For those who aren't aware, the Saiga 100 in 30-06 is here in the states after being promised and procrastinated for nearly 5 years.
For those who aren't familiar with Saigas, they are sporting variations of the AK-100 series with proprietary magazines and classic curved grip stocks. They are available in 223, 7.62x39mm, 308, 410ga, 20ga, and 12ga. Most Saigas take many AK accessoris, including optical mounts. Many have found these Saigas readily convertable into the better balanced AK config using US made trigger groups and other US made parts to comply with import laws. These Saigas are busting the myth that AKs are inaccurate by design and many of them shooting MOA groups and practically all of them shooting <2MOA.
The Saiga-100 is a bigger step in the sporting direction, with a push button receiver safety and many other parts changed from the original AK spec. But the core AK action, legendary for its ruggedness and reliability, is practically the same. So the Saiga-100 isn't one step away from being an AK lookalike. As an afficionado of Saiga conversions, I don't plan to do any to my Saiga-100.
But as a semi-auto hunting and target shooting rifle, the Saiga-100 may be one of the most competitive rifles on the American market. It can be had for under $500, and when people are paying $800 for a BAR and $1000 for a Benelli R1, and $400ish for the problematic Remington 7400, a rifle based on a design that can fire tens of thousands of rounds, work after being rusted shut or dropped in the mud, and shoot 2moa on a bad day is probably one of the best deals out there.
So my question is do folks out there think this is a real rival to the Remington 7400? Do you think sales of the 7400 in 30-06 will drop in the near future? Or is the Saiga-100 something that just won't catch on? Would you buy one over a 7400? Why/why not?