NFrameFred
Member
"Be wary giving advice - a fool won't heed it and the wise don't need it"
Just say get a Dillon. Seems to work for everything.![]()
I would, too, if they gave me opportunities like that. Excellent answer!1 guy asked me what would be a good cheap deer rifle, I mentioned a .30-30. Guy then says he wants a real caliber that will actually kill deer like a .300 Win. Mag. So I told him why stop there, get a .375 H & H. I do like answering questions . . . .
I'm increasingly reluctant to respond to posts requesting advice on equipment, as it seems that the requests are very seldom honest or candid in their expressed objective. Typical examples ask for recommendations for "the best" accessory for some particular purpose, and only later do we learn that the poster doesn't really want (can't afford, or is too cheap to purchase) "the best".
A recent query asked for "the best" small, lightweight, robust red-dot sight (for a long gun, I think). The Aimpoint Micro was my recommendation, and you'd have thought I was proposing pedophilia, apostasy, or something equally offensive and disturbing, when the price came to light. Turns out the person requesting the recommendation didn't want to hear about the "best", but instead wanted some magical way to cheat the "get what you pay for" reality. This seems to be all too common. People might at least have the courtesy to specify price parameters with these requests, so that those of us who have long since accepted the "get what you pay for" axiom aren't wasting our time replying to poorly stated requests for info.
Tell me up front that you want a recommendation for a scope for your new $1,000 rifle, that you'll be using on a once-in-a-lifetime hunt costing a month's wages and two year's accumulated vacation time, with a $200 budget for the optic, and I'll save my breath, so to speak...
David, this is among your finest suggestions, and I'm taking it seriously, and to heart. Henceforth, inquisitive individuals asking after my unique, extensive experience and especially informative advice, will be required to submit a PayPal remittance, at the rate of $10 per paragraph of succinct response, upon receipt of which, my inestimably informative response will be conveyed. I'm hopeful of a comfortable retirement, projecting profits from this arrangement...
I wouldn't quit my day job yet.Henceforth, inquisitive individuals asking after my unique, extensive experience and especially informative advice, will be required to submit a PayPal remittance, at the rate of $10 per paragraph of succinct response, upon receipt of which, my inestimably informative response will be conveyed. I'm hopeful of a comfortable retirement, projecting profits from this arrangement...
There are many good knifes to choose from....Is this a bad time to ask what the best pocket knife is??![]()
try eeny, meeny, miney, moSo, what would you say is the best caliber for hunting whitetail deer with?
I really want to kill 'em good, so maybe a 300 Ultra Mag? Or should I get a 300 Weatherby Mag? Or a 7MM Ultra Mag? Or a .338 Lapua?
Now I'll need a scope....
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David, this is among your finest suggestions, and I'm taking it seriously, and to heart. Henceforth, inquisitive individuals asking after my unique, extensive experience and especially informative advice, will be required to submit a PayPal remittance, at the rate of $10 per paragraph of succinct response, upon receipt of which, my inestimably informative response will be conveyed. I'm hopeful of a comfortable retirement, projecting profits from this arrangement...
There are many good knifes to choose from....
(somebody was gonna do it)
Seriously now, I just picked up a CTG. How much is it worth?
I'm increasingly reluctant to respond to posts requesting advice on equipment, as it seems that the requests are very seldom honest or candid in their expressed objective. Typical examples ask for recommendations for "the best" accessory for some particular purpose, and only later do we learn that the poster doesn't really want (can't afford, or is too cheap to purchase) "the best".
A recent query asked for "the best" small, lightweight, robust red-dot sight (for a long gun, I think). The Aimpoint Micro was my recommendation, and you'd have thought I was proposing pedophilia, apostasy, or something equally offensive and disturbing, when the price came to light. Turns out the person requesting the recommendation didn't want to hear about the "best", but instead wanted some magical way to cheat the "get what you pay for" reality. This seems to be all too common. People might at least have the courtesy to specify price parameters with these requests, so that those of us who have long since accepted the "get what you pay for" axiom aren't wasting our time replying to poorly stated requests for info.
Tell me up front that you want a recommendation for a scope for your new $1,000 rifle, that you'll be using on a once-in-a-lifetime hunt costing a month's wages and two year's accumulated vacation time, with a $200 budget for the optic, and I'll save my breath, so to speak...