Finish looks good and and it feeds properly.That is pretty sad, what about the rest of it
Does it look well finished, feed properly etc
How did you know it was loose?
More details would help
I can certainly understand your frustration
Trued Remington action. The builder is not local so I shipped it back to him.Which action is it? Did you contact the gunsmith? If local, just go to the shop and I'm sure they'll torque it back on. If not, get an action wrench and do it yourself.
My thinking is that it was hand tight,and the last three rounds that were fired before I saw that the barrel was loose were.002 longer than the ones from the start .Was the barrel timed?.....flats on a brake, straight flutes....etc? You can expect a barrel to torque up and sometimes hitting the timing takes a nominal torque that is kind of arbitrary......but hand tight isn't good. You will see your fired brass is probably .003" or so longer than the stuff from the beginning.
B23. The action was trued and barrel chambered and threaded by the builder.Tigg, the smith that built/assembled this rifle for you is he also the same person that trued the action, and, cut the threads on the barrel or was the action trued by one person and the barrel chambered/threaded by another? You mentioned this is a Proof CF barrel, was it a prefit or prechambered Proof barrel by chance?
Depending on the method of how your action had the threads trued and if the barrel threads were cut by a different person I could see were it would be possible to have one be slightly oversized compared to the other and it could come loose over time. I'm not a gunsmith and this is only speculation but I can see how that could happen.
Ok, then that should eliminate any concern I was proposing about the potential for the threads possibly being a loose fit.B23. The action was trued and barrel chambered and threaded by the builder.
I would, a lot of responses here say it isn’t but it really is a big fuckupI wouldn't lose faith in the guy if all he did was leave the barrel untorqued. He probably had a lot of other projects and just forgot that one thing. It could be that there's absolutely nothing wrong with the gun other than that. Don't throw the baby out with the bathwater.
I can think of a lot more things that would make me lose faith in a builder and an untorqued barrel doesn’t even come into the top 10. I’ve forgotten to torque down my own when switching barrels. All I did was tighten it down using my vise and everything went swimmingly.I would, a lot of responses here say it isn’t but it really is a big fuckup