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There are some 77s that will shoot that small but I think they are the exception and not the rule. Ruger has produced some 77s over the years that shoot like that but most of the 77s I’ve owned or ones my friends have had were doing good to get under 1 moa or .50 moa. I have one Ruger in a laminate stock, heavy barrel in 6PPC that I picked up here that shoots .25 consistently.I have a Ruger 77 in .223. It's the stainless steel version in a Zytel 'paddle stock', and the barrel twist is 1:12. I also has a Timney trigger set down to 3/4 ounces. I'm thinking a 53 gr bullet over V133 powder(?)
Will I be able to get it to shoot 1/4 minute~??????
I'll probably won't end up too disappointed. I had my hopes raised that when I found out that I was shooting too heavy a bullet and bought some 52gr and 53gr-ers. I also have some new Norma brass that I'll be using.Any factory rifle that could repeat .250" groups as an average is pipe dream! Any factory rifle that can average .500 is a keeper, not to mention uncommon.
Most any rifle can turn in a .250 moa group once, it's just a matter of how many groups you will have to shoot to get one,,, the 77 was known to be rugged, reliable, and strong. Not so much as a leader in extreme accuracy.
This is why I would invest in a good barrel and have a good gunsmith chamber and bed it. Factory guns just won't do this all day. To me it's worth the effort and money for the repeatable results.M77 mk2 223 varmint/target model. Its in a heavy wood stock from factory. This is with 50gr nosler varmint ballistic tip. It will shoot this size groups all day long. I will also add that i bought this 2nd hand from my gunsmith friend with his load data. Loaded with what he said and was shocked. He did not know round count but knew was under 500 rounds.
From what he told me the smith lightened the trigger just a bit but not sure how. The barrel is the factory ruger barrel, still has all the engraving from ruger on it. He bedded only up by recoil lug area. Its about 2 inch area.This is why I would invest in a good barrel and have a good gunsmith chamber and bed it. Factory guns just won't do this all day. To me it's worth the effort and money for the repeatable results.
Do you know what barrel he used? What all did he do to it, trigger, bedding, action timing, face and thread truing,,,,? But looks like it was done right!
Back when Ruger made those VT's they used Douglas and Wilson barrels on a lot of them if not all. Per Ruger and an employee of Douglas. When I scope the barrels on those it sure doesn't look like a "Factory Ruger" barrel. Those things will shoot quite well IME. WDFrom what he told me the smith lightened the trigger just a bit but not sure how. The barrel is the factory ruger barrel, still has all the engraving from ruger on it. He bedded only up by recoil lug area. Its about 2 inch area.
I've been told by others bedding the Rugers is different from other actions because of the tang and action screw.From what he told me the smith lightened the trigger just a bit but not sure how. The barrel is the factory ruger barrel, still has all the engraving from ruger on it. He bedded only up by recoil lug area. Its about 2 inch area.
Would you mind sharing the load and have you tried that load in any other .223 ?M77 mk2 223 varmint/target model. Its in a heavy wood stock from factory. This is with 50gr nosler varmint ballistic tip. It will shoot this size groups all day long. I will also add that i bought this 2nd hand from my gunsmith friend with his load data. Loaded with what he said and was shocked. He did not know round count but knew was under 500 rounds.
