So I started the day with my Sako A7 in 300 Win. Mag topped with a Leupold VX1 4x12-40LR... this is what she did.
I used a load of 73gr R22, Fed 215LRM primers, Hornady cases and 200gr Speer Grand Slams. All I could manage were 3"-4"- 3 shot groups. Here's the kicker...the groups jumped all over the paper.
So I came home and did some google research. Apparently they are free floated barrels-NOT. 4" ahead of the recoil lug there are pressure points on each side of the barrel in the stock. Everything else is free floated.
I removed the stock and saw the pressure points were touching the barrel in different contact areas instead of evenly which I thought would not be for good accuracy.
After a little research I used a wood chisel to remove them as I noticed one side of the barrel was touching the point harder than the other side. Then I filed down the barrel channel very slightly on the one side to free the barrel. Now my barrel is truly free floated. I put the gun together torquing the action screws to 55 in lbs switched scopes to a Leupold VX2 2x7-32LR (lost faith in the 4x12) and when back to the range.
Sorry I forgot to take pictures of the stock chiseling, my bad.
Gun went from 3"-4" groups @ 100 meters to get this...3 shots with a 200gr Speer Grand Slam over 73gr R22 @ 2872 fps to ..... 3 shot 3/8" @ 100 meters!!! (centre to centre)
I was losing faith in this gun but after a simple fix its unreal. Large group is before fix, the best I could get...the last group was after the simple fix. Its literally a tack driver now. It finally gets its accuracy guarantee Sako promises.
If you have a Sako A7 giving you fits...try this. It may turn your gun around.




I used a load of 73gr R22, Fed 215LRM primers, Hornady cases and 200gr Speer Grand Slams. All I could manage were 3"-4"- 3 shot groups. Here's the kicker...the groups jumped all over the paper.
So I came home and did some google research. Apparently they are free floated barrels-NOT. 4" ahead of the recoil lug there are pressure points on each side of the barrel in the stock. Everything else is free floated.
I removed the stock and saw the pressure points were touching the barrel in different contact areas instead of evenly which I thought would not be for good accuracy.
After a little research I used a wood chisel to remove them as I noticed one side of the barrel was touching the point harder than the other side. Then I filed down the barrel channel very slightly on the one side to free the barrel. Now my barrel is truly free floated. I put the gun together torquing the action screws to 55 in lbs switched scopes to a Leupold VX2 2x7-32LR (lost faith in the 4x12) and when back to the range.
Sorry I forgot to take pictures of the stock chiseling, my bad.
Gun went from 3"-4" groups @ 100 meters to get this...3 shots with a 200gr Speer Grand Slam over 73gr R22 @ 2872 fps to ..... 3 shot 3/8" @ 100 meters!!! (centre to centre)
I was losing faith in this gun but after a simple fix its unreal. Large group is before fix, the best I could get...the last group was after the simple fix. Its literally a tack driver now. It finally gets its accuracy guarantee Sako promises.
If you have a Sako A7 giving you fits...try this. It may turn your gun around.
























































