I have two 2007 manufactured Series 580 Mini-14 rifles. One is stainless in synthetic, the other stainless in wood. I replaced the Ruger handguard with a Choate ventilated handguard; which does not have the obtrusive shroud on its right side. IMO, with the Choate handguard installed the rifles handle like M1 Carbines. The synthetic stocked version is about 4 oz lighter and about 3/8 inch shorter than the wood stocked rifle I own. It is not as accurate as the rifle in the wood stock, giving 2.5 MOA with a scope off a bench at 200 yards. The barrel walks high and right as it gets hot, about like many other hunting rifles I own (like the Remington 7400 carbine). 10 shots and you're 4 high and 4 right at 200 yards with a group about 4-5 MOA. The stainless wood stocked Mini-14 is as accurate as any standard AR15 rifle. It is capable of 1.5-2.0 MOA at 200 yards. It does not walk as the barrel heats; however, when the barrel is ridiculously hot it opens the groups to 3-4 MOA at 200 yards.This is all with Wolf 62 grain HP ammo. I have tried some Sierra 69 grain HP Match King bullets in the wood stocked rifle. Allowed to stay cool to moderately warm the rifle shoots 1 MOA at 100 yards with the Sierra load. Scoping these rifles is superbly easy due to Ruger's excellent scope mounting system. A lot of writing in response to your question, but hopefully it offers some corroboration for the following. I would recommend, and use, a Series 580 Mini-14 for coyotes out to 150 yards. I grew up with standard configuration rifles (like M1 Carbines, Garands, Springfields, Remington 700s, etc.) and have shot such for most of my 40+ years of shooting. The FN-FAL and the AR15 have good ergonomics for their configuration, however, for me, nothing points and handles as well for hunting a conventional configuration rifle.