I have owned 4 Kimber rifles. Here is the breakdown.
223 Montana, wouldn't group less than 3" @ 100 yards. Sent it in to Kimber they said it was within spec.
243 84M, wouldn't group less than 4" @ 100 yards. Sent it in to Kimber they said it was within spec.
338 Federal Montana, grouped ok about 1.5" @ 100 yards but kicked the snot out of me.
6.5 Creedmoor Montana, averaged about a 5" group @ 100 yards. Sent it to Kimber, they said it was within specs.
So in my experience 75% of the time you will get a rifle that shoots horribly.
100% of the time when you send it to Kimber for repair you get treated like a second class citizen who does not know what they are doing and the rifle is within spec according to them.
Buy a Tikka, use the money you saved on better optics....
Conclusion: a Kimber rifle is about as useful as a poopy flavored lollipop.
223 Montana, wouldn't group less than 3" @ 100 yards. Sent it in to Kimber they said it was within spec.
243 84M, wouldn't group less than 4" @ 100 yards. Sent it in to Kimber they said it was within spec.
338 Federal Montana, grouped ok about 1.5" @ 100 yards but kicked the snot out of me.
6.5 Creedmoor Montana, averaged about a 5" group @ 100 yards. Sent it to Kimber, they said it was within specs.
So in my experience 75% of the time you will get a rifle that shoots horribly.
100% of the time when you send it to Kimber for repair you get treated like a second class citizen who does not know what they are doing and the rifle is within spec according to them.
Buy a Tikka, use the money you saved on better optics....
Conclusion: a Kimber rifle is about as useful as a poopy flavored lollipop.