Thanks for your comment. I simply like quality, well-built products, a by-product of my desire for perfection, which I know can be expensive. The Bravo in my opinion, is a good value. The price goes to $439 with a Howa action, and Sako green is not available for the Howa, but still, I think it a good piece. I have to decide what quality/price strata I want to be in. Going MDT as I configured it, means about a $231 price bump over the Bravo, and that is the MDT sale. Without the MDT sale, the gap grows to $371.
It is hard for me to believe the misaligned stock/fore-end is supposed to be that way. I've looked at plenty of photos of the Bravo, with actions installed, and some are quite misaligned while others are very close to perfect. Either manufacturing is inconsistent or the fit is sensitive to installation process. I don't know.
Overall, especially for the Howa, there is little else to be had for the price of the Bravo. The only other option is the Bell & Carlson Tactical Style 6, and then you have to add bottom metal. I have Howa polymer bottom metal and a mag, which is cheap, but still, the cost now is close to as much as the Bravo, and I don't have adjustable LOP on the B&C.
The Bravo does offer some advantages over the MDT (for me).
- Bravo can use AICS mags. MDT can only use MDT polymer mags.
- As a poster noted above, the MDT polymer mags hold 8 rounds. There is no 5 or 10 round option.
- I do not need fancy (costly) continuously adjustable LOP. The Bravo spacers work fine, as I am the only one shooting the rifle.
- I prefer a quickly removable cheek piece if the bolt interferes vs a screw wheel.
Phil