OK, I have just slugged the bore of a BSA commercial M17 sporter as follows:
I took a once fired cartridge, and bored out the head to 5/16. I put the drill bit into the case, shank first, until it seated against the shoulder. I put the whole arrangement into a vice, and filled the neck of the case with lead that I melted from a couple RNHP bullets.
Once cooled, I removed the drill bit, chambered the case, and hammered the slug through using a taped rod with a rounded tip
The measurement for the grooves appears to be somewhere between .308 to .309, while the lands measure somewhere in the .3035 to .3045 range. Measuring this is difficult with a vernier caliper, hence the margin of error.
I'm thinking I don't have a barrel problem contributing to inaccuracy. Considering that this is a sporter profile barrel with zero float,and no action bedding, I think I may be able to make some improvements by bedding/floating.
Would you agree, or is it fool's errand to try to make this rifle work well with the current barrel installed?
I took a once fired cartridge, and bored out the head to 5/16. I put the drill bit into the case, shank first, until it seated against the shoulder. I put the whole arrangement into a vice, and filled the neck of the case with lead that I melted from a couple RNHP bullets.
Once cooled, I removed the drill bit, chambered the case, and hammered the slug through using a taped rod with a rounded tip
The measurement for the grooves appears to be somewhere between .308 to .309, while the lands measure somewhere in the .3035 to .3045 range. Measuring this is difficult with a vernier caliper, hence the margin of error.
I'm thinking I don't have a barrel problem contributing to inaccuracy. Considering that this is a sporter profile barrel with zero float,and no action bedding, I think I may be able to make some improvements by bedding/floating.
Would you agree, or is it fool's errand to try to make this rifle work well with the current barrel installed?