My take is that Winchester realised free-floating the barrel offered similar accuracy to bedding devices, with less manufacturing time and cost, in line with most European competitors.
Remember Winchester did not build the D, the first free-floated 52, for F-class or BR shooting. It was built for prone/3P/4P shooting, often with irons (or with lower power 'scopes than are available today). I strongly suspect they had in mind US-NRA conventional targets. Received wisdom, at least on this side of the pond, is that a free-floated barrel is more forgiving when shot from a sling; as sling-shooting was the contemporary market for 52s, accomodating this, while saving costs, was surely a no-brainer for Winchester.
I have to put David Joe's comment about stock materials in context. He writes that "when composites became standard for accurate rifles; is this true? Outside of the US, composite stocks seem to have had minimal, if not no, impact in smallbore shooting. One could argue that laminates are composite, but wood dominated until Walther brought out the aluminium-stocked KK200 in 1994/95*. As the companies who had employed barrel bedding devices, or bedded barrels (Winchester, BSA, and Remington) were either defunct, or no longer supplying serious smallbore shooters, by the time composite were a thing, it's no surprise they didn't experiment with this new technology. Anschutz, Walther, FWB (and Toz and Izmash for USSR teams) dominated the matches with free-floated barrels and receivers bedded directly onto wood, what impetus did they have for change? The design bureau at Ishevsk chose barrel bedding, via a hefty flat-based sleeve for the later Strela/Taiga rifles, but later switched to free-floating for the Typhoon and Ural 5/6.
That said, there has been renewed interest in alternatives to free-floating barrels, starting with the Unique X-Concept. Currently the Esprit Carabine Universal Concept and Pardini FR22 offer a clamped/damped barrel and free-floating receiver, and the Feinwerkbau FWB2800 combines a damped barrel clamp with receiver bedding. Anschutz put the latter feature on their concept A22 Max rifle earlier in the year.
*This wasn't the first alu stock, but was the first from a major manufacturer.
Remember Winchester did not build the D, the first free-floated 52, for F-class or BR shooting. It was built for prone/3P/4P shooting, often with irons (or with lower power 'scopes than are available today). I strongly suspect they had in mind US-NRA conventional targets. Received wisdom, at least on this side of the pond, is that a free-floated barrel is more forgiving when shot from a sling; as sling-shooting was the contemporary market for 52s, accomodating this, while saving costs, was surely a no-brainer for Winchester.
I have to put David Joe's comment about stock materials in context. He writes that "when composites became standard for accurate rifles; is this true? Outside of the US, composite stocks seem to have had minimal, if not no, impact in smallbore shooting. One could argue that laminates are composite, but wood dominated until Walther brought out the aluminium-stocked KK200 in 1994/95*. As the companies who had employed barrel bedding devices, or bedded barrels (Winchester, BSA, and Remington) were either defunct, or no longer supplying serious smallbore shooters, by the time composite were a thing, it's no surprise they didn't experiment with this new technology. Anschutz, Walther, FWB (and Toz and Izmash for USSR teams) dominated the matches with free-floated barrels and receivers bedded directly onto wood, what impetus did they have for change? The design bureau at Ishevsk chose barrel bedding, via a hefty flat-based sleeve for the later Strela/Taiga rifles, but later switched to free-floating for the Typhoon and Ural 5/6.
That said, there has been renewed interest in alternatives to free-floating barrels, starting with the Unique X-Concept. Currently the Esprit Carabine Universal Concept and Pardini FR22 offer a clamped/damped barrel and free-floating receiver, and the Feinwerkbau FWB2800 combines a damped barrel clamp with receiver bedding. Anschutz put the latter feature on their concept A22 Max rifle earlier in the year.
*This wasn't the first alu stock, but was the first from a major manufacturer.
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