I bought a Savage Bmag HB .17WSM for sage rat hunting hoping I'd get a decent shooter. Once I got the rifle the bolt design is ridiculous and the mag design so-so. Once disassembled the action take-down surfaces are miniscule.... truly a sad piece of engineering IMO. The muzzle crown had burrs on it that would shred a paper towel.
The accuracy in the factory Tupperware stock with serrated muzzle were mediocre after testing with 20 and 25g Winchester and 20g American Eagle.
So after hours of work fitting it into a Boyd's Pro Varmint stock, lapping the crown, and then bedding with Devcon I've started accuracy testing again.
My typical barrel cleaning has been 1 dry patch, 1 wet patch using BoreTech Eliminator letting it sit 10 minutes, 1 dry patch, then 6 or so passes with nylon bore brush wetted with BoreTech, then dry patch which takes 10 plus patches to get a nearly clean patch.
First test experimenting with action torques. (All targets shot top left to right order with same lot of ammo)
The next outing (3/24/2019) at 100yds starting with a clean bore (excuse the errant .22mag holes)
I expected the high right first round flyer on a clean bore, the next 4 had me excited, the next two targets are WTF! I checked the action torque and the front had loosened, retorqued and the shot the next two targets..... WTF again. Cased the gun.
Disassembled and checked the bedding and mounting surfaces, thoroughly cleaned it again, torqued the action to 30ip front and rear.
Yesterday I test fired again at 50 yards (top 5 targets .477" dots):
I rechecked the action torque after the 3rd target opened up again and it was fine. Shot the next two targets for confirmation and cased it again.
Got home and cleaned the barrel after those 25 rounds and it was amazingly dirty. It didn't appear to be copper fouling on the patches, just black. So I decide to give it a thorough JB bore cleaner and bore bright treatment, about 30-40 passes with each product followed with solvent brush and dry patching then a patch with a little Kroil.
Any idea as to what's causing the accuracy to degrade in this manner?
Other than it's a budget Savage built on a Friday before a 3 day weekend and retooling of machining equipment.
The accuracy in the factory Tupperware stock with serrated muzzle were mediocre after testing with 20 and 25g Winchester and 20g American Eagle.
So after hours of work fitting it into a Boyd's Pro Varmint stock, lapping the crown, and then bedding with Devcon I've started accuracy testing again.

My typical barrel cleaning has been 1 dry patch, 1 wet patch using BoreTech Eliminator letting it sit 10 minutes, 1 dry patch, then 6 or so passes with nylon bore brush wetted with BoreTech, then dry patch which takes 10 plus patches to get a nearly clean patch.
First test experimenting with action torques. (All targets shot top left to right order with same lot of ammo)

The next outing (3/24/2019) at 100yds starting with a clean bore (excuse the errant .22mag holes)

I expected the high right first round flyer on a clean bore, the next 4 had me excited, the next two targets are WTF! I checked the action torque and the front had loosened, retorqued and the shot the next two targets..... WTF again. Cased the gun.
Disassembled and checked the bedding and mounting surfaces, thoroughly cleaned it again, torqued the action to 30ip front and rear.
Yesterday I test fired again at 50 yards (top 5 targets .477" dots):

I rechecked the action torque after the 3rd target opened up again and it was fine. Shot the next two targets for confirmation and cased it again.
Got home and cleaned the barrel after those 25 rounds and it was amazingly dirty. It didn't appear to be copper fouling on the patches, just black. So I decide to give it a thorough JB bore cleaner and bore bright treatment, about 30-40 passes with each product followed with solvent brush and dry patching then a patch with a little Kroil.

Any idea as to what's causing the accuracy to degrade in this manner?
Other than it's a budget Savage built on a Friday before a 3 day weekend and retooling of machining equipment.