Since I know everyone's tired of looking at the same old precision action builds...
Most agree that the barrel is the most important component of an accurate rifle, and I'll present this one as some empirical evidence. I enjoy building rifles off the Mosin-Nagant action; "crude", you bet. Bolt on most rattles like a bearing in a tin can. But, long before Savage introduced the Model 110, Mosin and Nagant designed a bolt with a floating bolthead way back in 1891. IMHO, this feature compensates for the sloppy bolt and minor misalignments in the same way as the modern designs. The Finns knew long ago that ditching the crude Russian barrels and replacing them with their own would produce an accurate rifle, and did this regularly with many built for Sniper training (the TKIV-85 is still used as a DM rifle) and comps.
With "generic" handloads this one did quite well- .311 McGowen blank chambered in 54r (most reloaders go with a .300/.308 barrel for obvious reasons)- and sent to LRI for fluting (awesome job). Suppressor ready with AAC 90t hider.
It won't win any benchrest competitions, but it is a very accurate rifle for the customer that wanted "something different". Vortex HS sits atop. Yes, just as with the Mauser- screw on a quality barrel, and it will shoot.
Moral to the story.... don't skimp on your barrel, or the optic.
Flame suit on, for the inevitable "can't put lipstick on a pig" comments
[IMG2=JSON]{"data-align":"none","data-size":"full","height":"392","width":"523","src":"https:\/\/i.imgur.com\/4cIGnesm.jpg"}[/IMG2]
[IMG2=JSON]{"data-align":"none","data-size":"full","src":"https:\/\/i.imgur.com\/dn2z541m.jpg?2"}[/IMG2]
Most agree that the barrel is the most important component of an accurate rifle, and I'll present this one as some empirical evidence. I enjoy building rifles off the Mosin-Nagant action; "crude", you bet. Bolt on most rattles like a bearing in a tin can. But, long before Savage introduced the Model 110, Mosin and Nagant designed a bolt with a floating bolthead way back in 1891. IMHO, this feature compensates for the sloppy bolt and minor misalignments in the same way as the modern designs. The Finns knew long ago that ditching the crude Russian barrels and replacing them with their own would produce an accurate rifle, and did this regularly with many built for Sniper training (the TKIV-85 is still used as a DM rifle) and comps.
With "generic" handloads this one did quite well- .311 McGowen blank chambered in 54r (most reloaders go with a .300/.308 barrel for obvious reasons)- and sent to LRI for fluting (awesome job). Suppressor ready with AAC 90t hider.
It won't win any benchrest competitions, but it is a very accurate rifle for the customer that wanted "something different". Vortex HS sits atop. Yes, just as with the Mauser- screw on a quality barrel, and it will shoot.
Moral to the story.... don't skimp on your barrel, or the optic.
Flame suit on, for the inevitable "can't put lipstick on a pig" comments
[IMG2=JSON]{"data-align":"none","data-size":"full","height":"392","width":"523","src":"https:\/\/i.imgur.com\/4cIGnesm.jpg"}[/IMG2]

[IMG2=JSON]{"data-align":"none","data-size":"full","src":"https:\/\/i.imgur.com\/dn2z541m.jpg?2"}[/IMG2]
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