V
vicvanb
Guest
Shot my Savage LRPV 204 Ruger yesterday after waiting all winter and spring for the weather to warm up. Got some tiny groups--this rifle is the most accurate factory varmint rifle I have ever owned and I've had a bunch. The only thing I did to it was remove a small amount of stock material from the upper edges of the aluminum bedding block.
I guess some LRPV rifles have problems--crooked actions, out of round firing pin holes, action screw holes not right, etc.--but mine apparently is perfect, at least it shoots extraordinarily well.
I have one question: mine is throated so long I can't contact the lands by seating Sierra 39gr bullets as far out as I can. The Hornady factory loads have deeply seated bullets but they shoot well too. I wonder if accuracy might be even better if the throat allowed me to experiment with bullet seating depth as I have done with all my other rifles.
Are all the LRPV rifles throated long?
I guess some LRPV rifles have problems--crooked actions, out of round firing pin holes, action screw holes not right, etc.--but mine apparently is perfect, at least it shoots extraordinarily well.
I have one question: mine is throated so long I can't contact the lands by seating Sierra 39gr bullets as far out as I can. The Hornady factory loads have deeply seated bullets but they shoot well too. I wonder if accuracy might be even better if the throat allowed me to experiment with bullet seating depth as I have done with all my other rifles.
Are all the LRPV rifles throated long?