When conversation turns to premium hunting rifles, most name Tikka, Bergara, Christensen Arms. But there’s a manufacturer quietly building reputation among serious hunters and long-range shooters – Seekins Precision.
Seekins is known in the AR-15/AR-10 community as manufacturer of high-quality components and rifles. But their bolt-action rifles in the Havak lineup are a completely different level. This isn’t mass production, this is almost custom-level quality at production rifle price.
Havak PH3 (Precision Hunter 3) in 7mm PRC is the third generation of their hunting platform. Price around $2400-2600 puts it in the premium segment, where competitors are Christensen Arms, Proof Research, and even entry-level custom builds. But Seekins claims PH3 is worth every dollar.
Let’s break this down as honestly as possible: is this genuinely a premium-level rifle, or just good marketing and inflated price? What exactly do you get for $2500, and is it worth it?
History of Seekins Precision and Havak Lineup
Seekins Precision was founded by Glen Seekins in 2004 in Idaho. Initially the company specialized in precision components for AR platforms – handguards, scope mounts, upper/lower receivers. Their products quickly earned reputation as among the best in the industry.
In 2016 Seekins released their first bolt-action rifle – Havak. The name references hawk, symbolizing hunting instinct and precision. Philosophy was simple: apply the same quality standards and precision machining as AR components to bolt-action rifles.
Havak evolution:
- Havak (Gen 1) – original model, heavy tactical/hunting hybrid
- Havak Bravo – lightened version for mountain hunting
- Havak Element – ultra-light with carbon barrel
- Havak PH2 (Precision Hunter 2) – balance of weight and accuracy
- Havak PH3 (Precision Hunter 3, 2023) – current flagship
When Hornady launched 7mm PRC, Seekins quickly added it to the PH3 lineup. They understood this cartridge fit perfectly into the precision hunting rifle concept.
Design Philosophy: Precision Machining Meets Hunting
Seekins approaches rifle manufacturing like an aerospace company. Every part is machined in-house on 5-axis CNC machines with tight tolerances. This isn’t assembly line production like Ruger or Savage – this is small-batch manufacturing with quality focus.
Key principles:
1. Integration: receiver and recoil lug are single CNC-machined part (not separate components)
2. Materials: only premium steel and aluminum, no compromises
3. Quality control: each rifle tested for accuracy before shipping
4. American made: 100% manufactured in Idaho, no offshore components
5. Lifetime warranty: lifetime warranty against defects for original owner
Result: rifle that feels like custom build, but costs (relatively) like production rifle.
Havak PH3: Technical Specifications
Base parameters:
- Caliber: 7mm PRC
- Action: Bolt-action, 90-degree throw
- Barrel length: 24 inches (standard for PH3)
- Barrel profile: Proof Research carbon wrapped #3 contour
- Twist: 1:8 (optimal for 175-180gr bullets)
- Barrel threading: 5/8-24
- Overall length: approximately 44″
- Weight: 7.5-7.8 pounds (with carbon barrel)
Receiver and action:
- Material: 416R stainless steel
- Type: integrated recoil lug (CNC-machined with receiver)
- Finish: Cerakote Elite Series (multiple colors)
- Feeding: M16-style extractor (most reliable type)
- Ejection: plunger ejector
- Bolt face: standard magnum (.532″)
- Picatinny rail: 20 MOA cant, integrated
Bolt:
- Locking lugs: three radial (120 degrees between them)
- Bolt throw: 90 degrees (standard)
- Fluting: spiral on bolt body (weight reduction)
- Handle: oversize tactical-style, removable
- Cocking: cock-on-open
- Finish: Cerakote matching receiver
Trigger mechanism:
- Type: TriggerTech Primary (adjustable)
- Range: 2-4 pounds
- Out of box: usually 2.5-3 pounds
- Type: single-stage with ultra-clean break
- Zero creep, zero over-travel
Barrel:
- Manufacturer: Proof Research
- Type: carbon fiber wrapped, stainless steel core
- Contour: #3 Sendero (medium-heavy)
- Length: 24″
- Finish: satin stainless on muzzle portion, carbon on rest
- Accuracy guarantee: Sub-MOA with premium ammunition
Stock:
- Manufacturer: AG Composites (Alpine Hunter)
- Material: carbon fiber shell with internal structure
- Type: Monte Carlo with vertical grip
- Adjustments: length of pull via spacers (3 positions)
- Recoil pad: Limbsaver AirTech precision
- Forend: fully free-floating, textured
- Stock weight: about 1.5 pounds (very light)
- Bedding: aluminum V-block system
Magazine:
- Type: detachable AICS-pattern
- Capacity: 3 rounds for 7mm PRC (magnum length)
- Included: one Accurate Mag magazine
- Compatibility: works with AICS standard magazines
Additional:
- Sling swivel studs (front and rear)
- Muzzle brake: optional Seekins ATC (Advanced Tactical Compensator)
- Case: soft Seekins rifle case included
What’s in the Box
Seekins equips PH3 properly for premium rifle:
- Rifle with integrated 20 MOA Picatinny rail
- One Accurate Mag AICS 3-round magazine
- Soft Seekins case with logo
- Hex key set for adjustments
- Torque wrench for action screws (rare!)
- Manual and warranty card
- Factory test target (3-shot group)
For $2500 the package matches the price. Especially nice is inclusion of torque wrench – shows Seekins cares about proper maintenance.
Accuracy: Guarantee and Reality
Seekins officially guarantees Sub-MOA accuracy with premium ammunition. But unlike general claims, they include actual factory test target with each rifle.
Factory testing:
- Each rifle is shot at factory
- 3 shots at 100 yards with premium ammunition
- Target included with rifle
- Typical groups on targets: 0.3-0.6 MOA
Real owner results for PH3 in 7mm PRC:
With premium ammunition (Hornady Precision Hunter, Federal Premium, Nosler):
- Groups of 0.4-0.7 MOA consistently
- Some owners report groups of 0.3-0.5 MOA
- Consistency outstanding – group-to-group variance minimal
With handloads:
- Groups of 0.2-0.4 MOA achievable with properly selected components
- Rifle very responsive to ammunition quality
- Some precision shooters achieve 0.15-0.25 MOA five-shot groups
Important observations:
- Proof Research carbon barrel holds accuracy even when heated
- Can shoot 15-20 rounds consecutively without significant accuracy degradation
- First “cold bore” shot lands in group (rare!)
- POI (point of impact) shift minimal with temperature changes
Comparison with competitors:
- Tikka T3x: Seekins more accurate (0.4-0.7 vs 0.5-0.8 MOA typically)
- Bergara B-14: about same level
- Christensen Arms Ridgeline: Seekins slightly more consistent
- Weatherby Vanguard: Seekins significantly more accurate (0.4-0.7 vs 0.6-1.0 MOA)
- Sig Cross Sawtooth: Seekins significantly more accurate and consistent
Accuracy verdict: PH3 is one of the most accurate production rifles on market. For $2500 you get accuracy comparable to custom builds at $4000-5000. This is genuine precision instrument, not just hunting rifle.
Proof Research Barrel: Carbon and Steel
Use of Proof Research carbon fiber wrapped barrel is one of PH3’s key elements.
Proof construction:
- Steel core (416R stainless) with traditional rifling
- Carbon shell wound under pressure around steel
- Aerospace-grade carbon fiber and epoxy
- Carbon shell thickness varies along length for optimal stiffness
Carbon barrel advantages:
1. Weight:
- #3 contour carbon barrel weighs approximately 1-1.5 pounds less than steel equivalent
- For 7mm PRC this is critical – weight reduction without losing stiffness
2. Stiffness:
- Carbon has outstanding stiffness-to-weight ratio
- Less barrel whip = better accuracy
3. Thermal stability:
- Carbon dissipates heat better than thin steel barrel
- Can shoot more rounds without affecting accuracy
- POI shift when heated minimal
4. Durability:
- Life comparable to steel barrel (2500-3000 rounds for 7mm PRC)
- Carbon shell not subject to corrosion
- Resistant to impacts and scratches
Carbon barrel cons:
- More expensive than steel ($600-800 difference)
- If damaged – repair impossible, only replacement
- Some shooters prefer “feel” of steel barrel
Practice: Proof Research is one of two leading carbon barrel manufacturers (second is Carbon Six). Their barrels are used by top manufacturers like Christensen Arms, Fierce, and now Seekins. Reputation impeccable.
In practice with PH3: barrel genuinely holds accuracy when heated better than any thin steel rifle. Can shoot group after group at range without waiting between strings. For hunting rifle this may be overkill, but for serious long-range practice it’s real advantage.
Bolt: Three Lugs and M16 Extractor
Havak PH3 bolt uses proven design with modern improvements.
Three radial locking lugs:
- Positioned in circle 120 degrees apart
- More contact area than two lugs = more reliable lockup
- Even load distribution = less wear
- For 7mm PRC at 65,000 psi this matters
M16-style extractor: Seekins uses proven M16/AR-15 style plunger extractor – most reliable type in industry.
Advantages:
- Holds case centered on bolt face
- Powerful spring ensures confident extraction
- Less likely to have stuck case
- Easily replaceable (field replaceable)
Plunger ejector: Built into bolt face, ejects cases confidently at 3-4 o’clock, distance 6-8 feet.
Bolt throw:
- Standard 90 degrees (not short-throw like Sig Cross)
- Smoothness outstanding – best I’ve felt besides Tikka
- Seekins uses special lubrication and polishing at factory
- Effort when closing minimal even on magnum cartridges
Spiral fluting: Spiral grooves on bolt body:
- Reduce weight by approximately 2 ounces
- Improve dirt and water resistance (less surface for accumulation)
- Look cool (subjective, but yes)
Practice: PH3 bolt throw is one of the best in industry. Not as buttery as Tikka, but very close. Significantly smoother than Weatherby, Savage, or Ruger. Cycling fast, confident, no binding.
TriggerTech Primary Trigger Mechanism
Seekins installs TriggerTech Primary – one of the best aftermarket triggers on market, which many shooters buy separately for $200-250.
Characteristics:
Type: Single-stage with ultra-clean break (has feel of two-stage, but that’s psychological effect)
Technology: patented frictionless release technology – trigger breaks without friction, like glass rod
Adjustment: 2-4 pounds (usually out of box 2.5-3)
Feel:
- Absolutely zero creep (pre-travel)
- Zero over-travel (travel after break)
- Break so clean it’s called “best production trigger”
- Reset crisp and short
Safety:
- Won’t fire if dropped (even at 1.5 pounds setting)
- Certified safe down to 1.5 pounds
Comparison with competitors:
TriggerTech Primary (on PH3) vs:
- Tikka stock trigger: TriggerTech better (significantly)
- Savage AccuTrigger: TriggerTech better (cleaner break)
- Weatherby Vanguard trigger: TriggerTech dramatically better
- Ruger Marksman (even with Old Beaver spring): TriggerTech better
- TriggerTech Diamond ($280 separately): Primary 95% there, Diamond slightly better adjustability
Practice: This is trigger that doesn’t need changing. Even for precision competition shooting, Primary is more than sufficient. For $2500 rifle you expect good trigger, and Seekins delivers one of the best.
Personally, this is my favorite trigger for hunting rifles. Light enough for precision (2.5-3 pounds), but with sufficient safety margin for field conditions.
AG Composites Stock: Carbon and Ergonomics
AG Composites Alpine Hunter stock is one of PH3’s features.
Construction:
- Carbon fiber shell
- Internal structure of foam and composite
- Aluminum V-block bedding system
- Weight about 1.5 pounds (very light)
Geometry:
- Monte Carlo with raised comb for comfortable eye positioning
- Vertical grip (almost like precision rifle)
- Drop about 0.75″ at comb
- Length of pull adjustable via spacers (3 positions: 13″, 13.5″, 14″)
Texture:
- Aggressive stippling on grip and forend
- Genuinely functional, doesn’t slip even with wet hands
- Durable coating, doesn’t wear off
Recoil pad:
- Limbsaver AirTech Precision – one of the best recoil pads
- Thick (about 1″)
- Soft, but not “spongy”
- Critical for 7mm PRC – recoil feels mild
Bedding system:
- Aluminum V-block integrated in stock
- Receiver sits in V-block without stress
- Action screws (two) torqued to 65 inch-pounds
- System ensures repeatability – can remove and reinstall action without re-zeroing
Forend:
- Fully free-floating
- Wide for comfortable offhand hold
- Rigid enough – doesn’t flex under bipod load
- Sling swivel stud front for bipod
Stock pros:
- Light (critical for overall weight)
- Rigid (improves accuracy)
- Comfortable (ergonomics excellent)
- Beautiful (carbon weave visible)
- Adjustable LOP
Cons:
- No comb height adjustment (only LOP)
- Carbon can crack with extreme impact (rare, but theoretically)
- For some too “tactical” style
Practice: AG Composites makes some of the best carbon stocks in industry. Their products used on custom builds at $5000+. That Seekins uses AG on production rifle at $2500 is statement about quality.
Personally, this stock’s ergonomics are my favorite. Vertical grip comfortable for both bipod shooting and offhand. LOP in middle position (13.5″) fits most shooters.
Cerakote Elite Series Finish
Seekins uses Cerakote Elite Series – top tier ceramic coating.
Cerakote Elite characteristics:
- Coating thickness 0.001″ (very thin, doesn’t affect tolerances)
- Hardness 70+ HRC
- Resistant to scratches, chemicals, corrosion
- Temperature resistance to 1200°F
Available colors for PH3:
- Graphite Black (classic)
- Sniper Grey
- Burnt Bronze
- Tungsten (dark grey)
- FDE (Flat Dark Earth)
- Custom colors for upcharge
In practice: After year of use, finish looks like new. Scratches appear only from serious impacts, and even then shallow. In wet conditions, corrosion not a problem at all.
Cerakote Elite better than standard Cerakote (which other manufacturers use). Difference small, but noticeable with extended use.
AICS Magazines: Industry Standard
PH3 uses AICS-pattern magazines – right decision for premium rifle.
Included: One Accurate Mag 3-round magazine. Accurate Mag is top manufacturer, their magazines used by military and LE. Quality excellent, feeding flawless.
Compatibility: PH3 works with any AICS magnum length magazines:
- Accurate Mag (3, 5 rounds)
- Magpul AICS (3, 5 rounds)
- MDT Metal (3, 5, 10 rounds)
- Alpha Mag (premium, but expensive)
Capacity: For 7mm PRC magnum-length magazines usually 3 rounds (short) or 5 rounds (standard). Three sufficient for hunting, five more convenient for long-range practice.
Recommendation: Buy couple additional Accurate Mag or Magpul magazines ($50-70 each). Convenient to have loaded magazines, especially for long-range training.
Weight and Balance: Sweet Spot
Overall weight of PH3 in 7mm PRC with 24″ carbon barrel: 7.5-7.8 pounds without optics.
With typical hunting optic (Leupold VX-5HD 3-15×44 about 17 ounces) total weight about 8.5-9 pounds.
Comparison:
- Lighter than Weatherby Vanguard (7.5 pounds) with optics (about 9 pounds)
- Comparable to Tikka T3x in medium configuration
- Heavier than Sig Cross Sawtooth (6.9 + optic = 8 pounds)
- Lighter than Savage 110 Tactical (8+ pounds base)
Balance: Balance point located approximately at magazine – perfect. Rifle not nose-heavy (forward bias) and not butt-heavy (rear bias).
When shooting offhand, balance feels natural. With bipod – stable platform.
Weight practicality:
For walking hunts: 8.5-9 pounds with optics is reasonable weight. Not ultra-light (there are 6-7 pound rifles with optics), but not heavy (some tactical rifles 11-12 pounds). Can carry all day without excessive fatigue.
For recoil: 7.5 pounds without optics for 7mm PRC – recoil manageable, but noticeable. Good recoil pad (Limbsaver) and muzzle brake help significantly. With brake, recoil feels like 6.5 Creedmoor.
For accuracy: This weight is sweet spot for accuracy. Heavy enough for stability when shooting, but not so heavy as to be unwieldy.
Optics: What to Mount on Premium Rifle
For $2500 rifle makes sense to invest in good optics. Not necessarily $3000, but $800-1500 is reasonable range.
Recommendations by category:
“Reasonable” level $800-1200:
- Leupold VX-5HD 3-15×44 ($1000) – light, quality, American
- Vortex Razor LHT 3-15×42 ($1000) – light for light rifle
- Nightforce SHV 4-14×56 ($1100) – tank-level durability
Premium level $1200-2000:
- Leupold VX-6HD 3-18×50 ($1500) – step up from VX-5, better glass
- Nightforce NX8 2.5-20×50 ($1800) – compact, light, feature-rich
- Zeiss V6 3-18×50 ($2200) – German glass, outstanding optics
“No compromise” level $2000+:
- Schmidt & Bender Klassik 3-12×50 ($2500) – if budget allows
- Swarovski Z8i 2.3-18×56 ($3000) – best hunting glass on planet
- Kahles K318i 3.5-18×50 ($2800) – Austrian quality
Personal recommendation: For PH3 I’d choose Leupold VX-6HD 3-18×50 ($1500). American optic on American rifle, excellent glass, light (20 ounces), reliable. Total budget $2500 + $1500 = $4000 for complete setup – reasonable for premium system.
Alternative: Nightforce NX8 2.5-20×50 if planning more long-range shooting. Slightly heavier, but incredibly versatile with magnification range.
Muzzle Brake: Seekins ATC or Aftermarket?
PH3 ships without installed brake, but Seekins offers their ATC (Advanced Tactical Compensator) for $120-150 optionally.
Seekins ATC:
- Three-port design
- Recoil reduction approximately 40-50%
- Gas directed forward and to sides
- Quite loud (like most effective brakes)
- Manufacturing quality excellent
Alternatives:
Area 419 Hellfire ($120-150):
- Self-timing (no gunsmith needed for installation)
- Very effective (50-60% reduction)
- Mounting system for quick-attach suppressors
- Popular choice among precision shooters
Precision Armament M4-72 ($100):
- One of most effective brakes on market (70%+ reduction)
- Very loud
- Excellent quality
VG6 Gamma ($50):
- Budget option
- Effectiveness about 40%
- Good price/effectiveness ratio
Recommendation: For 7mm PRC brake isn’t optional – it’s necessary for comfortable shooting, especially on long-range sessions. I’d choose Area 419 Hellfire for self-timing and ability to add suppressor through their system in future.
Important: With good brake, PH3 recoil in 7mm PRC feels approximately like 6.5 Creedmoor. Without brake – it’s full magnum. Invest $120-150 in brake, it’s worthwhile investment.
Customer Service and Warranty
Seekins Precision is relatively small company (about 100 employees), and this reflects in customer service.
Lifetime warranty:
- Lifetime warranty for original owner
- Covers material and manufacturing defects
- Does NOT cover wear from normal use or damage from abuse
Response to inquiries:
- Email: usually respond within 24-48 hours
- Phone: can get through, wait time usually 5-10 minutes
- Support knowledgeable and helpful – often engineers answer, not just call center
Warranty service:
- If need to send rifle, turnaround time 2-4 weeks
- Seekins pays return shipping
- Usually do thorough inspection and fix any issues
Parts:
- Available directly from factory
- Prices reasonable for premium company
- Availability usually good
Reputation: In AR community Seekins has excellent reputation for customer service. With bolt-action rifles (newer direction) there’s less long-term data yet, but early indications positive.
Comparison:
- Better than Sig Sauer
- About level with Bergara
- Slightly worse than Weatherby (who are simply outstanding)
- Better than Savage
Reliability: Precision Doesn’t Mean Fragile
One concern with premium rifles is how reliable they are in field conditions. PH3 dispels this myth.
Field tests: Many hunters use PH3 in extreme conditions:
- Alaska brown bear hunts (wet, cold, dirty)
- African plains game (heat, dust)
- Mountain hunts (altitude, temperature swings)
Reliability reports overwhelmingly positive:
- Bolt works even when dirty
- M16 extractor doesn’t fail
- Action doesn’t bind from temperature changes
- AG Composites stock takes impacts
Component durability:
Proof Research barrel: Life 2500-3000 rounds for 7mm PRC (standard for magnum cartridges). After this accuracy begins degrading, but rifle still functional.
Bolt: Three locking lugs + quality steel = long service life. Practically no registered cases of PH3 bolt failure.
TriggerTech trigger: Rated for 100,000+ cycles without degradation. Practically eternal for hunting rifle.
Cerakote Elite finish: Holds up for years even with active use.
Stock: Carbon construction strong, but theoretically can crack with extreme impact. In practice – rare.
Practice: PH3 is precision instrument, but built tough. This isn’t delicate benchrest rifle requiring white gloves. This is working rifle for serious hunters.
Ammunition: What to Shoot for Best Results
To achieve full PH3 potential, need quality ammunition.
What works outstandingly:
Factory ammunition:
- Hornady Precision Hunter 175gr ELD-X – groups 0.4-0.6 MOA consistently
- Federal Premium 175gr Terminal Ascent – groups 0.5-0.7 MOA
- Nosler Trophy Grade 175gr AccuBond – groups 0.4-0.6 MOA, but expensive ($4+ per shot)
Handloading: PH3 exceptionally responsive to handloading. Many owners achieve:
- Groups 0.2-0.4 MOA with optimized loads
- Some precision shooters report 0.15-0.25 MOA five-shot groups
Recommended components for handloading:
Bullets:
- Berger 180gr Hybrid Target – outstanding BC, accuracy
- Hornady 180gr ELD-M – excellent for long-range
- Sierra 183gr MatchKing – time-tested
- Nosler 175gr AccuBond LR – for hunting
Powder:
- H1000 – most popular for 7mm PRC
- Retumbo – slightly slower, good for heavy bullets
- N565 – Vihtavuori option, very stable
Brass:
- ADG – best quality, expensive
- Peterson – excellent quality, slightly cheaper
- Hornady – affordable, quality
Primers:
- CCI 250 Large Rifle Magnum
- Federal 215 Large Rifle Magnum
OAL considerations: AICS magazines allow seating bullets quite far out (about 3.340″ max OAL for magnum AICS). This gives flexibility for optimizing seating depth.
Important: Proof Research barrels have reputation being slightly “picky” first 100-150 rounds (break-in period). After break-in they stabilize and become very consistent.
Upgrades: Are They Even Needed?
For $2500 PH3 is already maximally complete package. Most upgrades have questionable value.
What DOESN’T need changing:
- Trigger (TriggerTech Primary already top-tier)
- Barrel (Proof Research premium)
- Stock (AG Composites excellent)
- Bolt (smooth and reliable)
- Finish (Cerakote Elite premium)
What can be added:
1. Muzzle Brake or Suppressor ($100-1500): MANDATORY for comfortable shooting.
- Brake: Area 419 Hellfire ($150)
- Suppressor: Thunderbeast Ultra 7 ($1000 + $200 tax stamp) – best-in-class for hunting
2. Bipod ($100-400):
- Harris 6-9″ S-BRM ($100) – proven classic
- Atlas BT10 ($280) – if need premium
- Really Right Stuff SOAR ($350) – top-tier
3. Additional Magazines ($50-80):
- Accurate Mag 5-round ($70)
- Magpul AICS 5-round ($50)
4. Level and Bubble ($30-100): For long-range precision important to keep rifle level.
- Flatline Ops scope level ($40) – simple and effective
5. Sling ($30-100):
- Vickers Combat Sling ($50) – versatile
- Armageddon Gear Precision Rifle Sling ($80) – for precision shooting
What NOT worth adding:
- Aftermarket trigger (already top-tier)
- Chassis system (stock already premium)
- Barrel swap (Proof already best)
Realistic “full setup” budget:
- Rifle: $2500
- Optics: $1000-1500 (Leupold VX-5HD or VX-6HD)
- Brake: $150 (Area 419)
- Bipod: $100-280 (Harris or Atlas)
- Magazines: $100 (two additional)
- Sling: $50
- Ammo for zeroing: $200-300
Total: $4100-4700 for complete precision hunting setup.
Competitors: What to Compare With
In $2400-2600 price range, PH3 competitors:
Christensen Arms Ridgeline ($2000-2200):
- Cheaper by $300-400
- Carbon barrel (from Christensen own production, not Proof)
- Lighter (6.3 pounds)
- Accuracy comparable (0.5-MOA guarantee)
- Seekins wins on trigger (TriggerTech vs Christensen stock), bolt smoothness, overall quality feel
Proof Research Elevation ($3200-3500):
- More expensive by $600-900
- Their own production (Proof makes barrels for others, but also complete rifles)
- Proof carbon barrel (of course)
- Precision focus more than hunting
- Proof wins on ultimate accuracy potential, Seekins better value
Fierce CT Rival ($2400-2700):
- Comparable price
- C3 carbon barrel (their technology)
- Sub-MOA guarantee
- About same level, Seekins slightly better on quality control consistency
Gunwerks ClymR ($4500-5500):
- Significantly more expensive
- True custom-level
- Includes load development
- Gunwerks better (but should be at twice the price)
Bergara Premier HMR Pro ($1800-2000):
- Cheaper by $400-600
- Steel barrel (not carbon)
- Heavier (9+ pounds)
- Chassis instead of traditional stock
- More tactical/competition focus
- Bergara better value for bench shooting, Seekins better for hunting
Tikka T3x ($850-1000):
- Dramatically cheaper ($1500+ difference)
- Steel barrel
- Excellent accuracy (0.5-0.8 MOA)
- Best-in-class bolt (smoothness)
- Tikka unbeatable value, but Seekins gives carbon barrel, better trigger, premium stock – does this justify $1500 difference? Depends on buyer
Weatherby Vanguard Obsidian ($570-650):
- Almost four times cheaper
- Sub-MOA guarantee
- Steel barrel
- Heavier (7.5 pounds)
- Excellent customer service
- Weatherby incredible value at $600, but Seekins gives carbon barrel, better trigger, carbon stock, better overall refinement – is it worth $1900 difference? For most – no. For serious precision hunters – maybe yes.
Competitor verdict: PH3 sits in premium segment where competition is fierce. It’s not “best value” (that’s Tikka or Weatherby), but gives one of best balances of accuracy, weight, quality, and refinement for its price.
For $2500 Seekins PH3 competes with best production rifles and some entry-level customs. And holds up admirably.
Who This Rifle Is For
Seekins Havak PH3 in 7mm PRC is ideal for:
Serious precision hunters who want top-tier accuracy in field conditions and willing to pay for it.
Long-range hunters planning shots 400-800 yards and needing reliable accuracy.
Mountain hunters for whom balance of weight and performance matters (not ultra-light, but not heavy).
Quality enthusiasts who value premium materials, precision machining, attention to detail.
Handloaders who want platform responsive to load development.
Those wanting “almost custom” without custom prices and lead times.
Shooters transitioning from budget/mid-tier rifles and wanting serious upgrade.
NOT suitable for:
Hunters on strict budget – for $600-800 can buy Weatherby or Ruger that will accomplish 90% of same tasks.
Those wanting best value – Tikka at $850 gives comparable accuracy for $1600 less.
Casual shooters who shoot 20-30 rounds per year – premium rifle will be underutilized.
People wanting maximum lightness – there are lighter rifles (Christensen Arms Ridgeline 6.3 pounds).
Those needing fastest-smoothest bolt – Tikka still king in this aspect.
Bottom Line: Premium That Justifies Price
Seekins Havak PH3 in 7mm PRC is rare case of premium rifle that genuinely delivers what it promises.
For $2400-2600 you get:
- Proof Research carbon barrel ($800-1000 separately)
- TriggerTech Primary trigger ($200-250 separately)
- AG Composites carbon stock ($600-800 separately)
- Cerakote Elite finish
- Guaranteed Sub-MOA accuracy (realistically 0.4-0.7 MOA)
- Precision machining at aerospace-level
- American made quality
If you add up component costs separately:
- Action + barrel installation: $1500-2000 (custom build)
- Proof barrel: $800-1000
- TriggerTech: $250
- AG Composites stock: $700
- Cerakote + machining work: $300-500
Total components: $3550-4450
For $2500 PH3 is significant value in premium segment.
Main question: Is PH3 worth $1600-1900 more than Tikka T3x or Weatherby Vanguard?
Honest answer:
For most hunters – no. Tikka at $850 or Weatherby at $600 will give 85-90% performance for 35-25% of price. That’s better value.
But PH3 worth the premium if:
- You need rifle under 7 pounds with magnum cartridge (carbon barrel critical)
- Planning serious long-range shooting and handloading (responsiveness to quality loads matters)
- Value best-in-class components (TriggerTech, Proof, AG Composites)
- Want almost custom-level quality without custom prices ($4000-6000) and lead times (6-12 months)
- Plan to keep rifle many years and want buy-once-cry-once
PH3 isn’t “best value”. It’s best-in-class performance in production rifles.
This is rifle for shooter who understands difference between “good” and “excellent,” and willing to pay for it. For someone who will use rifle’s full potential – handloading, long-range shooting, serious hunting.
If your budget is $2500 for rifle, and you’re serious about precision hunting – Seekins Havak PH3 is one of best options on market. You won’t be disappointed.
But if budget tight, or you’re casual shooter – buy Tikka for $850 or Weatherby for $600, invest difference in optics, ammo, and training. You’ll get more practical benefit.
Bottom line: Seekins Havak PH3 is outstanding rifle for serious shooters. Premium, but justified. Not for everyone, but for those who need it – this can be rifle for life.







