I can take a couple pictures of my rifle if you like and post them.
It’s built on a Badger Ordnance M2008 left hand action. McMillan A5 stock. Defiance bottom metal. GAP fitted up two barrels for me originally. A .308win barrel M40 contour finished at 24” with a Surefire brake for the suppressor. 2nd barrel they fitted at the same time is a mod. Rem. Varmint contour in .260 Rem with a 1-8.2 twist and finished at 24” also but no brake/suppressor attachment. Just late last year I had another 6.5mm barrel fitted up by Wade Stuteville in 6.5cm and chambered with his reamer (he had a reamer with a shorter throat that I wanted and we didn’t have a reamer like that so Wade installed the 3rd barrel for me). GAP pillar bedded the stock on the original build as well. The 3rd barrel is a Hvy Palma contour finished at 23” and has a 1-6.75 twist.
When the gun was first built it had a US Optics scope on it but now is wearing a Vortex Razor GenII.
GAP has also built several other rifles for guys in the shop as well. All non standard GAP rifles.
Later, Frank
Bartlein Barrels
To me, a “tactical” rifle is why they exist to begin with, and one that hangs with dedicated match
toys that are unusable once off the line, is the pinnacle of rifle-making. Every competition rifle I have looks “too tactical,” most guys say. I have maybe two straight taper 1.25” barrels in some 100, and not a single one on an F-Open rifle that travels. My F-Open actions are Cerakoted chrome-moly Surgeon XL’s that weight 4.5 pounds and require 1.5” tapered bar stock. No idle talking here, Ned. I believe all your GAP rifles are tactical and that’s why I wrote what I did, after your post.
Candidly, Frank, I was just trying to figure out if Ned is serious that I don’t have the “faintest idea” about the forte of one best tactical rifle makers extant, when I say that they mainly focus on tactical rifles, (as if there’s something wrong with that.) If I’ve got that focus incorrect somehow, any branching out is necessarily to a less demanding genre of rifle-making, as far as I’m concerned.
And Ned, when it comes to custom tactical rifles, one of the things that makes them tactical to begin with is how adjustable and practical the stocks are. So, when a manufacturer sources these stocks for their rifles, then excellent barrels from Frank, and so on and so forth, yes, to some extent there’s less customization being done than on say Benchrest job from a slab, and there’s nothing wrong with that, nor is it something to jump on guys about.