I thought this was widely known? People struggling with proof barrels has been talked about quite a lot over the years in the circles I run in. I thought everyone was just happy that we had a company that could produce such a wide range of barrels for so many different configurations and come in at a pretty cheap price point. I've got a proof on one of my .20-223AI's right now, and it's literally the best shooting proof I've ever owned. It was not easy to find a load for it... (which has been common on the proofs I've worked with) but wowzer it sure does like 55gr bergers and H4350. Cranks them out at 3170fps too, which is not slow from a 20" barrel. All the proofs I've worked with could be made to shoot well enough for a lot of people's standards... just not mine. Until this .20 cal that is. This thing flat out shoots. It's sub-1/4moa. If they did this every time, they'd be the only barrel maker left in the USA. lol
Sub-1/2 MOA has been easy enough to achieve from every proof I've worked with. They just don't seem to be as easy to get that 1/3 to sub-1/4 MOA as a few other manufacturers barrels are. Still, for how their pre-fits perform for the dollar spent to get them... lots of happy folks running around with proof barrels on their rifles. That's not an anomaly, that's a real thing. Were it not so, they wouldn't be as popular as they are.
So I think cooler heads will prevail here. Proof has a place in the industry, and obviously they are going nowhere. They'll be around for quite a long time I imagine. I'm happy that Benchmark started making carbon barrels a few years ago, and they are my #1 manufacturer of choice for both carbon and steel barrels. So forgiving and very consistently forgiving. I've only ever had one bad barrel from them, among hundreds. That barrel had bad rifling which could be seen with a bore scope, but it still shoots amazing!
No barrel maker can be all things to all shooters. Be calm. Be respectful. Be understanding. Don't condemn people, businesses, or their products unless your own first hand experience leads you to do so. Even then, it's usually not worth it. Just talk about what you like, and not what you don't like. It's hard, but its easier than the alternative.
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