Amen Brother, My point exactly. I enjoy reading these forums because there are some great people of like minds here talking about stuff I'm into but I'm very tired of reading about how some guy bought a $400 off the rack rifle and a $10 box of ammo and it shot .25" groups the first time out. I'm a small arms instructor for the Army and I would love to go to the range with some of these guys just so I could pick up some pointers from them to pass on to my students.
I don't mean to sound jaded here but if every rifle shot MOA there would be no companies like Lilja or Krieger selling custom barrels or custom smiths because there would be no need for them because everyone could be a competition shooter with their favorite deer rifle.
Not every rifle will shoot MOA, but it’s amazing what a $400 rifle – or less – can do.
Here’s the first group I shot with a Remington M700 BDL .308 Win made in 1975. The rifle became mine in November, 2005 for $350. It was purchased used from Gander Mountain. The interesting thing about this 9-shot 100-yard group is that every loaded round was unique – I had incremented the powder charge by 0.5g for each successive load. The only work done to the rifle was to float the barrel.

That group was shot 1/14/2006. Here’s one I shot with that rifle last weekend...

Last November I picked up a used Ruger M77 made in 1984. It cost me $350 at a gunshow in Conroe, Tx. The only work done to the rifle was to float the barrel and polish the trigger. The first two groups shot with this rifle went 8 shots into 1.0” and 10 shots into 1.15”. Not quarter-inch groups, but then again I used two different powders, BL-C(2) and H4350, and again everly loaded case had 0.5g more than the one that preceded it. Here’s a group it shot last weekend. Only two shots because I figured the elk was dead at that point...
Here is one more group, fired from a Ruger M77 made in 1989 and acquired by me in January of 2004. I paid $400 for it and it came with a Leupold M8 4x in the rings. Since I had just paid $100 for an identical scope, I figure the rifle cost me $300. Again the only work done was to float the barrel and polish the trigger.

This kind of accuracy is not needed for hunting. Frankly, a 3MOA rifle will do most jobs, but I wouldn’t keep a rifle that won’t do at least half that.