According to the data sheet I received, they used the cheap 130gr Fed blue box as well. I’ve tried about 10 different factory loads. You’d think by now one of them would stand out as it’s favorite flavor.What’s the official ammo Tikka uses to certify? Not every rifle shoots every ammo well.
This was my thinking leaving the range as well. Shots 1-3 were the tightest on both groups. I would say shots 4 and 5 are what pushed it out of MOA in both cases. Maybe just coincidence, maybe not. Next time I shoot I will try letting the barrel cool for a much longer period of time before the 4th and 5th shots.JM1,
What did the first 3 rounds measure when you took back out after Tikka serviced? MOA guarantee is for 3 rounds, not necessarily 5. Often a 3 shot sub-MOA group will grow when the 4th and 5th rounds are fired. Just curious if you measured to know whether it was sub-MOA or not.
So the Tikka meets their guarantee, just not as good as you would like.According to the data sheet I received, they used the cheap 130gr Fed blue box as well. I’ve tried about 10 different factory loads. You’d think by now one of them would stand out as it’s favorite flavor.
This was my thinking leaving the range as well. Shots 1-3 were the tightest on both groups. I would say shots 4 and 5 are what pushed it out of MOA in both cases. Maybe just coincidence, maybe not. Next time I shoot I will try letting the barrel cool for a much longer period of time before the 4th and 5th shots.
All in all, yes. Maybe my expectations are too high. It just seems like Beretta didn’t put much effort into making it shoot to its true potential when I sent it in and noted the obvious flaws. The terrible ream job could’ve been made right with a new barrel but they refused to replace it. Instead they took the easy route and just polished it. The 3 shot group they achieved barely passed at 0.9” at 100 yards and back in the mail it came, 8 weeks later with no communication or notice. Again maybe I’m just asking too much, just didn’t feel very taken care of as a customer. In my opinion, the quality I received wasn’t quite worth the $1000 price tag.So the Tikka meets their guarantee, just not as good as you would like.
Just curious, have you tried 120gr or 123gr ELD-Ms in a 6.5mm Tikka? Saw these available when I was almost out of the 140 and 147s (since then I was able to stock back up, but the light bullets are still there). I haven't seen much in the way of reviews for the lighter options, and just read/hear about how the 140s shoot great (which they do) and how 140 and 147s are good on game as they are the heavy-for-caliber ELD-M bullets for the Creedmoor.Every Tikka and Sako I've shot have met the 5 shot MOA and I've owned close to 20. I also used to shoot 1,000 rounds or more per month so that helps...
Tikkas and Sakos that I've shot really like the lightest bullets in the cartridge offering.
I shoot .260 which is basically the same thing as 6.5 CM... I've owned 3 Tikkas/Sakos in .260 over the years and the most consistent groups have come from the Hornady 129 Grain SST's. That bullet is absolutely lights out on any vital hit, elk included. Never had a need to try any other bullet after I found the 129's shoot so well.Just curious, have you tried 120gr or 123gr ELD-Ms in a 6.5mm Tikka? Saw these available when I was almost out of the 140 and 147s (since then I was able to stock back up, but the light bullets are still there). I haven't seen much in the way of reviews for the lighter options, and just read/hear about how the 140s shoot great (which they do) and how 140 and 147s are good on game as they are the heavy-for-caliber ELD-M bullets for the Creedmoor.
No offense taken, I’m the only one that’s shot the rifle. While I don’t claim to be a sniper, I own several other rifles that I can consistently shoot to their sub-moa potential. Off a solid bench with sandbags, I’m quite confident in my ability to be dead on the bullseye at 100 yards. While I agree the rifle isn’t always to blame, I’ve shot enough over the years to point the finger in this case.No offense meant but have you had somebody else who shoots a lot shoot a 3 shot group for you? I also assume your shots are at a distance of 100 yards? Try a group at 50 yards and see how you do. I've seen a lot of guys shoot for groups at 50 yards and have them stacked on each other, then move to 100 yards have anywhere from 2-5" groups. Hint, it's very rarely the rifles fault.
All in all, yes. Maybe my expectations are too high. It just seems like Beretta didn’t put much effort into making it shoot to its true potential when I sent it in and noted the obvious flaws. The terrible ream job could’ve been made right with a new barrel but they refused to replace it. Instead they took the easy route and just polished it. The 3 shot group they achieved barely passed at 0.9” at 100 yards and back in the mail it came, 8 weeks later with no communication or notice. Again maybe I’m just asking too much, just didn’t feel very taken care of as a customer. In my opinion, the quality I received wasn’t quite worth the $1000 price tag.
You tell me. The first photo is the Tikka in question. The second photo is my other Tikka that is an all day sub-MOA shooter. I don’t think you need to be overly “qualified” to see the difference in jobs.With all due respect, are you qualified to identify a “terrible ream job”? Those Chinese iPhone bore scopes have caused equally as much grief as they have good.
I got one in 7 rem mag ive wasted 100s of dollars in Ammo trying to figure out.I'd be annoyed, too. Thanks for sharing.
I'm sure it's all in my head, but seems like all the problem Tikkas are 7mmish.