You can polish a turd to a high luster 100 bucks at a time. But when you slice into it, the odor is still there.
You can polish a turd to a high luster 100 bucks at a time. But when you slice into it, the odor is still there.
I've had my share of Rem's trued, they shot well, as good as I myself can shoot. Was not my point, you want a money pit, restore an old boat or a Rem 700.If you throw a hundred of each at a target and both have equal accuracy, what's the difference?
Especially if the polished ones are irregular shaped from too much handling and rubbing and their group is bigger.
Did you watch the vid or not? I want you to watch the vid.View attachment 1088224 View attachment 1088227 View attachment 1088228 View attachment 1088229 what's wrong with old boats?
89 alumaweld 16x54
Nephew is 6'7" to put fish in perspective.
He's also the reason I have my 6five.
So as far as polishing turds.
Been doing it for 30+ years!
Some times a guys gotta work with what he's got.
this is were the rube is for competition. for a hunting rifle or p dog, gophers just shoot them. if you want to compete and actually be in the top end of things that's were custom comp actions belong. say what you want butt this is my experience at 1k bench shooting. feel free to look at all the major comps. and see what wins you wont see remy or savage very often. cody finchAnother aspect that I feel is valid to the topic is an actions smoothness to functionality. Which directly effects tracking, cant, and return to battery capabilities, all of which effect precision do to aiming error. Any amount of upset and/or shifting to the rifle or its supporting setup do to functionality, will create certain amounts of aiming error, no matter how significant or insignificant the amount.
In the heyday of 30 caliber target rifles in 3 position matches, Winchester 70's proved smoother, more reliable and accurate than Remington 700 ones. Especially when magnums were used at long ranges.I doubt I'll ever purchase a Remington product again, unless they make some of those older folding knives with antler like grips-handles.
a trued up 700 or even a savage with a premium barrel and a quality trigger will outshoot most shooters
Even if you buy the tools, it won’t help if you don’t understand the measuring and machining concepts required. The problem is the machining skill (and corresponding measuring skill) of the average gunsmith not the tooling.
How many custom actions did you test before forming your opinion ?
" Lots of emphasis gets put on actions, however in depth thinking, I personally conclude an action plays a very small part in overall precision/accuracy. My guess 1% or less. For example, I have a trued rem 700 6BR where I believe I could never shoot the difference if it was a custom action and all else equal. "