Um, if you have a sub MOA rifle at 500 yards I wouldn't touch a thing.
hunterfreakhd wrote:ThisUm, if you have a sub MOA rifle at 500 yards I wouldn't touch a thing.
hunterfreakhd wrote:Does the bedding block exactly line up with the barrel down the middle of the stock? That quote just stuck out in my head when I first read your post.I figured someone had to say it if not me someone would've.
hunterfreakhd wrote:I found a good conversation about this http://www.snipershide.com/forum/ubbthr ... er=2921453
Towards the bottom of the page are some good things to check.
I hope this helps.
WolfTrack wrote:Skim bedding my Rem 700 Sendero did help me:
It had opened up to a 1 1/2 inch gun from sub-1 inch with factory loads with Nosler Ballistic tips.
I cleaned out a lot of copper fouling and evenly torqued the action screws. There was a SLIGHT improvement.
I was working for a gunsmith at the time, so he guided me through. He applied some layout fluid to the rifle's action and torqued it into the stock before it dried. We took it out and he showed me how much (rather how little) contact there really was between the action and action block in the stock.
He then guided me through skim bedding. We re-did the layout fluid test, and there was a HUGE difference. There was now more complete, if not full, contact between the action and stock.
After all settled, and everything evenly torqued, the rifle is about half MOA with the same loads. It's even better with handloads too.
YMMV
bulletproof wrote:Have you shot it without a stock?
grousemaster wrote:bulletproof wrote:Have you shot it without a stock?
No. Why would I?
bulletproof wrote:grousemaster wrote:bulletproof wrote:Have you shot it without a stock?
No. Why would I?
To see how it shoots with a free floated barrel and no stock contact on the receiver. Basically a board, two long bolts, a few washers, sandbags and remote trigger.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 4 guests