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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Rifles, Bullets, Barrels & Ballistics
Trying to dial in rifle
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<blockquote data-quote="deadlift" data-source="post: 1087439" data-attributes="member: 40021"><p>Heres a few tricks to try: 1). loosen the tang screw and place your finger under the barrel at the tip of the forend where the tip and barrel meet, now tighten the tang bolt. You should have no movement on the finger touching the stock and barrel. 2). If its floated place a folded playing card under the forend tip till you get a small amount of pressure, then shoot it. And 3). find a smith to lap the carbon out and check with a bore scope till its all gone. 4). Go between 200-300rds between cleaning, I know it sounds weird but trust me in this one. What twist/bullets are you running? I will agree with the other guys, usually double grouping is a sign of stress somewhere in the "system".</p><p>Chris</p><p>Benchmark Barrels</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="deadlift, post: 1087439, member: 40021"] Heres a few tricks to try: 1). loosen the tang screw and place your finger under the barrel at the tip of the forend where the tip and barrel meet, now tighten the tang bolt. You should have no movement on the finger touching the stock and barrel. 2). If its floated place a folded playing card under the forend tip till you get a small amount of pressure, then shoot it. And 3). find a smith to lap the carbon out and check with a bore scope till its all gone. 4). Go between 200-300rds between cleaning, I know it sounds weird but trust me in this one. What twist/bullets are you running? I will agree with the other guys, usually double grouping is a sign of stress somewhere in the "system". Chris Benchmark Barrels [/QUOTE]
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Trying to dial in rifle
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