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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
300 WM Dies/Brass Prep
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<blockquote data-quote="sodakota" data-source="post: 2962553" data-attributes="member: 81002"><p>My 700 Remington 300 Win Mag is accurate - shooting several loads under .5 MOA. The best load is right at .2 MOA. I don't have to do much to get it to shoot well, including annealing.</p><p>However, with other rifles I've had to do quite a few things to get them to shoot. In particular I have a 722 222 Rem that needs TLC. If I treat it well, it will shoot .2 MOA. If I throw the same load with brass that hasn't been annealed/weighed/visually inspected, .8 MOA is the result. </p><p>What I'm saying is each rifle is a rule into its own. </p><p>I've been annealing more often since I found out how much it helped that 222. I'm working with a couple 25 caliber rifles now and I'll be certain to anneal to see if improves the accuracy. </p><p>I've been trimming cases to length for most of my shooting career, that's something that is critical, IMHO. Annealing may help, a lot.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="sodakota, post: 2962553, member: 81002"] My 700 Remington 300 Win Mag is accurate - shooting several loads under .5 MOA. The best load is right at .2 MOA. I don’t have to do much to get it to shoot well, including annealing. However, with other rifles I’ve had to do quite a few things to get them to shoot. In particular I have a 722 222 Rem that needs TLC. If I treat it well, it will shoot .2 MOA. If I throw the same load with brass that hasn’t been annealed/weighed/visually inspected, .8 MOA is the result. What I’m saying is each rifle is a rule into its own. I’ve been annealing more often since I found out how much it helped that 222. I’m working with a couple 25 caliber rifles now and I’ll be certain to anneal to see if improves the accuracy. I’ve been trimming cases to length for most of my shooting career, that’s something that is critical, IMHO. Annealing may help, a lot. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Reloading
300 WM Dies/Brass Prep
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