D
Douglas
Guest
Well, I finally got off my butt today to find out for myself what's what after reading about all the fuss for the last couple months.
The rifle I used was built by a famous gunsmith (not Calfee) here on benchrest.com, the barrel was the hot barrel that everyone had to have a couple years ago, the ammo is Eley black box. I used three different velocities ammo, 1040, 1060, 1080. Conditions were calm this morning, didn't even set out flags. I used IR50/50 targets.
At my range we have portable target boards so I was able to set the portable one at 42 yards and still able to see over and shoot over the 42 yarder to our permanent 50 yarders. In other words, I didn't have to move the 42 yarder to shoot the 50 yarder.
My rifle was a good shooter, but not a killer. I never scored a lot of X's, shot upper 240's. The tuner had one 8oz weight, set at about 250, so I did have a leg up over starting from scratch. I started out using the 1040 and the 1080, showed verticle. Then I started adding weight with RVA's weights, one oz at a time. Verticle almost disappeared, added 1/2oz went the other way. Then I started adjusting the tuner, without the 1/2 oz, backed off about 50 clicks, no more verticle. Just to make sure I started to use all three velocities, 1040, 1060, 1080, no verticle, pretty happy. These test shots were rather fast, not waiting between shots, feeling pretty good almost one hole.
Next was the water test, this is shoot three rapid shots, the third round just pull back the bolt enough for the empty case to clear the chamber, not eject, then close the bolt on the empty round, then wait at least one minute, eject the empty, insert the fourth round and fire. The fourth round was a flipper, a little higher than the first three. I did this three times, just to make sure, and had the same results, the muzzle was not stopped. A little more playing around adjusting the tuner, finally got it dead nuts. Using all three velocities, rapid fire and waiting between shots, this muzzle is stopped, at 42 yards.
I then went up to the 50yd target, same firing procedure on the three sighters. I then began shooting for record using the 1060 velocity ammo. The whole target I had one bad flipper, an eight, don't know why, remember I didn't have flags out. I shot 14X's, prevously I never shot more than 6X's with this rifle. I think I got the job done, we'll see this Saturday's match.
I began with 8ozs weight on the tuner, ended up with 12ozs, set back 100 clicks on the tuner. That's my story, hope you didn't get too bored.
Thanks, Douglas
The rifle I used was built by a famous gunsmith (not Calfee) here on benchrest.com, the barrel was the hot barrel that everyone had to have a couple years ago, the ammo is Eley black box. I used three different velocities ammo, 1040, 1060, 1080. Conditions were calm this morning, didn't even set out flags. I used IR50/50 targets.
At my range we have portable target boards so I was able to set the portable one at 42 yards and still able to see over and shoot over the 42 yarder to our permanent 50 yarders. In other words, I didn't have to move the 42 yarder to shoot the 50 yarder.
My rifle was a good shooter, but not a killer. I never scored a lot of X's, shot upper 240's. The tuner had one 8oz weight, set at about 250, so I did have a leg up over starting from scratch. I started out using the 1040 and the 1080, showed verticle. Then I started adding weight with RVA's weights, one oz at a time. Verticle almost disappeared, added 1/2oz went the other way. Then I started adjusting the tuner, without the 1/2 oz, backed off about 50 clicks, no more verticle. Just to make sure I started to use all three velocities, 1040, 1060, 1080, no verticle, pretty happy. These test shots were rather fast, not waiting between shots, feeling pretty good almost one hole.
Next was the water test, this is shoot three rapid shots, the third round just pull back the bolt enough for the empty case to clear the chamber, not eject, then close the bolt on the empty round, then wait at least one minute, eject the empty, insert the fourth round and fire. The fourth round was a flipper, a little higher than the first three. I did this three times, just to make sure, and had the same results, the muzzle was not stopped. A little more playing around adjusting the tuner, finally got it dead nuts. Using all three velocities, rapid fire and waiting between shots, this muzzle is stopped, at 42 yards.
I then went up to the 50yd target, same firing procedure on the three sighters. I then began shooting for record using the 1060 velocity ammo. The whole target I had one bad flipper, an eight, don't know why, remember I didn't have flags out. I shot 14X's, prevously I never shot more than 6X's with this rifle. I think I got the job done, we'll see this Saturday's match.
I began with 8ozs weight on the tuner, ended up with 12ozs, set back 100 clicks on the tuner. That's my story, hope you didn't get too bored.
Thanks, Douglas