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Hunting
Long Range Hunting & Shooting
New rifle - Cooper 92 Backcountry
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<blockquote data-quote="el matador" data-source="post: 1330228" data-attributes="member: 12193"><p>3.692" is touching the lands with the 215s in my Cooper 56. I wouldn't worry too much about it since this gun shot well at 3.600 and so does it's twin (buddy has the same gun). </p><p></p><p>Personally I would avoid dealing with Cooper unless you really have to. I think most of their guns are great quality but their customer service kinda blows. My rifle had a bad chamber and it has not been easy working with them on it. My buddy's rifle on the other hand is an awesome gun. Had it shooting in the .3s on day 1. I would leave the stainless alone if it were me.</p><p></p><p>Another thing I would do if it were me: Use lighter bullets. A light weight gun is not easy to hold steady, so the kind of shots where you'd want a 215 Berger are likely out of the question anyway. A high-BC 178-190 grain bullet would be better suited to the Model 92 in my opinion.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="el matador, post: 1330228, member: 12193"] 3.692" is touching the lands with the 215s in my Cooper 56. I wouldn't worry too much about it since this gun shot well at 3.600 and so does it's twin (buddy has the same gun). Personally I would avoid dealing with Cooper unless you really have to. I think most of their guns are great quality but their customer service kinda blows. My rifle had a bad chamber and it has not been easy working with them on it. My buddy's rifle on the other hand is an awesome gun. Had it shooting in the .3s on day 1. I would leave the stainless alone if it were me. Another thing I would do if it were me: Use lighter bullets. A light weight gun is not easy to hold steady, so the kind of shots where you'd want a 215 Berger are likely out of the question anyway. A high-BC 178-190 grain bullet would be better suited to the Model 92 in my opinion. [/QUOTE]
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New rifle - Cooper 92 Backcountry
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