Here's how they used to do it in the old days...
https://goo.gl/photos/LDE8vejfE83vJ5ky6
McMillan No.32. Pat McMillan's own rifle.
https://goo.gl/photos/LDE8vejfE83vJ5ky6
McMillan No.32. Pat McMillan's own rifle.
I believe that it was Pat's brother Mac that shot the .009" group. JamesIs that the rifle he shot the .009" group with?
Is that the rifle he shot the .009" group with?
Looks like he made a few lightening cuts to make weight.
Hal
Fixed scope. I can see how you could adjust for side to side POI with the Leupold Style rear adjustment and dovetail front, maybe he shimmed the mount untill it hit close enough for the up and down at 100, then used the big square at 200.
It is a bit of history. The stock looks like a 40x pattern with a sharp cornered forearm.
The rifle Mac used to shoot the 0.009 was on a McMillan action. But the stock was one of Gale's early fibreglass models. Scope was a Siebert converted Leupold (12x bumped to 24x). Pat made the barrel, chambering it in 222. The reported load was 23.5 of BL-C over prototype BR-4 primers.
Beautiful piece of benchrest history you have there. I hope it still sees range time.
-Lee
www.singleactions.com
I see the pinch screw on the side of the front mount now. I guess you loosen it to adjust the rear screws, then re
tighten it.
Fixed scope. I can see how you could adjust for side to side POI with the Leupold Style rear adjustment and dovetail front, maybe he shimmed the mount untill it hit close enough for the up and down at 100, then used the big square at 200.
It is a bit of history. The stock looks like a 40x pattern with a sharp cornered forearm.
rear windage adjustable mounts. If you move the scope side to side with the scope clamped in the front mount don't you run the risk of tube bend? If you loosen the front mount before adjusting the rear then retighten the front don't you still apply stress to that part of the tube?
Not quite sure what your concern is with the Leupold windage adjustable mount. The front ring pivots in the front base in a dovetail fitting. I have seen that dovetail get loose though if the scope is removed very much.
They aren't Leupold. They're Beuhler and can be vertically adjusted by manipulating shim stacks inside the rings. I guess once they're in the right configuration there is little chance of things shifting, but it seems cumbersome by today's standards. I called them up in Orinda and, although they aren't making rings anymore, they do answer the phone and were kind enough to send me some information, including some 30 year old invoices sent to McMillan.