375 Chatfield/Taylor finally finished

Now your getting somewhere :)
Those B&L Balvars are NICE scopes. They are longer than the 2x7s and thus fit well on a long action. I like it as much as the Leupold 1.5x5 and would trust it on any rifle I own. I plan on using it for load development for this one and then using it as a backup scope to the Leupold later on.



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Is the barrel tapped for the rear site as well?
No, not yet. I'll probably leave it as is. If I want to use open sights, I'll probably just buy one of those receiver sights that attach to Weaver bases.

BTW ... the Weaver bases on it now are the all-steel ones which are a improvement over the ones in the pics as they move the front ring a bit further back.


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gloss Weaver rings and scope! I expect nothing less from you SC! :D But since the theme of this gun is budget 375, its all good! :cool:
 
gloss Weaver rings and scope! I expect nothing less from you SC! :D But since the theme of this gun is budget 375, its all good! :cool:
Hmmmm, a purple Leupold to go with those Weaver rings real nice, but all I had was the B&L. ;)

Originally I was thinking about going the full route with all matte finish, Talleys, a VXIII 1.5x6 matte I have here, a McMillan, and NECG sights, but I got the B&C stock for literally nothing and decided to cheeep out with what I had on hand and not bothering to refinish the action.

Budget 375 IS the theme here! :D

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So I finally got out to shooting this week past. Recoil wasn't bad but there is a fair bit of muzzle jump and I got a couple kisses from the scope, plus the bolt handle has a nasty habit of chew into my trigger finger which all in all is a bit distracting.

Shot eight loads after sighting in. I'm not sure if the large groups are me or the rifle.

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......... so I got out tonight as well and tried again the 74.5/Reloader15 load.

I got two nice 1" groups right off the bat, but then the next 2 groups opened up to over 2"-3". I remembered to take the chrony. Glad I did.

Hand got chewed up again from the bolt. It makes it hard to shoot, that's for sure. Any suggestions to avoid this?

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So I finally got out to shooting this week past. Recoil wasn't bad but there is a fair bit of muzzle jump and I got a couple kisses from the scope, plus the bolt handle has a nasty habit of chew into my trigger finger which all in all is a bit distracting.

Shot eight loads after sighting in. I'm not sure if the large groups are me or the rifle........


LMOA!

I've been waiting for this!

I had a 416Rem built on this stock.....It weighed 8 pounds 2 ozs ready to hunt. I ran a 1.5-5 Leupold.
Let me take you on a quick stroll down memory lane!

I chose the stock because of the large recoil surface and the straight design (my bolt touched the stock) and I thought the sling system would be appropriate for a large caliber rifle.

Problem was that the stock design was such that the bolt handle riped my knuckle to the bone 3 times....I mean all the way!
The short grip also caused sever collisions between the trigger guard and my middle knuckle....I actually pounded a large chip of bone off that floated around for a few years.

My buddy that shoots both a 338 Win and a 375Wby (very well) took one shot from my little 416 and couldn't dry fire his 338 after that without flinching. He packed up his gear and wisely called it a day....So much for recoil control.
I let a guy at the local range shoot the thing. At the shot the guy sagged to his knees. It turns out a 13.5 " length of pull is not so great....Unless you like cosmetic surgery.

The final insult came during load development.
Long story short I fired just over 600 violent ( and expensive) rounds in 3 months trying to get a consistent load ready for a grizzly trip.....You guessed it! The old B&C bedding surface folded.

In the end a McMillan took the rifle from a 2"-4" grouper to a solid sub 1 1/4" shooter (never more), my skin grew back, my bone spur eventually did whatever bone spurs do, and recoil was way down (I have no idea why).

Check your bedding!
 
This glove has SuperCubs name written all over it :D
Gee Dave ....... You've really outdone yourself this time with your kind offer to lend me thees gloves. That's very kind of you, but I think there is a fellow in BC (Tod Bartell) who could really use a pair of those to go with his beloved 260s. :sniper:



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That looks pretty painfull!!

What about a glove or something like that?

A different stock may be the solution?

I found a glove in the trunk of the car and tried it out, but by then is was already chewed up and distracting. I'll let it heal and try the glove thing.


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Gee Dave ....... You've really outdone yourself this time with your kind offer to lend me thees gloves. That's very kind of you, but I think there is a fellow in BC (Tod Bartell) who could really use a pair of those to go with his beloved 260s. :sniper:



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It is Noels actually, but I am sure if you ask him nice he will lend it out.

Bartell is on to something though, you are kind of a nancy boy. Pull up your big girl panties and get shooting :p :D
 
Problem was that the stock design was such that the bolt handle riped my knuckle to the bone 3 times....I mean all the way!
The short grip also caused sever collisions between the trigger guard and my middle knuckle....
I'm lucky in that respect as I don't get the treatment from the trigger guard. The bolt doesn't hit hard enough to break any bone, but just digs in. I may get the checkered contact point on the underside of the bolt smoothed up.

Does it make any difference when shooting in a standing position? I didn't try it.



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