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Could use some advice and perhaps loads using 869 powder. Thank you.

That just sounds like a HOOT to play with..........

Yes it is. - The gun weighs 68 Lbs. and I built it Without a muzzle brake. She is not at all unmanageable on the rest. - I fired 47 rounds the day I did the break-in on the barrel & wished that I had more ammo that day, but I didn't want to get to far along in the loading process until I knew what was going on.
These big guns can be made shoot accurately if the right steps are taken. - This ones going to E2K in Montana and I plan to test & tune it at 2K prior to the match. - It shot pretty well at 500 yds & I'm hoping it holds at 2K.
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Is that a two by forty inch barrel? Like 38 pounds? Free floated on the EX 2-1/2 action? I ordered a shorter one the other day for that red stocked 50. Glad to see a brake is optimal. Making it a switch barrel. Those 22-250 velocities you get shame the 50.
It DOES look like fun...but I'm still trying to wrap my head around the notion of only getting about 5 loaded rounds per pound of powder.
Could use some advice and perhaps loads using 869 powder. Thank you.
Yes - 2.00 for 10" then straight taper to 1.75" on a BAT EX25. - This is a switch-barrel gun. - Has 4 barrels in 50 BMG Imp. - The 50 barrels have a Big brake. - The 50 BMG does alright as well. I pushed the 820 gr. Lehigh heavy bore riders to 3060 fps without problems running V/V 20N29 (271 gr.) rounds warmed in a warmer for about 36 hours at 130 F.
- When I did the 416 I scaled the dimensions of the reamer print down to fit the RUAG/RWS brass & its a neck-turn chamber. (Same on the 50's they're neck turn as well) - The 416 barrels are 1-13 tw., enough to stabilize up to the 450's & maybe even the 472 gr.
- Ron -
Which would say has the absolute long range accuracy advantage, heavy BMG Imp going over 3k, or 416 heavies? The proportions remind of two cases relative to each other - Rsaum and .338 LM, that actually perform pretty similarly at 1,000 even though the bigger one seems to have to try much harder.
The 2.00 dia. model "L" action is an excellent choice or the 1.75 octagon model "L" for an ELR rig up to including the Cheytac case. - Another avenue is to use the EX20 (2.00 diameter) and have the bolt done in CheyTac case head size. - BAT will do this at no extra cost. OR if you wanted they can do 2 bolts, one in CheyTac & another in 50 cal case head size. - The Model "L" requires a minimum of a 1.450 dia. barrel & the EX requires a 1.75" min. barrel.
Until the "dust" settles regarding weight, I won't even pursue building an ELR Bi-Pod gun. - I'll run with the 338 Lapua Imp. that I have and will pursue E2K which I'm hoping is a success as at least the rules are laid out and not in a state of continual change.
The EX25 is too big for ELR type competition, back when I purchased these actions the intent was & still is Unlimited class 50 BLG rifles. The one I added the 416 Barrett to as it was most cost effective to do the 416 Barrett addition. - The second one has 2.00 dia. barrels in some big blocks on a really big stock.
- Ron -
Nice! I recognize the Bats but the other actions I’ve never seen, very interesting. The brake on the 2 inch is huge, as is the block.
 

