wildcatter
Silver $$ Contributor
I picked up a custom Remington Mohawk with three barrel for one reason, a light accurate, throw in the truck gun for varmints. The rifle had a 223 barrel, and that was my plan to see how the 47 grain HP's would do in it, and not really interested in the other two barrels. after having, a 6mm and 7mm 223 in Super 14 contenders, I wasn't really impressed with them. They shot good enough, but were in my opinion to anemic for bolt guns. BUT, I've been wrong before!!
The 6x45 barrel was on it when I picked it up, or I probably would have just shot the 223 and if I was happy with the accuracy, the other two barrels would have been gone!! But when I got it, the 6x45 barrel was on it, so instead of changing it I decided to pull the 4-20x50 Optica5 Meopta off my 22LR on it and see what it was like with 10" more barrel.........
First thing I did was break out the bore scope, this was not what I wanted to see. My first impression was, I can't even sell this thing, but over the past 70 years I've learned to never judge a book by it's cover! Same with firearms. But how can a Custom Mohawk, with a Timney Trigger, custom bolt release, and trued action, be built with a barrel like this?




That is what I found, all five of those spots were located about 11 to 12 1/2" out from the receiver, dead center of the barrel placed around the diameter in that 11/2" length. mostly in the upper 2/3rds of it. So it could not even be shortened for an XP pistol or a carbine to get rid of it. I was real close to just screwing the 223 barrel and going from there. But past experience with barrels that weren't what I wanted them to look like, even though none really looked this bad, that looks aint everything!
It was obvious this barrel didn't have many rounds down the tube, the chamber and throat was great, crown looked good, and since I sold me 6mm PPC bench gun, with almost 2000 65 grain Bibbs on my shelf, and about a full pound of Benchmark I never found a use for, I'd see how bad this thing was.
WOW, am I glad I did! First off was the first trip out was just 3 shot loaded at what Hodgdon called max, and showed as compressed, to 1/2 grain hotter and then .8 and 1.2 and finally 1.5 grains over their shown max, and I still wasn't compressing the Benchmark barely starting into the bottom of the neck. Nothing was even cratering the primers, and these new Virgin LC cases were not showing any pressure.
So back to the shop, scope and clean the bore again, and that was when I took those camera shots with the bore scope camera, hmm where is the copper? There was none, even after the 3 wet patches, 6 strokes with the bore tech bronse brush and three more wet patches with Butch's. I was still not expecting anything great, but with no copper building up, I was going to see what it could do.
Again this was only purchased because I was wanting a light wieght handy little rifle for 2 to 3 hundred yard Varmint. The short Mohawk action didn't hurt either, since my first full blown custom bench rifle was built on it's little Brother the XP-100. The XP and the Mohawk have always been a soft spot for me. With the light sporter contoured barrel at 660 @ the muzzle, I didn't expect a whole lot anyways from the 24" 1-8 twist X Caliber barrel. The Timney Trigger was crisp and travel free with no creep or over travel. But the little light barreled action in the older Fiberglass McMillan general purpose stock, which I also have a soft spot for, since I had two Fred Sinclair builds back in the day, a 300 win mag, and 338 win mag, were both built on this stock. Real old world workhorse hunting stocks. I decided that 1/2 MOA would be impressive enough with the 65 bibs, if I could get 3000 to 3100 fps with this gun.
So the max listed load was where I started since my test loads prove to be safe. I was loading about .010" into the lands, and with this 1-8 twist barrel throated for 90 grain bullets I was not loading very deep in the neck of the LC brass. I took 3 five starting at the 27 grains that Hodgdon shows for the 62 grain bullets. then 5@27.5 5@28.0 and then only 3 each of 28.5, and 29.0 grains. I new all the 5 shots were safe and showed nothing as pressure, but since I didn't want to pull bullets later I decided to see if the 29.0 showed any pressure I would just pull those, and only shooting 3 at 28.5 in my first test, if any of them did show pressure I'd just stop there.
![20241211_105158[1] full crop.jpg 20241211_105158[1] full crop.jpg](https://forum.accurateshooter.com/data/attachments/672/672266-06ac02e4dbda018028e3fa252eb5b157.jpg?hash=BqwC5NvaAY)
I used the Max book loads to get the Optika5 sighted in close then started on the left lower target square with the 27.5 loadm 4 shot went high, but I was struggeling to find a way to rest this light rig on my bags and knew part of it could have been me, as the 5th shot went in the same place the first 3 did, meating my 1/2" moa accuracy to work with this rigg. But wow, over 120 fps spread?
I then used a different rest arrangement that felt a little better, still more work steadying than my usual varmint rigs! So I then started on the bottom left of the right sighter for the 28.0 grn load and after 4 shots was starting to have FUN! With the 5th holding in the same hole, and the spread dropping to about 60 fps, I thought maybe this is better than I hoped, but I've shot flukes before. PLUS 3200+fps, more than I would have thought I would get out of this caliber with 65 grain bullets.
Then I moved up and shot the NBRSA emblem on the center of the right target, after giving the scope some more up adjustment. and watching every case, and feeling for bolt lift to see any over pressure signs. I again was like WOW, and now the spreads are down below 40 fps, and with a .360" 3 shot group, I am beginning to believe the first 2 targets. So I decided to keep going with the last load I had 3 shots of 29.0 grains. This is still not compressed, but is 1/2 way up the neck.
Well now knowing this barrel is going to shoot, and excited to see what's next, I moved the scope back where it was for the first two loads, just to check the 4-20x50 Optika5 since it had never been shot past 50 yards on a rimfire. A bonus in my day showing it does track as good as the Zeiss scopes Meopta builds, a real bargain scope with the best glass of any 1" scope tubed scope I've ever owned, and as good as my Zeiss Conquest 6.5-20x50 on my 17 MachIV 6BR switch barrel varmint rigg.
I move to the bottom sighter again using to right S for my aiming point this time---- yep, a picture is worth a thousand words!! Scope is tracking perfect, the groups are shrinking,, and now the velocity is far exceeding what I thought was possible from an ancient old target shooters wildcat, only designed to shoot paper! I was blown away, and after 4 groups, 2-5 shot, and 2-3 shot for caution, I am positive, this barrel caliber combo is no fluke!! 3300+ fps, extreme spread now down to under 25 fps I don't really care iof it will shoot any better! It is a lot more than what I hoped this rifle would be! I don't think I'm even going to try other bullets or powders in it. .3 moa with a 65 grain Varmint bullet, at this speed! I don't think I will even mess with the 223 barrel, and it is only test fired when the gun was built, still new.
I did reset the scope to the same elevation I shot the 28.5 grain load with, and give it 4 clicks to the left, then used the bottom center of the square on the top record target to check for zero,,, again tracking like it should. After that, I did have two 85 grain bullets loaded.
I had 2 Sierra 85 grain bullets to see if they were showing the same tame pressures with Benchmark the manual showed. One each,,, 27.0 grains max shown load, and 27.5 grain if the first was safe. Again I can go hotter if I want to load these for deer hunting where legal. But again after I pulled the target It dawned on me,, 1/2 grain different loads, one shot each, now aiming at the top of the center square on the upper record target, and yep, under 1/2 moa using the same aiming point.
Then by the time I walk back to the bench with this target, admiring it as walked, it hits me again! Those 85 grain bullets are practically the same exact point of impact the 65 grain bullets were, and that was the 27.0 grain load I didn't try for group? As I set the target on the bench, I turned and looked at the chrony for the first time since I shot the 85 grain loads, not even thinking about how fast, just wanting to shoot them to see how safe?
Well almost 3000 fps @ 2972 I think, I didn't write it down, but first thing I thought when I looked at the readout was WOW, almost 3000 fps with room to go up? I'll be testing the 85 grain HPBT Game Kings just to see, but if they group under 1/2" moa at this speed or a little more, what a perfect deer load for the eastern whitetails, or any deer out to 250 to 300 yards!
I was so mind blown, with 3 of the 27.0 grain loads left after all this shooting, over 20 rounds thru the barrel, I walked the target back for one more shot, I wanted to save to shells in case the ultimate happened and I seen coyote on the way home,, but had to shoot one last shot, to confirm my zero that was just a click maybe to the left, but with the wind blowing right to left, I left there for now. So back at the bench again with the target rehung,,,, there it is one last time, no flukes, no doubt in the rifle, the barrel, the scope, the loads, it is what it is. Back on the bottom sighter on the left target I started on and no shots around the right mothball, I placed one last shot, and I honestly think it would have cut the same hole as the top right target I checked this zero at.
All in all way more than I had hoped for. The 6x45 is truly more than I had expected! The rifle is really impressive for a light wieght walk around hunting rig, and best of all, I thinks it would be a great whitetail rig as well varmint for stalking either. So good, that the Meopta is going back on the 22RF and the new Leica Amplus6 3-18x44i, it EARNED IT!!
The 6x45 barrel was on it when I picked it up, or I probably would have just shot the 223 and if I was happy with the accuracy, the other two barrels would have been gone!! But when I got it, the 6x45 barrel was on it, so instead of changing it I decided to pull the 4-20x50 Optica5 Meopta off my 22LR on it and see what it was like with 10" more barrel.........
First thing I did was break out the bore scope, this was not what I wanted to see. My first impression was, I can't even sell this thing, but over the past 70 years I've learned to never judge a book by it's cover! Same with firearms. But how can a Custom Mohawk, with a Timney Trigger, custom bolt release, and trued action, be built with a barrel like this?




That is what I found, all five of those spots were located about 11 to 12 1/2" out from the receiver, dead center of the barrel placed around the diameter in that 11/2" length. mostly in the upper 2/3rds of it. So it could not even be shortened for an XP pistol or a carbine to get rid of it. I was real close to just screwing the 223 barrel and going from there. But past experience with barrels that weren't what I wanted them to look like, even though none really looked this bad, that looks aint everything!
It was obvious this barrel didn't have many rounds down the tube, the chamber and throat was great, crown looked good, and since I sold me 6mm PPC bench gun, with almost 2000 65 grain Bibbs on my shelf, and about a full pound of Benchmark I never found a use for, I'd see how bad this thing was.
WOW, am I glad I did! First off was the first trip out was just 3 shot loaded at what Hodgdon called max, and showed as compressed, to 1/2 grain hotter and then .8 and 1.2 and finally 1.5 grains over their shown max, and I still wasn't compressing the Benchmark barely starting into the bottom of the neck. Nothing was even cratering the primers, and these new Virgin LC cases were not showing any pressure.
So back to the shop, scope and clean the bore again, and that was when I took those camera shots with the bore scope camera, hmm where is the copper? There was none, even after the 3 wet patches, 6 strokes with the bore tech bronse brush and three more wet patches with Butch's. I was still not expecting anything great, but with no copper building up, I was going to see what it could do.
Again this was only purchased because I was wanting a light wieght handy little rifle for 2 to 3 hundred yard Varmint. The short Mohawk action didn't hurt either, since my first full blown custom bench rifle was built on it's little Brother the XP-100. The XP and the Mohawk have always been a soft spot for me. With the light sporter contoured barrel at 660 @ the muzzle, I didn't expect a whole lot anyways from the 24" 1-8 twist X Caliber barrel. The Timney Trigger was crisp and travel free with no creep or over travel. But the little light barreled action in the older Fiberglass McMillan general purpose stock, which I also have a soft spot for, since I had two Fred Sinclair builds back in the day, a 300 win mag, and 338 win mag, were both built on this stock. Real old world workhorse hunting stocks. I decided that 1/2 MOA would be impressive enough with the 65 bibs, if I could get 3000 to 3100 fps with this gun.
So the max listed load was where I started since my test loads prove to be safe. I was loading about .010" into the lands, and with this 1-8 twist barrel throated for 90 grain bullets I was not loading very deep in the neck of the LC brass. I took 3 five starting at the 27 grains that Hodgdon shows for the 62 grain bullets. then 5@27.5 5@28.0 and then only 3 each of 28.5, and 29.0 grains. I new all the 5 shots were safe and showed nothing as pressure, but since I didn't want to pull bullets later I decided to see if the 29.0 showed any pressure I would just pull those, and only shooting 3 at 28.5 in my first test, if any of them did show pressure I'd just stop there.
![20241211_105158[1] full crop.jpg 20241211_105158[1] full crop.jpg](https://forum.accurateshooter.com/data/attachments/672/672266-06ac02e4dbda018028e3fa252eb5b157.jpg?hash=BqwC5NvaAY)
I used the Max book loads to get the Optika5 sighted in close then started on the left lower target square with the 27.5 loadm 4 shot went high, but I was struggeling to find a way to rest this light rig on my bags and knew part of it could have been me, as the 5th shot went in the same place the first 3 did, meating my 1/2" moa accuracy to work with this rigg. But wow, over 120 fps spread?
I then used a different rest arrangement that felt a little better, still more work steadying than my usual varmint rigs! So I then started on the bottom left of the right sighter for the 28.0 grn load and after 4 shots was starting to have FUN! With the 5th holding in the same hole, and the spread dropping to about 60 fps, I thought maybe this is better than I hoped, but I've shot flukes before. PLUS 3200+fps, more than I would have thought I would get out of this caliber with 65 grain bullets.
Then I moved up and shot the NBRSA emblem on the center of the right target, after giving the scope some more up adjustment. and watching every case, and feeling for bolt lift to see any over pressure signs. I again was like WOW, and now the spreads are down below 40 fps, and with a .360" 3 shot group, I am beginning to believe the first 2 targets. So I decided to keep going with the last load I had 3 shots of 29.0 grains. This is still not compressed, but is 1/2 way up the neck.
Well now knowing this barrel is going to shoot, and excited to see what's next, I moved the scope back where it was for the first two loads, just to check the 4-20x50 Optika5 since it had never been shot past 50 yards on a rimfire. A bonus in my day showing it does track as good as the Zeiss scopes Meopta builds, a real bargain scope with the best glass of any 1" scope tubed scope I've ever owned, and as good as my Zeiss Conquest 6.5-20x50 on my 17 MachIV 6BR switch barrel varmint rigg.
I move to the bottom sighter again using to right S for my aiming point this time---- yep, a picture is worth a thousand words!! Scope is tracking perfect, the groups are shrinking,, and now the velocity is far exceeding what I thought was possible from an ancient old target shooters wildcat, only designed to shoot paper! I was blown away, and after 4 groups, 2-5 shot, and 2-3 shot for caution, I am positive, this barrel caliber combo is no fluke!! 3300+ fps, extreme spread now down to under 25 fps I don't really care iof it will shoot any better! It is a lot more than what I hoped this rifle would be! I don't think I'm even going to try other bullets or powders in it. .3 moa with a 65 grain Varmint bullet, at this speed! I don't think I will even mess with the 223 barrel, and it is only test fired when the gun was built, still new.
I did reset the scope to the same elevation I shot the 28.5 grain load with, and give it 4 clicks to the left, then used the bottom center of the square on the top record target to check for zero,,, again tracking like it should. After that, I did have two 85 grain bullets loaded.
I had 2 Sierra 85 grain bullets to see if they were showing the same tame pressures with Benchmark the manual showed. One each,,, 27.0 grains max shown load, and 27.5 grain if the first was safe. Again I can go hotter if I want to load these for deer hunting where legal. But again after I pulled the target It dawned on me,, 1/2 grain different loads, one shot each, now aiming at the top of the center square on the upper record target, and yep, under 1/2 moa using the same aiming point.
Then by the time I walk back to the bench with this target, admiring it as walked, it hits me again! Those 85 grain bullets are practically the same exact point of impact the 65 grain bullets were, and that was the 27.0 grain load I didn't try for group? As I set the target on the bench, I turned and looked at the chrony for the first time since I shot the 85 grain loads, not even thinking about how fast, just wanting to shoot them to see how safe?
Well almost 3000 fps @ 2972 I think, I didn't write it down, but first thing I thought when I looked at the readout was WOW, almost 3000 fps with room to go up? I'll be testing the 85 grain HPBT Game Kings just to see, but if they group under 1/2" moa at this speed or a little more, what a perfect deer load for the eastern whitetails, or any deer out to 250 to 300 yards!
I was so mind blown, with 3 of the 27.0 grain loads left after all this shooting, over 20 rounds thru the barrel, I walked the target back for one more shot, I wanted to save to shells in case the ultimate happened and I seen coyote on the way home,, but had to shoot one last shot, to confirm my zero that was just a click maybe to the left, but with the wind blowing right to left, I left there for now. So back at the bench again with the target rehung,,,, there it is one last time, no flukes, no doubt in the rifle, the barrel, the scope, the loads, it is what it is. Back on the bottom sighter on the left target I started on and no shots around the right mothball, I placed one last shot, and I honestly think it would have cut the same hole as the top right target I checked this zero at.
All in all way more than I had hoped for. The 6x45 is truly more than I had expected! The rifle is really impressive for a light wieght walk around hunting rig, and best of all, I thinks it would be a great whitetail rig as well varmint for stalking either. So good, that the Meopta is going back on the 22RF and the new Leica Amplus6 3-18x44i, it EARNED IT!!