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Kimber Montana Accuracy
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<blockquote data-quote="pontoon" data-source="post: 1158266" data-attributes="member: 91473"><p>Yeah, I read it. See the link I posted above? It's actually a thread where someone copy and pasted the 24 hour campfire post. Here is the one you refer to: <a href="http://www.24hourcampfire.com/ubbthreads/ubbthreads.php/topics/8486810/1" target="_blank">Montana tinkering.... | Hunting Rifles | 24hourcampfire</a></p><p></p><p>I'm thinking about doing it myself. But the thread doesn't address whether a muzzle brake is a good idea for accuracy. Basically some threads/articles have said that allowing the rifle to free recoil caused accuracy to drop. On the thread I linked they actually bash lead sleds for being damaging to rifles/stocks, but I was reading elsewhere that it's really the best way to figure out how accurate the rifle is (and not how accurate you are). Any recommendations on rests or lead sleds would be helpful too.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="pontoon, post: 1158266, member: 91473"] Yeah, I read it. See the link I posted above? It's actually a thread where someone copy and pasted the 24 hour campfire post. Here is the one you refer to: [url=http://www.24hourcampfire.com/ubbthreads/ubbthreads.php/topics/8486810/1]Montana tinkering.... | Hunting Rifles | 24hourcampfire[/url] I'm thinking about doing it myself. But the thread doesn't address whether a muzzle brake is a good idea for accuracy. Basically some threads/articles have said that allowing the rifle to free recoil caused accuracy to drop. On the thread I linked they actually bash lead sleds for being damaging to rifles/stocks, but I was reading elsewhere that it's really the best way to figure out how accurate the rifle is (and not how accurate you are). Any recommendations on rests or lead sleds would be helpful too. [/QUOTE]
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