I was going to say: There is a WIDE range of pricing in the Blaser Line, They start about $4K and can go $50+K depending on how much you want to pimp things out.
There is a lot of miss-information about the Blasers out there. I own a few, I also have a few AI's and can compare and contrast them.
IMHO the Blaser is best take-down traveling rig for hunting out there. Hopefully the following info can help someone who is looking for a take-down hunting rig to decide if the Blaser is right for them.
First off the Blaser is really a "system" as opposed to a rifle. You can mix and match parts like a lego set:
Pros:
- Take down that allows you to carry TWO to THREE rifles in a 1/2 size gun case ( 1 stock, 2-3 scoped barrels in the case )
- Multi-caliber (.204 - .338 Lapua including .500 Jeffrey's)
- Can swap out different stocks
- 7-ish pounds (w/o ammo or optics)
- No return to zero issues (typically you buy a dedicated scope and scope mount for each barrel. You can swap scopes between barrels but then you have to re-zero)
- cycling the straight pull action is very fast - almost as fast as a semi auto
- Barrels made of very hard steel and last a long time
- 1/4 - 1/2 MOA accuracy
Cons:
- Hardly any aftermarket parts and theirs are pricey
- You MUST learn how to properly run the bolt and not pussy-foot it. If you close it softly it can appear in battery - but when you pull the trigger you just hear a click ...
- The same thing can happen if you don't FL resize brass on your reloads and have sloppy headspace.
- Not as sturdy as an AI - what hunting gun is?
I also have a Blaser Tactical (LRS-2). It seems more accurate than my AI's (but that's just splitting hairs as they are both 1/4-1/2 MOA guns and I am not a 1/4 MOA shooter) however, I can get 1/4 MOA more often with a wider range of ammo out of the Blaser than I can with the AI.
As I stated, they are on the pricy side. FWIW, I have shot multiple Blaser rifles with at least 20 different Blaser barrels and all of them were under 1/2 MOA ... so $4,000 for a 1/4-1/2 MOA hunting rifle? Seems to be about the going rate for any high-end gun that will shoot that well.
People are starting to warm up to switch-barrel guns for a range of tasks: practice on paper, long-range steel, varmints, big game ... Blaser has been doing switch-barrel guns for more than 30 years.
All that being said, even though I believe that the Blaser is one of the best hunting rigs out there I still shot a deer last year with my trusty AW .308.