"GoLite" PRS Build by MileHigh - its a shooter!

I am in the same boat. I had a GAP hospitaller and the weight just fatigued me after a few hours. I loved shooting that gun if I was staying in one spot. Definitely going light as possible this time.
 
This is clearly a hunting rifle but I'm planning to shoot it in a comp at some stage - just to see what the performance envelope is with an setup that weighs half of some comp rigs.

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What i have found with the GoLite comp/hunting rifle so far is that you have to "drive" it. The heavier rigs are more forgiving in lapses of fundamentals and concentration.

I went through a phase where I became convinced that the gun had a first round pop issue with the suppressor. Occasionally the first shot would be about 1-1.5" off and then the next shots would go through the same holes. Shot it recently to develop a hunting load and had no issues with the suppressor. Now I am thinking that the occasional first shot flyer is due to me not hard concentrating and being on top of on my fundamentals until after I let one fly.
 
I had promised a deer hunting (more like deer sniping or deer overwatch) report with the GoLite rifle:



We were on an eradication hunt in the UT mountains and I noted how nice it was to have a gun that only weighs 12 pounds in this steep (fall to the bottom) type of terrain that can reliably bang steel past 1,200 yards. I made a first round hit at 621 yards with the gun on the opposite hill to the right in the picture.

When I divide the cost of the equipment with the meat we recovered it comes out to
about $243.00/pound. I wonder if my wife has any idea how hard I work to provide good meat for the family ...
 
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I had promised a deer hunting (more like deer sniping or deer overwatch) report with the GoLite rifle:



We were on an eradication hunt in the UT mountains and I noted how nice it was to have a gun that only weighs 12 pounds in this steep (fall to the bottom) type of terrain that can reliably bang steel past 1,200 yards. I made a first round hit at 621 yards with the gun on the opposite hill to the right in the picture.

When I divide the cost of the equipment with the meat we recovered it comes out to
about $243.00/pound. I wonder if my wife has any idea how hard I work to provide good meat for the family ...

I see you ditched the AMG, any particular reason why?
 
Sorry not sure what you mean by AMG Covertnoob, if you are referring to the Leupold scope, I had a MOA based scope on my .22 trainer/comp gun and it was driving me crazy. I put the S&B on the GoLite gun as it didn't fit on the .22 without new base/rings and since I mainly shoot comps with the GoLite gun I figured that would be OK for now. It added a pound to the set up so when I get a decent mil/mil scope for the .22 that can focus down to 25 yds the Leupold will go back on the GoLite and the S&B will go on the AI AT, and the the 3-15 Premier that is on the AI AT will go on ... and so it goes...

I like the S&B better but the 3-18x MK 6 is a good scope and gets the job done and saves a little weight in the process.
 
I should have added that adding the rail to the bottom of the forend in order to directly engage the RRS tripod is a game changer - it works phenomenally well in the field.

I need to conduct some tests of GoLite vs. GoHeavy off of the RRS tripod in field conditions. I would not be surprised if the GoLite enjoys a slight advantage off the tripod over the heavier guns. But I have to test ...
 
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I should have added that adding the rail to the bottom of the forend in order to directly engage the RRS tripod is a game changer - it works phenomenally well in the field.

I need to conduct some tests of GoLite vs. GoHeavy off of the RRS tripod in field conditions. I would not be surprised if the GoLite enjoys a slight advantage off the tripod over the heavier guns. But I have to test ...

I could see the GoLite being supported better by the tripod, but if the conditions aren't calm, I'd say you're going to get pushed around by the wind a lot more. Inertia and all that...
 
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This is a beautiful thread. Thanks, 300ATT, for keeping us all in the loop. I'm inspired to further lighten my handy rig. I need to put it on a scale and see how far I have to go....
 
It is hard to build a "Do-It-All" rifle. I have been trying for many years - trying to build the perfect "head for the hills" gun. This build from MileHigh is as close as I have come but I would want a barrel swap to 6.5CM or heaven help me a .308 ...

The gun has great "Karma" and just hammers but you have to concentrate and not let up on the fundamentals ... not unlike a .22
 
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@300ATT Thanks for keeping this thread full of user experience and lessons learned. . I was wondering if you have still been shooting the rifle in matches? Have you learned anything else from this GOlite PRS build looking back is there anything you would change. I am looking at building a very similar set up in 6.5CM with a Bighorn action and a proof pre-fit. It seems you and some others on this thread found a sweet sport for a "do all rifle".
 
I have been "distracted" with COVID and other "life-drag" issues lately and have not run the gun in matches for over a year. I do find that the gun requires more attention to detail w/respect to recoil management and spotting your hits than some of the 15-17 lb PRS guns shooting 6 BRA and running breaks. You HAVE to be on your game if you want to spot your hits. That being said the gun typically hits what you point it at! :).

I also found that the action loves to be run hard and fast. The harder and faster the better or you can mess things up by short stroking the bolt.
 
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Yup. Just like F-Class, which is really Benchrest on your belly, PRS is becoming “benchrest on a barricade” or “benchrest on a tank trap” .... they need to add standing offhand to those matches ...
I want to shoot matches but I’m not interested in a 25 lb gun. It would be cool to a class that was capped by weight.
 
Old post....but I built your rifles chubby brother.






I need to upgrade glass. But with the Vortex HST its coming in around 12lbs.

Kelbly Atlas Tactical
Bartlein #13 5r 26" chambered by Kelblys in 6.5x47 Lapua
Manners PRS-2
Seekins M5 Precision DBM bottom metal





Showing promise. Still breaking it in. 5 shots at 100yds measure under .09"...I will take it!



I agree. I'd be much more interested in PRS matches if there were weight classes. A sub 15lb rifle class is more interesting than a $2500 production class to ME.


I built the rifle with long(er) range shooting in mind. Not necessarily PRS matches. I know a 12lb 6.5 will probably make it tough to keep up with 17-25lb BR variant 6mms.



It is what it is. Different shooters like different things and shoot for different reasons.


I really like the practical, situational type shooting in PRS matches. Personally just not interested in rifles that are too heavy to be practical for real world uses.