AK Troutbum
WKR
I think that was probably one round that went through tumbling and the other rounds didn't hit paper.
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Shuttup...... Load development.
Sent from a mountain somewhere, using telepathy.
You're a little high, right.
Yeah, isn't they posed to be in the little black thingy???
Randy
Just curious...and I know you stated no further testing, but I'd try some 165-168gr pills in the gun. I shoot 168gr Barnes TTSX out of my .308s and feel they have the best success.
Just my .02.
Just curious...and I know you stated no further testing, but I'd try some 165-168gr pills in the gun. I shoot 168gr Barnes TTSX out of my .308s and feel they have the best success.
Just my .02.
Only question on the Kimber is why no 150gr Federal Fusion?....They seemed to be the one that consistently shot well in your first outings.
The 150gr American Whitetails shoot real well in my Kimber as well.
Also, it's interesting looking at your shooting here as your light rifle consistency definitely seems to be improving.
Uniform groups seems to indicate that is about the rifle's capacity... I would venture with some bedding, handloading, etc... it would be pretty easy to cut that in half...
Just curious, I may have missed it, but what is your cleaning procedure? I'm assuming you didn't clean between groups?
I have a savage that shoots 1-1.5" for the first 7-10 shots after cleaning... then like magic, cuts the groups in half when it is dirty...
some guns work opposite... just a thought.
No cleaning at all yet. Just put some oil on a brush last time and scrubbed the barrel a time or two using a little oil, then just swabbed it out and oiled it before putting it away.
I've not used any solvents on it so far. So, it oughta be plenty dirty.
Ran out of 150gr Fusions. I thought I remembered running out of them, then I looked through my stash this morning and, sure enough, no Fusions.
However, those first 'good' groups were only 3rd groups, using the 150's. Not conclusive in the least, as to whether they shoot well or not.
If they were better than others at 3 shot groups than odds are they would be better with 8 shot groups as well.
I see bad groups with the majority of ammo from the tikka and I see bad groups with majority of ammo from the kimber. I think there is a good chance there is a factory bullet that could get the kimber shooting close to the tikka.
You cleaned it before you shot it for the first time yes? Cleaning your gun with regular solvent will not remove the copper fouling (unless it is jam packed with copper). You can have a nice clean bore that still has copper fouling, which will help to make the gun a more predictable shooter. The copper fouling sort of increases and then you see a level of stability in your shooting for a while. Then groups will go to crap and you have to copper it, but shouldn't be for a long time. If you have never solvent cleaned it, you are very, very brave. Every gun is going to have some small pieces of stuff in the bore from tooling and usually has a coat of oil. Solvent clean it really well, run a jag and patches through it until its clean.No cleaning at all yet. Just put some oil on a brush last time and scrubbed the barrel a time or two using a little oil, then just swabbed it out and oiled it before putting it away.
I've not used any solvents on it so far. So, it oughta be plenty dirty.
First of all, I would absolutely not copper a new gun, makes zero sense especially for a hunting gun where you need single shot cold bore predictable accuracy, second I would NEVER leave a copper solvent in your gun overnight. There are more than a few stories of people ruining bores that way, why take the chance on an expensive rifle?IF you try shooting it again... I'd give it a good, deep, copper solvent cleaning... let is soak for an hour or two...
Just a thought
You cleaned it before you shot it for the first time yes? Cleaning your gun with regular solvent will not remove the copper fouling (unless it is jam packed with copper). You can have a nice clean bore that still has copper fouling, which will help to make the gun a more predictable shooter. The copper fouling sort of increases and then you see a level of stability in your shooting for a while. Then groups will go to crap and you have to copper it, but shouldn't be for a long time. If you have never solvent cleaned it, you are very, very brave. Every gun is going to have some small pieces of stuff in the bore from tooling and usually has a coat of oil. Solvent clean it really well, run a jag and patches through it until its clean.
So I would absolutely solvent your gun. People often think a "dirty" gun shoots well but it is often a copper fouled gun that shoots well. As I stated, the copper will not come out and you do not want it to. From what I understand from a local rangemaster, Sako's frequently come in due to all of the sudden shooting like crap after 1000 rounds or so, and they are totally fouled. They tend to accumulate copper quicker due to how they're cut. If you notice your Tikka starting to shoot better and better as the round count goes up, it is probably due to copper accumulation (but keep it clean of carbon and lead fouling). Now your Kimber may copper more slowly and thus take a little bit of time to see some stability in the groupings. It may end up grouping better also, but if nothing else more predictably. IF you copper it, who the hell knows what you are going to get, but it will be less accurate and less predictable (unless you plan to copper it everytime after you shoot it). I hope this makes sense, clean it after you shoot it and you will know more or less you are starting at the same place when you head to the range. Don't take someone's advice to leave a caustic chemical recommended at only 15 minutes max in your bore and leave it in your expensive rifle overnight.Only thing that would make me concerned enough to clean it is if someone with some rapport says that cleaning it will take it from 2-3moa down to <1moa. Has that been observed with a new Kimber Montana, or with any new rifle from the factory, ever?
Edit: forgot to answer your first question. No, I didn't clean it before shooting it the first time. And neither did I do this with the Tikka. Just ran a couple oily patches down the barrel while they were in the safe, then swabbed that oil out before shooting them the first time.
So I would absolutely solvent your gun. People often think a "dirty" gun shoots well but it is often a copper fouled gun that shoots well. As I stated, the copper will not come out and you do not want it to. From what I understand from a local rangemaster, Sako's frequently come in due to all of the sudden shooting like crap after 1000 rounds or so, and they are totally fouled. They tend to accumulate copper quicker due to how they're cut. If you notice your Tikka starting to shoot better and better as the round count goes up, it is probably due to copper accumulation (but keep it clean of carbon and lead fouling). Now your Kimber may copper more slowly and thus take a little bit of time to see some stability in the groupings. It may end up grouping better also, but if nothing else more predictably. IF you copper it, who the hell knows what you are going to get, but it will be less accurate and less predictable (unless you plan to copper it everytime after you shoot it). I hope this makes sense, clean it after you shoot it and you will know more or less you are starting at the same place when you head to the range. Don't take someone's advice to leave a caustic chemical recommended at only 15 minutes max in your bore and leave it in your expensive rifle overnight.