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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Gunsmithing
To float or not to float barrel
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<blockquote data-quote="vancewalker007" data-source="post: 2321878" data-attributes="member: 66917"><p>Note, watch your velocities as that barrel will eventually settle in around 200-300 rounds. Usually barrels will jump up 40-60 fps once it settles all the way in. If you have a the wood or hand-laid fiber glass stock I'd just bed the action. If you have that polymer stick I'd toss it and get a stiffer one. Did you shoot a powder ladder to find a stable powder load to start with a stable powder load for bullet seating depth tests? Or, did you go to a book and pick the max load etc.?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="vancewalker007, post: 2321878, member: 66917"] Note, watch your velocities as that barrel will eventually settle in around 200-300 rounds. Usually barrels will jump up 40-60 fps once it settles all the way in. If you have a the wood or hand-laid fiber glass stock I'd just bed the action. If you have that polymer stick I'd toss it and get a stiffer one. Did you shoot a powder ladder to find a stable powder load to start with a stable powder load for bullet seating depth tests? Or, did you go to a book and pick the max load etc.? [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Gunsmithing
To float or not to float barrel
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