Yeah, not much. I think I spent around $700 but it’s a little fancier (cerakote, fluting, threaded). I wouldn’t be surprised if they don’t shoot any of them before going out, and gamble that people won’t take the $200 risk on a $500-$700 rifle to send back. Much like myself lolA vanguard is what $500? I would expect to have to tweak on a rifle in that price range a little bit, before I was happy with the thing.
This was my initial thought. Admittedly, I’ve never done any tinkering to any rifles. Again, my tikka, browning, and bergara work as they should. No need to tinker. Instead of taking a $200-$300 hit selling it, I’d rather spend $200-$300 (maybe a little more) to just make this one shoot. You’d go barrel over stock (chassis) or action work?Factory Weatherby barrels have never had the reputation of being really accurate. Rather than selling and getting another average shooting factory rifle, I’d rebarrel with a good quality tube and enjoy the little groups.
I pity anyone working in the “accuracy guarantee” dept of any company. Seeing the average shooter at the range not even know what action screws are, cheap scope holding on for dear life by Amazon-special rings and bases tightened down with the provided Allen key, shooting off elbows and a fully extended bipod through a wicked flinch… then proceed to bash the brand for not being a surgical instrument. I completely understand the $200 fee for the wasted time. Just a bummer it’s half the cost of the gun for those who actually do it right and get a lemon.Listened to the Weatherby guys on someone’s podcast. They are damn proud of themselves when they produce the Sub Moa group of their picking and get to send the rifle back with a $200 charge.
I had the same issue with a Vanguard in 300WM that my BIL owns. We were talking and he said he couldn't get better than a 2.5" group with it. It has a plastic stock that was super loose on the action screws and had a really tight barrel channel with more contact than not. I tightened the action screws and it shot worse. I used a rotary tool to cut the barrel channel open for a full float. No Change. We changed the scope mounts to get a better eye box. No improvement. I bought a B&C stock and put it in that. No improvement. Put my Maven 1.2 on it and got one group almost an inch with 150 grain Hornady Whitetail ammo but the 180 grain Hornady Whitetail was 4 inches and the 200 grain Hornady Precision Hunter was over 6 inches.I understand this isn’t 100% correct, but after all the different ammo changes I had to try something else. I was at the range and had limited tools available to me. Was just looking for proof of concept. I removed the action, cut a piece of target and folded it up till ~1/8” thick, and placed under the action to pick the barrel up. Torqued back to spec. Was contacting the stock badly in 2 different places. If this improved the groupings at all, I would sand out the touch points on the stock to free float the right way. It made 0 difference on the groupings. Still sat in the 2.5” range with two different loads
If you get to selling it, hit me up.Yeah, not much. I think I spent around $700 but it’s a little fancier (cerakote, fluting, threaded). I wouldn’t be surprised if they don’t shoot any of them before going out, and gamble that people won’t take the $200 risk on a $500-$700 rifle to send back. Much like myself lol
LOL. not enough to scare ya off, huh?If you get to selling it, hit me up.
I’ve thought about buying an MDT chassis to try… if it doesn’t work I can sell the factory setup and buy a barreled action for the chassis. Mainly because I haven’t seen it for myself (nor have I tried), but I find it so hard to believe that a stock would affect accuracy THAT much. Slightly more comfortable, the shooter shoots better. I can see that. Taking a turd to a shooter through a stock just doesn’t seem likely to me, but from what I’ve read on this forum that’s incorrect thinkingOn the cheaper factory rifles the first thing I always do is scrap the factory stock for one that had a block/chassis and make sure the barrel is free floated before I worry about accuracy.
Great chance it is a simple bedding/torque/free float issue. BUT it could still be barrel/chamber issue. In the last 6 months I have had friends return a proof research rifle that they rebarreled for free. Another returned two tikkas and it’s safe to say will never buy another one (chamber issue on both)!
If it was me I would put it in a better stock/chassis to see if it shoots, if not I would put the factory package back together and trade it back in.
Depends on the price!LOL. not enough to scare ya off, huh?
I think two boxes of different ammo will usually show the accuracy potential of most rifles. I have been burned by a scope with an internal lens that was loose, so try a second scope and double check the base screws.This was my initial thought. Admittedly, I’ve never done any tinkering to any rifles. Again, my tikka, browning, and bergara work as they should. No need to tinker. Instead of taking a $200-$300 hit selling it, I’d rather spend $200-$300 (maybe a little more) to just make this one shoot. You’d go barrel over stock (chassis) or action work?
On the cheaper factory rifles the first thing I always do is scrap the factory stock for one that had a block/chassis and make sure the barrel is free floated before I worry about accuracy.
Great chance it is a simple bedding/torque/free float issue. BUT it could still be barrel/chamber issue. In the last 6 months I have had friends return a proof research rifle that they rebarreled for free. Another returned two tikkas and it’s safe to say will never buy another one (chamber issue on both)!
If it was me I would put it in a better stock/chassis to see if it shoots, if not I would put the factory package back together and trade it back in.
I understand - need to see it to believe it deal (kind of like the scope testing stuff on here). Just need to remember the more surface area contacting the action/stock interface with uniform pressure just reduces the chances of that stuff moving/slipping. If it’s bad you can have those parts slipping/moving when you fire a shot and you POI will be all over.I’ve thought about buying an MDT chassis to try… if it doesn’t work I can sell the factory setup and buy a barreled action for the chassis. Mainly because I haven’t seen it for myself (nor have I tried), but I find it so hard to believe that a stock would affect accuracy THAT much. Slightly more comfortable, the shooter shoots better. I can see that. Taking a turd to a shooter through a stock just doesn’t seem likely to me, but from what I’ve read on this forum that’s incorrect thinking
JB weld for the win!For cheapo beater truck guns. We have had pretty good luck hogging out some material in the factory stock and dropping in a bunch of JBweld.![]()
They “shoot”
55gr Winchester Ballistic Silvertip
55gr Barnes TSXFB
55gr Federal Ballistic Tip
Guess I’ll buy a box of each and see what I can get it to do.
Ive tried 55gr hornady factory ammo (I’ll admit not premium match stuff) and it did about 3” on a 3 shot group. But hey, hopefully I’m wrong and they shoot great!Man, what if it likes really light stuff?