Dylan,
Welcome to the Forum.
I was in exactly the same spot as you, just over three years ago, having hunted my whole life and read enough to develop an interest in long range shooting.
I had actually just built a quality "wild dog gun" on a single shot action, and went along to my local full bore Club ........ just to learn bit more about this new calibre (6 x 47 Lapua) that I had built by shooting it for a few weeks at Club shoots, and have a bit of a crack at longer range work.
I was addicted from day one ! This rifle that I was going to break in carefully and then go and shoot dogs with, was going to spend most of its life behind the seat of a 4wd ute. But getting hooked on F Open right from the start meant that instead of living in a ute, it gets treated like Royalty, cuddled carefully and generally treated like my most prized possession......which it is .
So beware.......F Class can be extremely addictive !!
What I discovered was that the men and women involved in Full bore clubs in our part of the world, but particularly those in F Class, are a friendly, welcoming crew who basically make everybody welcome and who hold an enormous amount of knowledge that most will freely share, if you ask politely for help.
My mistake was having just enough knowledge to think that I knew what I needed to, generally...... do well shooting. I had worked it all out.......I thought........and didn't ask anyone for advice. In my defence I certainly didn't realize how high the addiction rate to F Class could be.
My McMillan A5 stock that looked pretty good to me when i ordered it is long gone, replaced by an F Class stock.
My Schmidt & Bender 5-25 x 56 PM11 with a P4 Fine reticle is long gone....the Mil Dot reticle was grossly unsuited to precision shooting at a tiny 0.5moa X ring.
The barrel is long gone....shot out from firing 23-25 shots every weekend for a bit over a year.
So the only things I have left now that I am deadly serious about F Open are the action and the Jewell trigger !!
In hindsight, I wish I had gone along to my local Club first, tried the Club rifles in 223 and 308, (virtually any Cllub you are near will haveClub rifles they loan to new members) and probably been offered a few trial shots from other calibres.
Every full bore/F Class club will have members with an extraordinary amount of knowledge that they are happy to share , if you ask politely and thank them when you are finished.
We have some of the best F Class shooters in the whole world, right here in Australia and what I have found in talking to the winners and high performers at big events around Australia is that they are all really good people, who will give you more assistance and free advice than you could have ever thought possible. They want to win, but they want to do it on the mound, on the day and will therefore give you any help that they can, to help you advance on your journey, and to improve your competitiveness .
Good luck in your new sport ! You have all of the pre-requisites that you need to become addicted.
