Perhaps the biggest problem was the local gunsmith?The primary advantage was when there was no such thing as a shouldered pre-fit barrel, and it was nearly impossible to find a gunsmith who knew how / was willing to work on anything besides a Rem-Chester.
Back then, a barrel nut gave you a certain amount of freedom from the crappy local gunsmith who insisted on re-cutting the action threads every time they put a new barrel on anything, whether it needed it or not.
Depending on what action you shoot, those conditions may not pertain any more.
Oh, he most definitely was. But I stand by the rest. There was a time, and I know you've been around long enough to know what I mean, when there weren't nearly the # of options - or *any* - for shouldered pre-fits. Or nearly as many options for just good gunsmiths with good machines, if one's tastes don't run that direction. For the average Joe wanting to put a new barrel on their factory varmint or "target" (non-BR) rifle, barrel nuts gave them an option they never would've had.Perhaps the biggest problem was the local gunsmith?
scope !!! Get tired of RV’ing did You ?I Have found there are way more pros than cons going the barrel nut route.
No I am still going strong between South Carolina and New England.scope !!! Get tired of RV’ing did You ?![]()
If you chamber/finish your own barrels.I believe the barrel nut system requires a minimum of two extra tools and removing the action from the stock.
All I need is a barrel vice and one action wrench.
Advantage goes to the shouldered barrel.
Why would that matter ?If you chamber/finish your own barrels.
Yes and a shouldered barrel can be timed.I took a barrel off a Defiance tenacity and put it on a Classic and the headspace was .0005 difference. I'm no gunsmith but I think if the measurements were taken of a particular action and written down a smith could spin up a barrel without the action in hand, maybe im wrong.
Ah. Right. Forgot there are prefits made that you can order from stock for many actions.Why would that matter ?
Someone school me please.
So say I've got an older 700 Rem rifle in whatever cartridge. I've got the means by which to remove the barrel, and would like to order a shouldered barrel chambered for a different cartridge. (same action length)
What do I do. Measure action face to bolt face?? Old barrel shank? jd
Well, one benefit of a nut over a shoulder is being able to set the headspece right where you want it. I have 2 x 6GT barrels, from 2 manufacturers, and the headspace varies by .0045". Without the Redding shell holders, it'd be harder to share a sizing die.
The downside is ... if you don't already have a headspace gauge then it's an added cost on top of a nut. I'm partial to the Zermatt 12 point nut, it's the best looking of the bunch.
All your brass fits all your rifles.
Well, I wouldn't go that far, unless they were cut with the same reamer. I have brass from one rifle that won't fit in another, even after sizing. It's stiff inserting it at the base.