Barrel Chop Screwed Up Accuracy

kevlar88

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Nov 19, 2018
Messages
229
Location
Hawaii/Texas/Germany
Any update on your CZ’s accuracy? I’m curious. Years ago, I ordered a .17 Hornet 527 from CZ and asked them to cut and thread the barrel. They could never get it to shoot well after the chop either.
I was finally able to pick up some cfe223 locally to try a different powder. Unfortunately life is currently getting in the way and will probably not get to shoot again for another 3 weeks or so.
 
OP
longrange13

longrange13

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Jun 25, 2023
Messages
282
The gunsmith wouldn’t take ownership of it. Ended up taking forms advice and going through everything and checking it. Last thing I got to was re-torquing the barrel. I bought a barrel vise and action wrench and cranked it down. It was pretty loose turns out. I went to 120ft/lbs and now it shoots like it was before. Never using that smith again.
Did you ever get this figured out? We didn't get a conclusion to your post.
 

The Guide

WKR
Joined
Aug 20, 2023
Messages
832
Location
Montana
The gunsmith wouldn’t take ownership of it. Ended up taking forms advice and going through everything and checking it. Last thing I got to was re-torquing the barrel. I bought a barrel vise and action wrench and cranked it down. It was pretty loose turns out. I went to 120ft/lbs and now it shoots like it was before. Never using that smith again.
Awesome! Glad you found your issue. Sucks that your issues came from the gunsmith.

Jay
 

kevlar88

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Nov 19, 2018
Messages
229
Location
Hawaii/Texas/Germany
I do not. I sent it off to my machinist as part of another experiment to see if he can match the chamber and action threads without sending in my action. I'll have some answers, to if that works or not, in the next month or so.
 

mxgsfmdpx

WKR
Joined
Oct 22, 2019
Messages
5,731
Location
Outside
The gunsmith wouldn’t take ownership of it. Ended up taking forms advice and going through everything and checking it. Last thing I got to was re-torquing the barrel. I bought a barrel vise and action wrench and cranked it down. It was pretty loose turns out. I went to 120ft/lbs and now it shoots like it was before. Never using that smith again.
Thanks for the update. This is very common with smiths unfortunately.
 

ElPollo

WKR
Joined
Aug 31, 2018
Messages
1,586
Depends on the smith and their equipment.
I’ve had multiple rifles cut and threaded and never had a barrel pulled to do it. Honestly, I wouldn’t trust my local smith to do that. He’s a good machinist, but doesn’t seem to believe in torquing anything.
 

mxgsfmdpx

WKR
Joined
Oct 22, 2019
Messages
5,731
Location
Outside
I’ve had multiple rifles cut and threaded and never had a barrel pulled to do it. Honestly, I wouldn’t trust my local smith to do that. He’s a good machinist, but doesn’t seem to believe in torquing anything.
Most are shocked at the 110+ ft lbs that Tikka and Sako barrels are torqued to. Then proceed to not torque them back to that as if it was “too much”. Sigh.
 

ElPollo

WKR
Joined
Aug 31, 2018
Messages
1,586
Most are shocked at the 110+ ft lbs that Tikka and Sako barrels are torqued to. Then proceed to not torque them back to that as if it was “too much”. Sigh.
That was the one experience I had with having my local smith mount a prefit barrel on a Tikka.
 

Bowfinn

FNG
Joined
Jan 6, 2019
Messages
99
Location
Anchorage, Alaska
The gunsmith wouldn’t take ownership of it. Ended up taking forms advice and going through everything and checking it. Last thing I got to was re-torquing the barrel. I bought a barrel vise and action wrench and cranked it down. It was pretty loose turns out. I went to 120ft/lbs and now it shoots like it was before. Never using that smith again.
You should recommend to the gun smith that he torque his lug nuts to 30ft lbs. Maybe he would learn something about appropriate torque levels.
 

Wrench

WKR
Joined
Aug 23, 2018
Messages
6,170
Location
WA
I screw on a lot of barrels, thread a lot of barrels and fix a lot of messes. One of the most common things I see with timed brakes is when the smith comes up shy on the timing and tries to crush the last few thou vs taking a skim cut. The brake shoulder burys and the first few threads try to climb the brake....except there's nowhere to go.....so the barrel yields to the thread and pinches the bore. If you ran a lap through it and it pinches at the muzzle......thank me late.
 
Top