, but that’s the point.
Watching/reading the build logs from the scratch building guys is fascinating, but totally off putting. There‘s just no way I have the time for that, much less the experience or skill.
I make bamboo fly rods, but I don’t make the blanks myself. It’s incredibly time consuming, even though I have made enough of them to easily justify the planing jigs and equipment. It takes long enough and it’s tedious enough to wrap one with silk than to hand plane 48 strips of split bamboo perfectly. Buying a quality blank removes 2/3 of the time required, and the material costs nothing, so you’re basically only paying for someone’s time. Worth it.