HuntingNut
HuntingNut
   Login or Register
HomeCommunity ForumsPhoto AlbumsRegister
     
 

User Info

Welcome Anonymous


Membership:
Latest: IPutMoInYoA
New Today: 0
New Yesterday: 0
Overall: 13131

People Online:
Members: 0
Visitors: 330
BOT: 1
Total: 331
Who Is Where:
 Visitors:
01: Forums
02: Photo Albums
03: Your Account
04: Forums
05: Your Account
06: Your Account
07: Forums
08: Forums
09: Forums
10: Forums
11: Your Account
12: Your Account
13: Forums
14: Home
15: Forums
16: Forums
17: Photo Albums
18: Forums
19: Forums
20: Your Account
21: Forums
22: Forums
23: Photo Albums
24: Forums
25: Forums
26: Home
27: Home
28: Forums
29: Forums
30: Forums
31: Your Account
32: Forums
33: Forums
34: Forums
35: Forums
36: Home
37: Forums
38: Forums
39: Forums
40: Forums
41: Forums
42: Forums
43: Your Account
44: Forums
45: Forums
46: Forums
47: Forums
48: Forums
49: Forums
50: Forums
51: Your Account
52: Home
53: Your Account
54: Forums
55: Forums
56: Forums
57: Home
58: Forums
59: Forums
60: Forums
61: Forums
62: Forums
63: Forums
64: Forums
65: Your Account
66: Forums
67: Forums
68: Forums
69: Forums
70: Home
71: Forums
72: Your Account
73: Forums
74: Forums
75: Forums
76: Forums
77: Forums
78: Forums
79: Forums
80: Forums
81: Forums
82: Forums
83: Your Account
84: Forums
85: Home
86: Your Account
87: Forums
88: Your Account
89: Forums
90: Forums
91: Forums
92: Your Account
93: Home
94: Forums
95: Forums
96: Forums
97: Your Account
98: Forums
99: Home
100: Forums
101: Forums
102: Your Account
103: Forums
104: Forums
105: Your Account
106: Forums
107: Forums
108: Your Account
109: Forums
110: Forums
111: Forums
112: Your Account
113: Forums
114: Forums
115: Your Account
116: Forums
117: Forums
118: Forums
119: Forums
120: Your Account
121: Forums
122: Your Account
123: Forums
124: Home
125: Forums
126: Your Account
127: Forums
128: Your Account
129: Forums
130: Your Account
131: Forums
132: Forums
133: Forums
134: Forums
135: Your Account
136: Your Account
137: Your Account
138: Home
139: Forums
140: Forums
141: Forums
142: Forums
143: Forums
144: Forums
145: Your Account
146: Forums
147: Forums
148: Your Account
149: Home
150: Forums
151: Forums
152: Forums
153: Forums
154: Forums
155: Your Account
156: Your Account
157: Forums
158: Forums
159: Forums
160: Forums
161: Forums
162: Your Account
163: Home
164: Forums
165: Home
166: Your Account
167: Forums
168: Forums
169: Your Account
170: Forums
171: Your Account
172: Forums
173: Your Account
174: Forums
175: Forums
176: Forums
177: Home
178: Forums
179: Home
180: Forums
181: Forums
182: Forums
183: Your Account
184: Forums
185: Your Account
186: Forums
187: Home
188: Forums
189: Forums
190: Forums
191: Forums
192: Photo Albums
193: Home
194: Forums
195: Your Account
196: Forums
197: Your Account
198: Home
199: Home
200: Home
201: Photo Albums
202: Your Account
203: Forums
204: Forums
205: Forums
206: Forums
207: Forums
208: Forums
209: Forums
210: Home
211: Your Account
212: Forums
213: Forums
214: Home
215: Forums
216: Forums
217: Your Account
218: Forums
219: Your Account
220: Home
221: Forums
222: Forums
223: Forums
224: Forums
225: Your Account
226: Forums
227: Forums
228: Forums
229: Your Account
230: Forums
231: Home
232: Forums
233: Forums
234: Forums
235: Photo Albums
236: Forums
237: Forums
238: Forums
239: Your Account
240: Your Account
241: Forums
242: Home
243: Your Account
244: Forums
245: Forums
246: Your Account
247: Forums
248: Forums
249: Forums
250: Forums
251: Home
252: Forums
253: Your Account
254: Forums
255: Forums
256: Forums
257: Your Account
258: Home
259: Forums
260: Forums
261: Forums
262: Forums
263: Your Account
264: Forums
265: Your Account
266: Forums
267: Home
268: Your Account
269: Forums
270: Photo Albums
271: Your Account
272: Forums
273: Home
274: Forums
275: Forums
276: Forums
277: Home
278: Your Account
279: Your Account
280: Forums
281: Forums
282: Home
283: Your Account
284: Forums
285: Forums
286: Home
287: Forums
288: Forums
289: Forums
290: Your Account
291: Forums
292: Your Account
293: Photo Albums
294: Forums
295: Your Account
296: Forums
297: Forums
298: Forums
299: Forums
300: Home
301: Home
302: Forums
303: Forums
304: Home
305: Forums
306: Home
307: Your Account
308: Your Account
309: Your Account
310: Photo Albums
311: Forums
312: Your Account
313: Your Account
314: Your Account
315: Your Account
316: Forums
317: Forums
318: Forums
319: Forums
320: Forums
321: Home
322: Forums
323: Your Account
324: Your Account
325: Forums
326: Forums
327: Forums
328: Forums
329: Your Account
330: Your Account
  BOT:
01: Home

Staff Online:

No staff members are online!
 

Coppermine Stats
Photo Albums
 Albums: 308
 Pictures: 2452
  · Views: 824588
  · Votes: 1316
  · Comments: 86
 

Having fun helping a friend accurize his rifle
Discussions related to Guns and Firearms
Go to page Previous  1, 2, 3, 4  Next
View previous topic :: View next topic  
Author Message
Gil Martin
Super Member
Super Member


Joined: Jan 28, 2005
Posts: 1837
Location: Schnecksville, PA

PostPosted: Sat Sep 04, 2010 3:59 pm    Post subject: Re: Having fun helping a friend accurize his rifle Reply with quote

Good job. Keep us posted. All the best...
Gil

_________________
Gil
Back to top
View user's profile
Elvis
Super Member
Super Member


Joined: Jul 27, 2008
Posts: 9256
Location: south island New Zealand

PostPosted: Sat Sep 04, 2010 5:12 pm    Post subject: Re: Having fun helping a friend accurize his rifle Reply with quote

good job, keep at it you will find a sweet one sooner or later.

_________________
You shot it You pluck it !
Them who eats the most duck eats the most feathers!
Back to top
View user's profile
slimjim
Super Member
Super Member


Joined: May 16, 2009
Posts: 8316
Location: Fort Worth TX

PostPosted: Sun Sep 05, 2010 6:35 am    Post subject: Re: Having fun helping a friend accurize his rifle Reply with quote

It certainly didn't shoot factory ammo that well. All that work brought it from 3+MOA down to 2 MOA. Hand-loads made a difference but make me wonder if he should trade if for a new model or a manufacture with a better reputation for accuracy.

_________________
"To anger a conservative, lie to him. To anger a liberal, tell him the truth." - Theodore Roosevelt

"The world is a dangerous place to live; not because of the people who are evil, but because of the people who don't do anything about it." - Albert Einstein
Back to top
View user's profile Photo Gallery
stovepipe
Super Member
Super Member


Joined: Sep 25, 2008
Posts: 4877
Location: Pine, Az.

PostPosted: Tue Sep 07, 2010 6:57 am    Post subject: Re: Having fun helping a friend accurize his rifle Reply with quote

200y? Better than I can hold. Dead deer on any account.
Back to top
View user's profile
chambered221
Super Member
Super Member


Joined: Aug 17, 2007
Posts: 3455
Location: Lost for good !!!

PostPosted: Tue Sep 07, 2010 4:42 pm    Post subject: Re: Having fun helping a friend accurize his rifle Reply with quote

I sure wouldn't get rid of a Remington 700 without looking at other factors first !!!

Scope, mounts, crown, bore condition, locking lugs, firing pin and spring, etc etc.

If I decided it was the barrel I'd have it re-barreled rather than buy a new gun.

My experience has shown that most guns will reduce group size by about 25-50% with a tuned handload. With that knowledge I'll usually do my assessment work using factory ammo. This will give you a solid base line to work from. Work on one thing at a time.

_________________
Ask as many people needed, sooner or later your question will be answered the way you want it answered !!!

A free people ought not only to be armed and disciplined, but they should have sufficient arms and ammunition to maintain a status of independence from any who might attempt to abuse them, which would include their own government.
~George Washington
Back to top
View user's profile Photo Gallery
slimjim
Super Member
Super Member


Joined: May 16, 2009
Posts: 8316
Location: Fort Worth TX

PostPosted: Tue Sep 07, 2010 6:23 pm    Post subject: Re: Having fun helping a friend accurize his rifle Reply with quote

chambered221 wrote:
My experience has shown that most guns will reduce group size by about 25-50% with a tuned handload. With that knowledge I'll usually do my assessment work using factory ammo. This will give you a solid base line to work from. Work on one thing at a time.

I'm getting more than 50% reduction with my first handload. Factory ammo, one box low end and one box high-end, shot 2+ MOA even after the doing the pillar bedding. I do not have the tools to make an assessment on bore condition or crown. I've loaded up 20 rounds with 59.4 grains of H414 and going to learn more about the rifle and how it performs before I change any more.

I had significant trouble with my Rem 700 so I may be a bit pre-disposed. I know Remington can made some accurate rifles and their actions can be machined to be very accurate but I do not think Remington has a reputation for accuracy out of the box. Not just their products today but with their past product. I'd rather puy a hunting rifle that doesn't need all the work to make it accurate to begin with. There are several on the market today that have a reputation for accuracy that are not more expensive than a Remington 700.

I can see the firestorm I just started.
Back to top
View user's profile Photo Gallery
Aloysius
Super Member
Super Member


Joined: Nov 03, 2009
Posts: 2440
Location: B., Belgium

PostPosted: Wed Sep 08, 2010 12:07 am    Post subject: Re: Having fun helping a friend accurize his rifle Reply with quote

Not only the firestorm... be happy your friend seems to have an older Remington, what I've seen here with friends didn't deserve to carry the name Remington anymore... groupings like a shotgun, predilled mounts not lined up properly, ... he got his new Remmy 700 rebarreled before he could hit the bullseye.
Back to top
View user's profile
cbsweeney
Member
Member


Joined: Jun 18, 2010
Posts: 197
Location: New York

PostPosted: Wed Sep 08, 2010 6:57 am    Post subject: Re: Having fun helping a friend accurize his rifle Reply with quote

slimjim wrote:
It gets easier the more you do it. Where do you live in NY?
Hey Slimjim,
I've been out of town the last week.
I am going to take a shot at bedding the two rifles I mentioned before. I read through the proceedure and with your pictures as a reference, I'm more comfortable it will work out well. The first one I want to do is a Savage in .308 win. The factory synthetic stock already has the pillars installed, so it should be fairly easy. I figure if it doesn't turn out great, I wouldn't mind changing that stock. I'm not crazy about the synthetic, but it's the gun I grab in any weather during deer season. The other is a Winchester model 70 in .300 WSM, and it has a nice laminated wood stock, and I want that one to turn out well, so i'll practice on the synthetic stock first.
I live on Long Island, a little town on the south shore, but I do most of my hunting upstate in Middleburgh, Schoharie county. It's a beautiful area, I'm going up this weekend to look at a piece of property that butts up to my In-laws, I'll take some pictures.

_________________
Give a man a fish, and he will eat today. Teach a man to fish, and he will sit in a boat and drink beer all day.
Back to top
View user's profile
chambered221
Super Member
Super Member


Joined: Aug 17, 2007
Posts: 3455
Location: Lost for good !!!

PostPosted: Wed Sep 08, 2010 5:10 pm    Post subject: Re: Having fun helping a friend accurize his rifle Reply with quote

No doubt Remington has created some self deserving criticism over the years !!!
That vintage (I'm guessing 70's) should be one of the better ones.

My point was that by having a proper re-barreling and having the action trued in the process by a premium barrel marker you'll end up with a rifle that's going to be hard to beat.

I'm going to assume one of the first things you did was clean the barrel........making sure there's no copper fouling !!!

_________________
Ask as many people needed, sooner or later your question will be answered the way you want it answered !!!

A free people ought not only to be armed and disciplined, but they should have sufficient arms and ammunition to maintain a status of independence from any who might attempt to abuse them, which would include their own government.
~George Washington
Back to top
View user's profile Photo Gallery
slimjim
Super Member
Super Member


Joined: May 16, 2009
Posts: 8316
Location: Fort Worth TX

PostPosted: Wed Sep 08, 2010 7:50 pm    Post subject: Re: Having fun helping a friend accurize his rifle Reply with quote

chambered221 wrote:
I'm going to assume one of the first things you did was clean the barrel........making sure there's no copper fouling !!!

That I did. I use Bore Tech Eliminator Bore Cleaning Solvent which doesn't damage the bore like Sweets, etc. I filled the barrel and let it set overnight. It came out deep blue. So used some fresh and did it for 24 hours more. At least it was translucent blue so I figured I got it all. Shoot 20 round through it so will clean again before the next range time to see how much copper it collected. My Tikka wouldn't show any noticable copper fouling after 20 rounds. I usually have light fouling after about 60 rounds.
Back to top
View user's profile Photo Gallery
slimjim
Super Member
Super Member


Joined: May 16, 2009
Posts: 8316
Location: Fort Worth TX

PostPosted: Wed Sep 08, 2010 7:59 pm    Post subject: Re: Having fun helping a friend accurize his rifle Reply with quote

cbsweeney wrote:
The first one I want to (bed) is a Savage in .308 win. The factory synthetic stock already has the pillars installed, so it should be fairly easy.

I have no experience doing synthetic stock that are plastic based. I've done fiberglass but no plastic. I've heard there are some unique procedures to get the bedding to stick to the stock. If you already have pillars, I'm not sure you will gain much by bedding the plastic stock. Is it shooting ok? If so, may be best to leave well enough alone. My Tikka has a very hard plastic stock with no pillars but it doesn't flex or compress noticable. It shoots great so I've left it alone. Pillars and glass be on the laminate would be easier to do and would most likely benefit from pillars.
Back to top
View user's profile Photo Gallery
slimjim
Super Member
Super Member


Joined: May 16, 2009
Posts: 8316
Location: Fort Worth TX

PostPosted: Wed Sep 08, 2010 7:59 pm    Post subject: Re: Having fun helping a friend accurize his rifle Reply with quote

cbsweeney wrote:
I live on Long Island, a little town on the south shore, but I do most of my hunting upstate in Middleburgh, Schoharie county. It's a beautiful area, I'm going up this weekend to look at a piece of property that butts up to my In-laws, I'll take some pictures.

I love the Catskills. I grew up in Schenectady and my grandfather had a farm in Walton. Looking forward to your pictures.

_________________
"To anger a conservative, lie to him. To anger a liberal, tell him the truth." - Theodore Roosevelt

"The world is a dangerous place to live; not because of the people who are evil, but because of the people who don't do anything about it." - Albert Einstein
Back to top
View user's profile Photo Gallery
cbsweeney
Member
Member


Joined: Jun 18, 2010
Posts: 197
Location: New York

PostPosted: Thu Sep 09, 2010 4:46 am    Post subject: Re: Having fun helping a friend accurize his rifle Reply with quote

slimjim wrote:
cbsweeney wrote:
The first one I want to (bed) is a Savage in .308 win. The factory synthetic stock already has the pillars installed, so it should be fairly easy.

I have no experience doing synthetic stock that are plastic based. I've done fiberglass but no plastic. I've heard there are some unique procedures to get the bedding to stick to the stock. If you already have pillars, I'm not sure you will gain much by bedding the plastic stock. Is it shooting ok? If so, may be best to leave well enough alone. My Tikka has a very hard plastic stock with no pillars but it doesn't flex or compress noticable. It shoots great so I've left it alone. Pillars and glass be on the laminate would be easier to do and would most likely benefit from pillars.
Thanks for the heads-up.
The Savage shoots fine, I figured it would be a good gun to start with. I may just leave it alone for now. The whole bedding process doesn't seem to be too complicated, just not something to be rushed.

_________________
Give a man a fish, and he will eat today. Teach a man to fish, and he will sit in a boat and drink beer all day.
Back to top
View user's profile
slimjim
Super Member
Super Member


Joined: May 16, 2009
Posts: 8316
Location: Fort Worth TX

PostPosted: Thu Sep 09, 2010 4:53 am    Post subject: Re: Having fun helping a friend accurize his rifle Reply with quote

chambered221 wrote:
No doubt Remington has created some self deserving criticism over the years !!!
That vintage (I'm guessing 70's) should be one of the better ones.

My point was that by having a proper re-barreling and having the action trued in the process by a premium barrel marker you'll end up with a rifle that's going to be hard to beat.

I had a Rem700 in .308 from that time period - saftey on locked the bolt. I usually shot 2+ moa. I bedded it a couple of different ways, tried hand loads, pressure pads mid-way down the barrel. It just wouldn't shoot any better than 1.5 MOA. Then one day, I pulled the trigger and just decided, that was it, I wasn't goning to fire that gun every again and sold it at the next gun show. Today, I wish I still had it as I'd do exactly what you suggest and rebarrel it in .260 and be shooting at 1000 yards.
Back to top
View user's profile Photo Gallery
Elvis
Super Member
Super Member


Joined: Jul 27, 2008
Posts: 9256
Location: south island New Zealand

PostPosted: Thu Sep 09, 2010 10:26 pm    Post subject: Re: Having fun helping a friend accurize his rifle Reply with quote

have you tried another scope???

_________________
You shot it You pluck it !
Them who eats the most duck eats the most feathers!
Back to top
View user's profile
Display posts from previous:   
Post new topic   Reply to topic   Printer Friendly Page    Forum Index » Gun & Firearm Discussions
Page 2 of 4
All times are GMT - 7 Hours
Go to page Previous  1, 2, 3, 4  Next



Jump to:  


You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum
You cannot attach files in this forum
You can download files in this forum


Valid CSS! Valid HTML 4.01!
Click to check if this page is realy HTML 4.01 compliant for speed :)

All logos and trademarks in this site are property of HuntingNut.com.
The comments are property of their posters, all the rest © 2011 by HuntingNut.com
Interactive software released under GNU GPL, Code Credits, Privacy Policy

.: Upgraded to DragonFly 9.2 by *Dizfunkshunal* :.