Cheap Hunting Rifles

What is the best and cheapest rifle to start hunting? So it's a good cheap gun for the range?
I will start the game and I want a firearm just to go to the range and shoot …. Thanks
Mike "The best weapon that could start with would be a Savage Arms, 223 or 243 cameras. These are good enough to do some squirrel hunting, and if you choose the 243 at least you can do some deer hunting with him. Savage is an excellent rifle. I have several of them in my collection including a Moose / Moose Rifle 7mm Remington Magnum chambers. That's one of Popper, so I would not recommend from this cartridge. Basically, anything bigger than .308 Winchester, the rifle. But I would start with a 243 and go from there. As for the pistol, which rarely start my students with a semi – as a 9mm. Its too much for the basic safety training. The Ruger MKII is an excellent choice for the home, as it teaches the basic operations and safety. I also have a Smith & Wesson revolver in .22 LR. These are my starting gun for the people. After showing some Proficiency with that in the 22 graduate Old and reliable .38 Special. The gun I have for this is a Ruger GP-100 cameras to .357 Magnum. The beauty of this caliber is the fact you can shoot .38 special in the gun undamaged and .38 Special cartridge is a fairly mild to begin with. As I learned in my years as an instructor, the gun does the master and novice alike. Revolvers are a very good choice for beginners because of their ease in teaching students. There is no magazine, not the security of dealing. So the student can learn at a slower pace to be safe with the gun. I also think that most of my students end up preferring the gun in the end, if the intention is for the purpose of home defense. This is the other class I teach. There are some fundamental issues that go with semiautomatic guns in a home defense situation. The biggest problem is the lack Fire in the cartridge first. This can be attributed to 3 main problems. The cartridge is defective from the factory, or the gun was stored without a cartridge in the chamber, or an empty chamber. In any of these situations your are forced to use both hands to cycle the slide to load a cartridge, or to locate a magazine charged. This becomes a problem should be on the phone with the police dispatcher Agresso while at home or hotel room. With a revolver, the tendency is to leave the loaded pistol, and in a safe place. I have a small safe hands next to my bed, it is a .357 Magnum load there, not my children can not reach to any of my firearms without my specific supervision, or my wife. However, my point is that a gun must never dropped the phone. Simply pull the trigger for the index of the next cartridge into the firing position. If you can only get 6 to 8 cartridges, depending on the type of gun, but if you need more 3 or 4 shots that are in big trouble, and even their 10-round 9mm will not get you out of trouble. You'll have some of these jokers state to .45 ACP is the only way to go. Not true. While .45 ACP is an excellent cartridge, it is usually too much for most people, for starters. I'm not saying it is a bad cartridge, which is only much muscle to begin. Now, having said all that, there is a very important piece of information you should understand. His defense gun is a direct extension of his person. Meaning, you need to practice with him often, and hands need to be comfortable with its fit, form and function. The last thing to be interested in the price. The reason why people say this is because your life is worth going cheap on a gun, which may have to rely on to take the heat? When you take the weapon, not should be no doubt in his mind as to what you're doing. If you have to think about this in a stressful situation, already dead. If you have a firing range in their locality, which rents guns, you could try several of them to see what his hands and eyes like the best. Ask yourself these questions as they are handeling each. I do not like the way the grip feels in my hand? Is the trigger comfortably placed in terms of my index finger? Are the additional controls on the firearm in a comfortable and easy to operate? Am I in control of the caliber of this gun well enough to learn to use the firearm proficently? Is the gun too heavy or too light? Is the gun easy to clean and care? Is the gun easier to load and unload? All these questions are necessary for selecting the right gun. As for his rifle, is probably going to have to go with someone who has several of them in a collection. Same applied here, however, there are more things to make guns easier to shooters. So again, this depends on you and your preferences. any case, I say to all my students that they should choose the larger size may find it easier to control. In my case, it's .40 S & W, in his service pistol. On the house, as I said .357 Magnum lives there. My gun is a Ruger GP-100 4-inch barrel (standard type of service revolver). The gun's in my service DHS is a Glock 22 in .40 S & W. My wife also works for the DHS, in a different contract, which carries 19 years in a Glock 9 mm service. Now last tip. Only the use of reloaded ammunition scope and effect of practice in their guns. If you keep the firearm loaded, keep the factory loaded with ammunition designed for that caliber. In your rifle, do what you want. Mainly because I doubt you'll have to load at home. As for the person who told you to get a gun, to reconsider AFTER his proposal has more expereince. A 12 Gauge is a real punch in the arm for a beginner. Good Luck!
Coyote hunting – Rifles