Hey guys,
I have a potential issue with a Bartlein barrel And/or gunsmith but I may be overthinking things. I thought I would see what you guys think. **NOTE: this thread is NOT intended to bash Bartlein or my local gunsmith.**
I recently acquired a Defiance action and a Bartlein carbon fiber blank. I took both of those items to a local and reputable gunsmith who only builds precision rifles. I dropped off my items and had them chamber the blank in 6.5 SAUM, thread the muzzle, and install the barrel. When the project was completed, I spoke to the business, and they said the barrel gave them issues. Specifically they said the barrel was the most crooked barrel they’ve ever handled. By crooked, I took it as it had significant runout. The shop owner told a close friend of mine that my rifle may have accuracy issues and if the shooter (meaning me) is a good shooter he will possibly not be pleased.
My concern was whether or not I would have accuracy issues due to the potential problem. I was told to just shoot it and see how it does.
Am I wrong for thinking that my gunsmith should have stopped the project as soon as they believed the barrel had a significant amount of runout? My worry is Bartlein will blame the gunsmith, and the gunsmith will blame Bartlein, and here I will be stuck in the middle. Any advice here guys?
I have a potential issue with a Bartlein barrel And/or gunsmith but I may be overthinking things. I thought I would see what you guys think. **NOTE: this thread is NOT intended to bash Bartlein or my local gunsmith.**
I recently acquired a Defiance action and a Bartlein carbon fiber blank. I took both of those items to a local and reputable gunsmith who only builds precision rifles. I dropped off my items and had them chamber the blank in 6.5 SAUM, thread the muzzle, and install the barrel. When the project was completed, I spoke to the business, and they said the barrel gave them issues. Specifically they said the barrel was the most crooked barrel they’ve ever handled. By crooked, I took it as it had significant runout. The shop owner told a close friend of mine that my rifle may have accuracy issues and if the shooter (meaning me) is a good shooter he will possibly not be pleased.
My concern was whether or not I would have accuracy issues due to the potential problem. I was told to just shoot it and see how it does.
Am I wrong for thinking that my gunsmith should have stopped the project as soon as they believed the barrel had a significant amount of runout? My worry is Bartlein will blame the gunsmith, and the gunsmith will blame Bartlein, and here I will be stuck in the middle. Any advice here guys?