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CNC machining is a marvelous thing. "Cheap" rifles, and most of the major manufacturers carry a cheap line, like the Ruger American can make someone with a thirty year old custom rifle cry. I've set up several for friends that shot factory ammo to about an inch right out of the box, including the cheap Remington 770 from Russia with Love that comes with a cheap scope and a stock made out of Silly Putty. I have plenty of hunting-grade centerfire rifles that cannot do any better even after bedding and custom reloading. Just don't buy a used one unless it is at giveaway prices; no one would sell such an inexpensive rifle unless it had a poor barrel. Ruger's QC is good but when you're talking about a $300 rifle saving money with a used one might not be a good idea. How much are new ones going for nowadays? I'm stuck in a 10 year old time warp on prices.Is a Ruger American a "good rifle?" Is the accuracy of the machining in the receiver and the barrel up to snuff for making hits on a gallon jug of Hawaiian Punch (about 5½ inches wide) at a modest 600 yards? Out to 880 yards (half a mile)? I have the empty desert in which to do it. I'm retired, but my manager refuses to let me be so. I still want to work because I've read that people who quit working entirely end-up keeling-over dead in about eighteen months after they retire. I guess the reason is that they lose the will to keep going. Their kids are out of college and are on their own in another city, the portfolio is doing well and it's just the missus and the mister. There's no "urgency" to live, anymore. Life becomes dull, boring and pointless. Then you wake-up dead one morning...