So I have a 700, Douglas bbl 300 whisper I bought here. Can't tell you much about the smithing, etc. but I have some excellent groups mixed in with some strange but poor groups. Here is what I mean (all groups are 5 shots at 100 yds, mild to flat conditions). The rifle has turned in 1/3 of all groups under 1/2 minute, with some in the .2s and .3s, but also generates groups up to 1-1/8" with the same load. The large groups often have 3 - 4 shots in one hole, with the remaining shots opening things up significantly. The scope is a used/unknown VX-III which I will change before the next outing. Absent that, the only obvious problem is excessive TIR. I checked the last 12 rounds loaded from my newly formed-from-223 Whisper brass and have runout .002" to .022" (not a typo), with the mean around .010". I have not had a chance to sort for effect, and with this fireforming brass I'm not sure I can get enough good rounds to shoot a group. FYI a carbide metal cutting saw is a super fast way to shorten 223 brass, but pulls the soon to be neck out of round at the cut, and even trimming .030" after FL sizing leaves some deformity. Good news is the fired brass measures .000 - .002" TIR fresh from the chamber.
So my question, do you think the fliers will go away when I get to the fire formed, and hence straight brass????
Thanks for the help.
Randy
So my question, do you think the fliers will go away when I get to the fire formed, and hence straight brass????
Thanks for the help.
Randy