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NesikaChad
Guest
Just thought these might stir up conversation.
Why?
It already shoots .096" for five shots with factory BH ammo. (100 yd)
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While at Nesika one afternoon, we (this is back in 2004) got into this high minded/high spirited debate over the cardinal rules of accuracy minded gunmaking.............
So, I decided to conduct a little experiment...........
I built the gun in seven hours. Started at three in the afternoon and by 10pm we were shooting groups in Cor-Bon's test tunnel.
Were you on the clock this whole time? Were the others in the spirited debate on the clock?
Sorry if it looks like I'm giving you a hard time here. I'm not. Just trying to get a little info. Being privy to the ins & outs of D Arms I've heard many grumblings about how few rifles Nesika shipped every month contributing to the bottom line of the Big D parent company. If they can be built in 7 hours I can understand most of the grumblings. Seriously though, I know it takes much more attention to detail than can be applied in 7 hours to produce the consistent level of product that Nesika was shooting for. Having been an inmate at Big D for half of the 90's I understand how the spirited debates can consume more of the productive day than customers are paying for. And how ineffective management was. My question just below your quote is not an accusation of you spending time on the clock. I don't know, that's why I asked the question. I got sucked into a few, ok more than a few debates while on the clock but did spend many nights working on my own projects off the clock till 2-3AM.
How much building did you do in 7 hours? Stock from a blank? etc?
Was Neiska producing the # or rifles a month that would support paying the # of employees it had?
Did BigD acquiring Neiska cause orders to fall off leaving more employees than sales would support? (this is my guess)
Again, I'm not chastising you or any of the workers at Neiska or bigD. I firmly believe that all the problems that DArms or ANY company have are the direct result of POOR MANAGEMENT at the very top. If sales wouldn't support the # of employees that Neiska had then management should have one of 2 things.
1) Lay off some help
2) sell more rifles
If bigD was precluded from laying off any of Neiska's help by contractual obligations then management made a poor decision accepting the contract.
If sales were good and production levels could have risen without sacrificing quality then it's management's fault for not making it happen.
The machine work on the inlet on the stock looks great.
Chad
Nice to see you are keeping busy and living the dream! makes all that time in Iraq worthwhile in the end, keep up the good work sir.
KB
There are a lot of ways to skin cats.
<snip>
A stock inlet's sole function is to provide a tension free environment for an action to register to. That's it. If that is achieved with bedding compound or a very stable parent material (the stock) then I can't help but feel that the rifle will shoot well. (assuming all the other components are doing their part too)
<snip>
Lots of answers to this problem.