RangerPark
CGN frequent flyer
- Location
- Near Edmonton, AB
Hello Everyone!
I've been shooting my new Remington 5R throughout the summer and I had really good results with it. I've been keeping tabs of my shooting in an Excel file, I recorded a total of 214 groups with the gun, mostly 5 round groups, from all sorts of hand loads to XM80 ball ammo. All 214 groups averaged .712 MOA. I experimented with all sorts of different hand loads and bullets, top 100 groups averaged .475 MOA, 53 groups with "Pet Loads" averaged .385 MOA, most of the shooting was done at 300 meters.
So for a factory barrel the gun shoots very well, no question.
Now this is my problem. I know my chamber is cut large. Fired brass comes out at Max SAAMI, I even get a little step near the case head indicating that not only the chamber is cut long but also large. I know this is probably causing premature wear on my brass but haven't experienced any case failures yet.
Since shooting season is practically over I'm thinking of having the barrel re-chambered to match specs over the winter. Basically have the smith bring the barrel in a whole turn, to keep the fluting aligned, and touch up the chamber with a match reamer. While we're at it I would also have the action blue printed. Should make an excellent gun even better, but could also be a waste of money.
So the question is, would any of you bother with this? Would it make more sense to shoot out the barrel first? That would be about 4000 more rounds to go. Am I going to ruin a whole bunch of brass reloading for 4000 more shots in a large chamber? Let me know what your thoughts are!
I've been shooting my new Remington 5R throughout the summer and I had really good results with it. I've been keeping tabs of my shooting in an Excel file, I recorded a total of 214 groups with the gun, mostly 5 round groups, from all sorts of hand loads to XM80 ball ammo. All 214 groups averaged .712 MOA. I experimented with all sorts of different hand loads and bullets, top 100 groups averaged .475 MOA, 53 groups with "Pet Loads" averaged .385 MOA, most of the shooting was done at 300 meters.
So for a factory barrel the gun shoots very well, no question.
Now this is my problem. I know my chamber is cut large. Fired brass comes out at Max SAAMI, I even get a little step near the case head indicating that not only the chamber is cut long but also large. I know this is probably causing premature wear on my brass but haven't experienced any case failures yet.
Since shooting season is practically over I'm thinking of having the barrel re-chambered to match specs over the winter. Basically have the smith bring the barrel in a whole turn, to keep the fluting aligned, and touch up the chamber with a match reamer. While we're at it I would also have the action blue printed. Should make an excellent gun even better, but could also be a waste of money.
So the question is, would any of you bother with this? Would it make more sense to shoot out the barrel first? That would be about 4000 more rounds to go. Am I going to ruin a whole bunch of brass reloading for 4000 more shots in a large chamber? Let me know what your thoughts are!