bigrich wrote:what i've heard is lithgow paused production cause of excess stock , the distributor "spika" has claimed breach of contract by lithgow for stopping production , and has pulled out as lithgow's distributor . my local gun shop can not order new lithgow's cause there is no distributor ATM . this is what i've heard , take it with a grain of salt .
fnq22 wrote:I wonder how much the cost of ammo and cost/availabilty of reloading components has on sales of centrefire guns...?..I would own more different calibre rifles if I could actually afford to shoot them..factory ammo for my .243 is about $3-4 a round in my local shops...
fnq22 wrote:I wonder how much the cost of ammo and cost/availabilty of reloading components has on sales of centrefire guns...?..I would own more different calibre rifles if I could actually afford to shoot them..factory ammo for my .243 is about $3-4 a round in my local shops...
fnq22 wrote:I wonder how much the cost of ammo and cost/availabilty of reloading components has on sales of centrefire guns...?..I would own more different calibre rifles if I could actually afford to shoot them..factory ammo for my .243 is about $3-4 a round in my local shops...
Wapiti wrote:I don't think ammo cost has a bearing on whether or not an individual buys another rifle.
Mates of mine buy rifles because they want them for the individual traits they offer, or just the pleasure of being able to choose.
Ammo cost is real, but in this case it's just a smokescreen someone thought up.
I can imagine that a paper shooter is going to be very aware of the cost of components, especially with club shoots requiring certain amounts of ammo per match.
That's just the price of the game. And the time taken to make all that ammo is a great way for the urban dweller to get away from the TV and into the shed, I guess.
But hunters who just crave being outdoors, walking about with a rifle, being where it's really at wouldn't care if the one shot they make that day costs $2, $5, more even.
The running cost of the vehicle, fuel, time and accessories pale that into insignificance, really.
And then there's people like us who, for us, the cost of burning ammo is thousands of $$$ more than not, in lost income let alone animal welfare.
And where both the cost of the firearms, ammo, as well as the loss of the stock is a 100% tax deduction.
I reckon it's more the deliberate system that forces shooters to justify each and every firearm purchase, and needing to get a permit, approvals whatever.
And then of course, people's personal perceptions of the brand of rifle this thread is really about. Personally, there isn't any feature of the Lithgow range of rifles that I actually want whatsoever. That's the real reasons they were sitting on the shelves whilst other brands were moving, irrespective of whether they are Aussie made or not. For a start, what is the benefit of a "crossover"?
You might dispute that, but what else is the reason?
Wapiti wrote:I'm sorry that the Lithgow rimfire didn't work for you Bigrich. I was really excited when these rifles were initially released, but then disappointed immediately, for a few engineering design reasons.
Same goes for the centrefires, all compromise cheap designs rather than what could have been an incredible rifle, because it was designed here, and could've been from a clean sheet using all the best features used from the most successful manufacturers worldwide, but it doesn't. It tries to cut corners, to its detriment. It could've had these best features, for no more cost.
It's not like they aren't accurate rifles, so that's not it.
But who am I to comment, I haven't put my neck on the block and designed a firearm, so my thoughts don't have any weight.
But obviously, sales numbers tell the story in the end. Shame for Aussie manufacturing.
Wapiti wrote:I don't think ammo cost has a bearing on whether or not an individual buys another rifle.
Mates of mine buy rifles because they want them for the individual traits they offer, or just the pleasure of being able to choose.
Ammo cost is real, but in this case it's just a smokescreen someone thought up.
I can imagine that a paper shooter is going to be very aware of the cost of components, especially with club shoots requiring certain amounts of ammo per match.
That's just the price of the game. And the time taken to make all that ammo is a great way for the urban dweller to get away from the TV and into the shed, I guess.
But hunters who just crave being outdoors, walking about with a rifle, being where it's really at wouldn't care if the one shot they make that day costs $2, $5, more even.
The running cost of the vehicle, fuel, time and accessories pale that into insignificance, really.
And then there's people like us who, for us, the cost of burning ammo is thousands of $$$ more than not, in lost income let alone animal welfare.
And where both the cost of the firearms, ammo, as well as the loss of the stock is a 100% tax deduction.
I reckon it's more the deliberate system that forces shooters to justify each and every firearm purchase, and needing to get a permit, approvals whatever.
And then of course, people's personal perceptions of the brand of rifle this thread is really about. Personally, there isn't any feature of the Lithgow range of rifles that I actually want whatsoever. That's the real reasons they were sitting on the shelves whilst other brands were moving, irrespective of whether they are Aussie made or not. For a start, what is the benefit of a "crossover"?
You might dispute that, but what else is the reason?
Wapiti wrote:I'm sorry that the Lithgow rimfire didn't work for you Bigrich. I was really excited when these rifles were initially released, but then disappointed immediately, for a few engineering design reasons.
Same goes for the centrefires, all compromise cheap designs rather than what could have been an incredible rifle, because it was designed here, and could've been from a clean sheet using all the best features used from the most successful manufacturers worldwide, but it doesn't. It tries to cut corners, to its detriment. It could've had these best features, for no more cost.
It's not like they aren't accurate rifles, so that's not it.
But who am I to comment, I haven't put my neck on the block and designed a firearm, so my thoughts don't have any weight.
But obviously, sales numbers tell the story in the end. Shame for Aussie manufacturing.