Louis I completely and utterly disagree with this
When you use the term "benchrest"
Other sports, "yes," but for actual/factual Benchrest I say "no"
In a sport where we've got top shooters having multiple barrels chambered at a time then going thru and "culling" them for ability.....
I currently own 8 full-on BR setups and only half of them are currently competitive and two of these have high round counts. The problem(s) is/are mine and the 4 inadequate guns WILL all be competitive when I get the bugs worked out, but right now I wouldn't bring them to a match as no amount of fiddling will produce competitive aggs IMO. Two have balance issues, one a scope base issue, one's just finicky as in I think I've got 'er dialed and then, another day, she ain't. As in I can't get her to repeat. As in, "I go right, she veers left/I go up, she goes down" type a' thing. It may be just me but I suspect a mechanical issue. (I suspect barrel timing but that may well just be my fevered imagination)
I believe that on any given day in BR only a percentage of the guns are actually capable of winning with the components to hand.
I furthermore believe that for that area of accuracy UNDER 1/4moa, that area addressed by "tuning", it's all about consistent vibration control which, with parts touching is hard to accomplish.
I personally see huge reactive differences between the 4-5 different areas of "touching" being discussed and the one with which I'm NOT at all familiar is the one Boyd's talking about..... I
will be going down and chambering a 700 this way soon just because....
I can