This is spot on. This would be a perfect beginner set up. It would also give u a fantastic stock and action that you can screw on a new barrel to at anytime.If you’re shooting groups 6ppc. If not competing you can pick up an older benchrest rifle pretty reasonable and put the scope of your choice on it. A lot of older bench guns were built for the Leupold and weaver 36 power scopes and it’s hard to make 10.5lbs with the newer benchrest scopes. Those older rifles are still plenty capable of shooting groups in the zeroes.
0.25"?I think id go 6br and do a lot of learning. Get the fundamentals down with that cartridge first. I do not neck turn anything i shoot, so get the learning curve with that easy to shoot cartridge, then branch out. I do not compete against anyone but myself. I have thought about going with a 6ppc myself but for what i do the 6br does great. This is a 5 shot group from my 6br on a budget rifle. R700 action criterion remage barrel. Im pleased.
Are we talking about registered competition or something else? If a person is interested in learning about how to shoot smaller groups, and most of that is going to be at 100 yards, the .222 is an excellent candidate. Back in the day I put one together just for that purpose. I still have it, and it still shoots. It was the rifle I started using home made wind flags with, and started loading at the range for. I learned a lot, and components are less expensive and barrel life a little longer than a 6PPCIf you were new to benchrest and on a budget, what chambering would you recommend to yourself?
Thanks for looking.