There has been some exchange on here about Weatherby Vanguard rifles [Howa] and as how Weatherby has them all using a pressure point at the forearm.
Some have even made the statement that this is necessary for these rifles to shoot well [as most Vanguards seem to do]
I decided to test my 270 Winchester S1 rifle, which has shown itself to be an exceptional shooter.
[3-shot groups flirt with ½ moa with the 140 NAB, chased by 60.0 grains of Vihtavuori N165 in a Winchester case, using CCI 200 primers]
I bought another Vanguard from a fellow Gunnut, which he had upgraded with a Boyd's AA Claro Walnut Stock, a very attractive piece of lumber, BTW.
He made no claims for the existing rifle that was in that stock, and I did not shoot it in that stock either. I simply took my Vanguard out of the original stock,
and transferred it into the Boyd's. I did not bed it or mess with it in any way. I did note that there was NO contact between the barrel and forearm anywhere,
a piece of paper slips easily under the barrel and slides back right to the area where the barrel is enlarged at the chamber area.
Took a box of my pet load [as above] and headed for the range. Shot a 3-shot group without even checking between shots. When I looked through my spotter,
what did I see? 3 shots inside 5/8", with two making almost one hole. However the group was now 2" left and 6" low. [had been 3" high, dead center in the original stock]
Did the adjustments, fired one shot, tweaked the adjustment once more, and fired another group, a 5 shot, taking my time.
The 5 shots are right where they should be and measure exactly ¾ inch, c to c.
My conclusion, based on this 270 at least, is that the Vanguard shoots just as well free-floated as it did when there was a fair amount of "up" pressure in the barrel.
I have several more Vanguards to experiment with, and plan to do just that later to see if this is an aberration, or if it applies to other Vanguards as well.
If any others have free-floated their Vanguards, perhaps they could post results.
Regards, Dave.
Some have even made the statement that this is necessary for these rifles to shoot well [as most Vanguards seem to do]
I decided to test my 270 Winchester S1 rifle, which has shown itself to be an exceptional shooter.
[3-shot groups flirt with ½ moa with the 140 NAB, chased by 60.0 grains of Vihtavuori N165 in a Winchester case, using CCI 200 primers]
I bought another Vanguard from a fellow Gunnut, which he had upgraded with a Boyd's AA Claro Walnut Stock, a very attractive piece of lumber, BTW.
He made no claims for the existing rifle that was in that stock, and I did not shoot it in that stock either. I simply took my Vanguard out of the original stock,
and transferred it into the Boyd's. I did not bed it or mess with it in any way. I did note that there was NO contact between the barrel and forearm anywhere,
a piece of paper slips easily under the barrel and slides back right to the area where the barrel is enlarged at the chamber area.
Took a box of my pet load [as above] and headed for the range. Shot a 3-shot group without even checking between shots. When I looked through my spotter,
what did I see? 3 shots inside 5/8", with two making almost one hole. However the group was now 2" left and 6" low. [had been 3" high, dead center in the original stock]
Did the adjustments, fired one shot, tweaked the adjustment once more, and fired another group, a 5 shot, taking my time.
The 5 shots are right where they should be and measure exactly ¾ inch, c to c.
My conclusion, based on this 270 at least, is that the Vanguard shoots just as well free-floated as it did when there was a fair amount of "up" pressure in the barrel.
I have several more Vanguards to experiment with, and plan to do just that later to see if this is an aberration, or if it applies to other Vanguards as well.
If any others have free-floated their Vanguards, perhaps they could post results.
Regards, Dave.





















































