I'm thinking of buying one of these and was wondering what the accuracy is like. Are there different barrel twists? First hand info only please. Pics are a plus.
Well said, all I could add is I believe the 1:10 is optimal when using the 63gr. RUAG ammo. I could be wrong, but I seem to remember reading somewhere that they were designed to be used together.here is a thread speaking to the accuracy of the short barrelled versions
http://www.canadiangunnutz.com/forum/showthread.php?t=461795
The non-restricted come in two twists 1/10 1/7 my preference is the 1/7 as they shoot heavier grained bullets more accurately than the 1/10's shoot the lighter grained bullets. Mind you they are all accurate with the right ammo.
Well said, all I could add is I believe the 1:10 is optimal when using the 63gr. RUAG ammo. I could be wrong, but I seem to remember reading somewhere that they were designed to be used together.
Cheers
...the 1/7 as they shoot heavier grained bullets more accurately than the 1/10's shoot the lighter grained bullets.
If you were to come out and shoot more1 in 10" rifles are the standard for Swiss service. The acceptance standard is (was) 10 shots with GP90 at 300m, all falling in an 11cm x 11cm square. GP90 uses a 63gr bullet and most would consider this to be a heavier bullet.
1 in 7" barrels are offered, primarily for use by countries using SS109 type ammo. The factory does not have an accuracy acceptance standard for these barrels (although one would expect comparable accuracy).
I have used SS109 type ammo ( C77) in SAN 1 in 10" barrels with excellent accuracy. My rifle stabilizes 77gr ammo, but accuracy is not impressive.
My recommendation is that unless you plan on using 75gr+ ammo in your rifle, a 1 in 10" barrel is probably your best bet. The 1 in 7" fans are driving demand for the faster twist barrels, but I have yet to see any truely superior results from them.
If you were to come out and shoot moreyou would see some of the guys trying to get a bit more performance, at 400, 500 & 600 yards. The heavier, ie. 77 gr bullets seem to do well, and the 1-7" barrels eat that up. I don't think (and haven't done that much for personal testing) that the 1-10" may not provide a noticeable benefit at those ranges.
I'm of the understanding that the Swiss standard, and most ofter used distance, is 300m. And the "SS109ish" bullets will do well out to that range.
For those of us who shoot a nipple sized group at 2000 yds, we are always looking for the added 'edge' (OK not so funny pun intended).
BTW, I hope you noticed the dig at getting ur azz out to shoot more.
If you were to come out and shoot moreyou would see some of the guys trying to get a bit more performance, at 400, 500 & 600 yards. The heavier, ie. 77 gr bullets seem to do well, and the 1-7" barrels eat that up. I don't think (and haven't done that much for personal testing) that the 1-10" may not provide a noticeable benefit at those ranges.
I'm of the understanding that the Swiss standard, and most ofter used distance, is 300m. And the "SS109ish" bullets will do well out to that range.
For those of us who shoot a nipple sized group at 2000 yds, we are always looking for the added 'edge' (OK not so funny pun intended).
BTW, I hope you noticed the dig at getting ur azz out to shoot more.
I have a black special 1:7 and it will put a round through a Loonie open sighted no problem at a 100 metres. Quite likely one of the most accurate rifles I have ever fired.
You will love it. The first shot tells you everything. Smooth like butter and solid like a rock.
You must have far better eyes than me. Without a scope I can't even see a loonie at 100 meters and I had laser eye surgury a year ago.
Maybe he meant the bird, not the coin...The front post on my classic green will totaly cover a loonie at 100yds



























