Sure. Piece of cake with a SavageWondering if you have a story how you kept your rifle but put a new barrel on it with a faster or slower twist rate for purposes of optimizing it for specific grain weights. I suppose some of us have considered doing this instead of buying another rifle.
You can have one rifle with multiple barrels of different calibers as long as the action can handle the length of the cartridge. As for a short action can handle from 223 to 308 cartridges on mine, of course I got 2 bolts for the action. I got a 223,243,308, and a 6.5x47.all on the same action. Just a matter of having the proper tools to change out.Wondering if you have a story how you kept your rifle but put a new barrel on it with a faster or slower twist rate for purposes of optimizing it for specific grain weights. I suppose some of us have considered doing this instead of buying another rifle.
I have rebarreled three AR's with slower twists for night time thermal coyote hunting for the speed of the lighter bullets.Wondering if you have a story how you kept your rifle but put a new barrel on it with a faster or slower twist rate for purposes of optimizing it for specific grain weights. I suppose some of us have considered doing this instead of buying another rifle.
Wondering if you have a story how you kept your rifle but put a new barrel on it with a faster or slower twist rate for purposes of optimizing it for specific grain weights. I suppose some of us have considered doing this instead of buying another rifle.
Yes, and apparently Roy(Ed) Weatherby really took it to an extreme. I often read that this was to control the pressures that his cartridges generated. But I wonder if that smooth tube leading to the leases plays apart. Which part I don’t know. I do know for a hunting rifle every Weatherby I have shoots perfectly from a cold clean barrel. Rather desirable feature for a hunting rifle. They are also accurate. From the lengthy freebore? I don’t think there is a flatter shooting cartridge than a 257 Weatherby. Is all that freebore strictly because of the rather high pressure loads? Does the radius shoulder play a part? How about the datum line?Not only twist but freebore is very important
I used to use 9 twists for my 6x284 and SMK 107'sWondering if you have a story how you kept your rifle but put a new barrel on it with a faster or slower twist rate for purposes of optimizing it for specific grain weights. I suppose some of us have considered doing this instead of buying another rifle.
This ^^^^^^^I used to use 9 twists for my 6x284 and SMK 107's
shot fine
Then went to 8 Twist to optimize for the newer Dtacs with Higher BC
Works even better.
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Dont know what you're really asking since when we build a gun we spec everything out factoring in every little detail just like building an engine, so factor in Stabilty Factor etc also and build the gun around the Bullet to be used for it.
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I always just rebarrel instead of buying a new rifle, once your rifle is built, from there on, it never needs anything else other than a new barrel every few years.
Dont see the point of buying another gun (i mean, once you already have a few in your stable)
Man, there are people on this site (or making this post) who have changed everything but the part with a serial #. So yea.Wondering if you have a story how you kept your rifle but put a new barrel on it with a faster or slower twist rate for purposes of optimizing it for specific grain weights. I suppose some of us have considered doing this instead of buying another rifle.
Tim is -Wondering if you have a story how you kept your rifle but put a new barrel on it with a faster or slower twist rate for purposes of optimizing it for specific grain weights. I suppose some of us have considered doing this instead of buying another rifle.

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