I had a "problem child" Browning BLR "Takedown" (made in Japan as opposed to a "Belgian" Browning) that wouldn't print under 4 MOA with my favorite .308 Win. hand loaded recipes, Winchester factory loaded Ballistic Silver Tips, Remington factory loaded Scirrocos, of any & all available bullet weights come hell or high water.
I realigned & reinstalled the scope & tightened & re-tightened every nut on that rifle, the scope (Leupold 2-7x33 "Rifleman") bases & mounts a dozen times since I bought the gun and if I may say so myself I'm no neophyte at installing scopes on rifles.
I spotted 4 boxes of "cheap as dirt" Remington 150 grain CORE-LOKT PSP (R308W1) cartridges on the shelf at the local "Crappy Tire" on sale today & bought them & took them out to the range & tried them in the recalcitrant BLR.
I had the benefit of my Caldwell lead sled which together with a 25 pound bag of #7 lead shot in the "tray" and another bag over the metal base tube provides a rock solid shooting platform for sighting in rifles, especially ones with heavy recoil.
I fired 2 boxes of "shells" & none of the 5 shot groups strayed over 1.5" (@100 yards) which is udderly
The CORE-LOKT is a good hunting bullet (I've shot moose & deer with them) in standard calibers as long as you don't push them too hard (keep muzzle velocities well under 3000 fps.).
I found that the lead cores of CORE-LOKT bullets separated from the jackets when I used them in my .300 Winchester Magnum (chronographed at 3200-3300fps with my "Shooting Chrony") after I dug them out of the backstop sand & examined them, but in my .308 Win. & .30-06 Spring. they held together & "mushroomed" perfectly.
My BLR from the "Land of the Rising Sun" & that cheap "Crappy Tire" Remington CORE-LOKT ammo will be accompanying me on a Pennsylvania combo Whitetail/Wild Boar hunt this November.
** I would have provided pics but my digital camera happened to be in my pick-up & I took my SUV to the range today so unfortunately no pics.
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