My old T3 with 24.5" fluted #4 barrel, T1 brake, VX6HD and one of Kens stocks. I was happy with this weight, I reckon it was light enough to shoot well in most positions.
My old T3 with 24.5" fluted #4 barrel, T1 brake, VX6HD and one of Kens stocks. I was happy with this weight, I reckon it was light enough to shoot well in most positions.
@Stocky, here ya go
Not sure why around 1.5 MOA would "erk" you, unless you are shooting flies ? In my book that is well within minute-of-deer/goat
Viva la Howa ! R.I.P. Toby | Black rifles matter... | #illegitimate_ute
Interesting that guys who regularly shoot really accurate rifles for score (i.e. there is no hiding as in the old one good group thing or "called fliers") are comfortable with more realistic accuracy for their hunting rifles!!
EBF - could you please give the approximate dimensions of your barrel profile. Thanks
@Tentman
.630 at muzzle, chamber end is .940 - the aim was to get as much "meat" off the barrel as possible.
Yeah man, I have Palma barrels that I expect a lot more from...
Wanting every rifle in the safe to shoot the mythical 0.5 moa groups "all day long" is nuts in my book. 3 (and even 5-shot) groups make me have a good old chuckle Gimp's 5x5 challenge is much more realistic, it mirrors what you typically have in high-end for-score comps : 4 or 5 strings of 10 shots per day.
With my hunting rigs, if I can consistently shoot 5 shots into an apple sized ring at 100 yds, I am happy to go for a walk. With the 45/70, if I can hit an A4 sized piece of paper several times in a row at 100 yds, that is a good day.
Viva la Howa ! R.I.P. Toby | Black rifles matter... | #illegitimate_ute
I mean the 5x5 group thing I posted approx a million years ago is a relatively good way to determine whether your rifle actually does consistently shoot "moa groups all day" within the bounds of reasonability, but for hunting purposes a more relevant test is firing a single shot at a target, cold bore, every time you go to the range - and mapping whether those first shots are within a suitable displacement range from point of aim
I think my Sako 85 finn with DPT, 3-18x Mk6, sling and cheek riser is about 3.8kg - and that's a comfortable weight to carry although not what I'd call "light".
Kiwi Greg has been putting together a light/short M7 .223 for me which I hope will come in quite a bit less than that with an old 3.5-10x Mk4 on it and some lightweight components
My dirty old wooden stocked Model Seven 260 with Vixen 2.5 - 15 scope comes in at 3.2 KG
The scope is almost 600 grams of that... if I welded on some wooden sights I could be well under 3kg
1:8 for 75-80gr. Might regret not going 1:7 for 88s at some stage but it looks like it shoots mint...
I'm hoping something in the 2.3-2.5kg range bare so 3.0-3.2ish maybe with scope and suppressor. Bit of a guess at numbers, they don't really matter so much as "it will be shorter and lighter than my .260"
On my old analogue scales carefully calibrated with a 500gn block of butter!!
My original Terminator Products Custom M700 (POS) 6.5SAUM 26inch barrel with McMillan Carbon Stock incl DPT magnum suppressor, no sling, scope or rings = 3.3kgs
Its replacement (that supprisingly actually fired extracts cases like it should)
Kimber Montana 300WSM 20 inch barrel and 2.5-8 VX3i +talley rings + Sling and DPT magnum suppressor = 3.25kgs
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