So I am trying to find a way to correct the POI on an 1895CB that I purchased a few weeks ago. Out of the box the rifle looks good(for a Remington built gun) but it shot about 18" left at 100 yards. I checked the sight and it's not canted, crown was a bit off centre, so I re-cut it on my lathe.
Tested the rifle again and the groups are better but I still have the rear sight cranked almost off the flat to get it on paper.
Things I also noticed while doing this work if that there is :
- Noticed one rifling land that is almost non existent, .004 shallower than the rest
- Octagon flats are not all parallel or same width
- I think the barrel flats are twisted, barrel looks over indexed at the receiver but at the muzzle the top flat is canted as if under indexed. In other words, looking from the muzzle the top flat leans left at the muzzle and right at the receiver.
- And to top it off the last round hangs up on the carrier more often than not.
I can overlook most items as long as I can get it shooting straight but not sure how to do it other than maybe a bit of precision bending of the barrel with an indicator, shop press and lots of test firing.
After seeing the headaches of people dealing with Gravel I am hesitant to return it for a "repair" or exchange since you never know if the replacement will be worse... also it has some handling marks now from use so not sure what they will say about that.
Suggestions? Maybe just send this heap back and see what happens?
Tested the rifle again and the groups are better but I still have the rear sight cranked almost off the flat to get it on paper.
Things I also noticed while doing this work if that there is :
- Noticed one rifling land that is almost non existent, .004 shallower than the rest
- Octagon flats are not all parallel or same width
- I think the barrel flats are twisted, barrel looks over indexed at the receiver but at the muzzle the top flat is canted as if under indexed. In other words, looking from the muzzle the top flat leans left at the muzzle and right at the receiver.
- And to top it off the last round hangs up on the carrier more often than not.
I can overlook most items as long as I can get it shooting straight but not sure how to do it other than maybe a bit of precision bending of the barrel with an indicator, shop press and lots of test firing.
After seeing the headaches of people dealing with Gravel I am hesitant to return it for a "repair" or exchange since you never know if the replacement will be worse... also it has some handling marks now from use so not sure what they will say about that.
Suggestions? Maybe just send this heap back and see what happens?