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The Basics, Starting Out
New Factory Rifle Advice
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<blockquote data-quote="Derek M." data-source="post: 723664" data-attributes="member: 2693"><p>I know of only one brand that has an accu-trigger. I don't know of anyone else that offers such a trigger. If it is the anonymous brand I think it is, I also heard they come with button rifled barrels. You may just want to shoot it as is and see what it does. You may be surprised. </p><p></p><p>Each barrel is different no matter where it came from. I've seen hand lapped expensive match grade barrels that took a long *** time to break-in where velocities and copper fouling settled down. In contrast I've heard about some Savage rifles cleaning up very quickly, as an example.</p><p></p><p>For me, if the barrel is hammer forged, I'm cleaning after every shot for 20, then after every 5 for whatever else it takes. If it is a button rifled barrel, like on a Savage, it will likely be much less cleaning.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Derek M., post: 723664, member: 2693"] I know of only one brand that has an accu-trigger. I don't know of anyone else that offers such a trigger. If it is the anonymous brand I think it is, I also heard they come with button rifled barrels. You may just want to shoot it as is and see what it does. You may be surprised. Each barrel is different no matter where it came from. I've seen hand lapped expensive match grade barrels that took a long *** time to break-in where velocities and copper fouling settled down. In contrast I've heard about some Savage rifles cleaning up very quickly, as an example. For me, if the barrel is hammer forged, I'm cleaning after every shot for 20, then after every 5 for whatever else it takes. If it is a button rifled barrel, like on a Savage, it will likely be much less cleaning. [/QUOTE]
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