DarkLordOfOptics
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Rifle strategy

A few days ago, I was helping a friend of mine get his rifle ready for a trip to Africa. He is a very serious and very good hunter, but not a very trained shooter. He is a very capable shot, but he shoots to hunt. Shooting is not a separate hobby for him (I am working to change that). He is a super nice guy and he bought a new rifle for his firs trip to Africa. Since he is planning to shoot some good size plains game out there, he bought a new rifle chambered in 300PRC. It is easily the most expensive rifle he has ever bought. Then, he went and bought Leupold VX-5HD 3-15x50 with FireDot reticle for it https://alnk.to/gp4wY2W. To cap off that shopping spree he went and set the scope up in a one piece DNZ mount. Now, all of that was done before he and I met, so I had zero input into his purchasing decision up to this point. It was even a little bit funny since when he told me that he got a nice lightweight 300PRC rifle, I jokingly said "I hope you did not buy a Christensen rifle and DNZ mount" and that is exactly what he did. He bought a Christensen Ridgeline rifle in 300PRC and a DNZ mount.
Christensen is a mystifying company to me. I had some early experience with their products and never touched them again. I assumed that like the rest of the industry they got better and given that they are still in business they must have. That having been said, any and all anecdotal evidence I have suggests that their rifles are garbage. I am sure that enough of them shoot, otherwise they would not survive, but I have not seen one yet.
This particular rifle did not shoot (8 inch groups at 100yards), but it was not clear to me whether the problem was with the garbage rifle or garbage mount. I suggested that he change to Area419 base and hunter rings before going out of town. https://www.anarchyoutdoors.com/shop-top-brands/area-419/?ref=fl0iza41

With that change made, we headed to the range again after I go back into town and the rifle started shooting adequately enough for hunting. It was still doing something odd with the slightest amount of heat in the barrel, but we walked it out to beyond 500 yards on plates and it was good enough for sub-300 yard (mostly) hunting he is going to do (he is currently enroute to South Africa).

That started me thinking about hunting rifles and I realized that I have been so focused on the precision side of things that I have not been paying a huge amount of attention to the hunting world.

I have been shooting and hunting with conventional calibers like 308, 6.5CM and 6ARC (and some unconventional ones like 8.6BLK) out of my various Fix rifles for quite a few years. I tested an ultra expensive Alpine Riflecraft rifle in 6.5CM last year that was remarkable, but definitely niche. I hunted pronghorn a couple of years ago with Stag Pursuit in 6.5PRC and shot that rifle quite a lot prior and since. I am rather fond of it overall and it is an easy recommendation for a crossover hunting /precision rifle. Aside from that, all my hunting and a lot of general shooting has been with the Fix by Q https://alnk.to/6bYA87p

The Fix rifles are fairly expensive at $3500 to $4000, so they are on the higher end of factory rifle spectrum though not nearly the most expensive. Also, for the time being, they are not available in bigger calibers.

Then, I was talking to another friend of mine and he asked what rifle would you recommend for hunting. Assume a $5k budget for the whole thing: rifle, optic, mount and suppressor. Also, assume it will be chambered in a peppy caliber along the lines of 300WinMag or similar.

That excludes the Fix (at least until the MegaFix gets here) and makes me think about what I would recommend.

Right off the bat, I have to admit that I have relatively little experience with the truly inexpensive stuff in recent years beyond shooting a few of them during the SHOT Show range day. I am talking about Mossberg, Glenfield, Ruger American, Savage, Remington, etc.

My basic opinion there has not changed: if you are on a budget, see if you can stretch it up enough to pick up a Tikka. It has been years since I saw a Tikka that did not shoot. Even the fast twist 22-250 Tikka I am struggling with shoots pretty well (just not well enough with the particular bullet I want; it is great with other bullets). I went and looked at what's out there and you can comfortably pick up a 300WM Tikka under a grand https://eurooptic.sjv.io/qWzjVg
In roughly the same price range you can pick up a similarly well regarded Bergara https://eurooptic.sjv.io/5k5NK1

For just a bit more, you can get a Stag Pursuit boltgun, but I have not seen one chambered for anything peppier than my 6.5PRC https://alnk.to/fSkg55u so back to the Tikkas and such we go.

I have more mileage with Tikkas, so I lean that way, but Bergara makes good guns. I would be remiss if I did not mention Howa. Howa generally makes good guns that really fly under the radar a lot of the times, but I make it a point to not touch anything that involves Legacy Outdoors who happen to be Howa's importer (if you ever wonder whether I hold grudges, I do).

If you have the budget to step up a little from Tikka/Bergara range, you find several different brands including Christensen that I am decidedly not a fan of.

With more traditional hunting brands we have the modern Miroku made Brownings and Portuguese-made Winchesters that are quite good, but with the higher end versions with better barrels and/or stocks, the prices start creeping up there.

That got me thinking which rifle out there constitutes a measurable step up from various Tikka and Bergara variants while offering both short and long action options with appropriately broad caliber selection?

I did some head scratching and some internet sleuthing. AI queries fairly consistently recommended Christensen Ridgeline referencing good reviews in various gun publications, like Outdoor Life (I am guessing Christensen spends some serious advertising money with them). That's the exact rifle my friend bought, presumably because of similar internet searching.

To my considerable surprise, Seekins HAVAK variants, while occasionally showing up, were never a top recommendation. Yet, I can not think of a better rifle in the $2000 to $3000 range. Seekins does a lot of things well. Most of the important stuff they do in house. They are constantly innovating with their processes and action designs and if I were looking for a conventionally stocked rifle to take on a mountain hunt, Seekins Element Hunter would be it. https://eurooptic.sjv.io/gROEx0

The rifle linked above is in 300 WinMag, but if it was me, I'd be more likely to go for 7Backcountry or 7PRC or even 6.5PRC. Those are all good options and Seekins offers all of them.

Depending on your budget, there are several different options all built on their excellent PH3 actions but differing in terms of stock and barrel configurations. They all shoot and they all use excellent stocks, barrels and riggers, so you are basically deciding how much you are willing to pay for lighter weight.

To do better (arguably) than Seekins PH3 in a conventionally stocked rifle, you are looking at something well north of $5k, especially if you want to go light.

Same goes for most chassis guns: aside from a few specialized ones, like the ones that use MDT's HNT26 chassis, they are not designed for light weight. I can get a titanium action of some sort, screw a Proof carbon fiber barrel into it and set it all up in a HNT26 chassis, but it still won't be much lighter (if at all) or more accurate (hard to say) than Seekins PH3 Element Hunter with their own carbon fiber wrapped barrel. It will be significantly more expensive though.

When, I keep on saying "conventionally stocked guns", I generally mean designs where a receiver is bolted into a stock or a chassis.

Now, personally, I prefer more modern adjustable guns with folding stocks, monoblock receivers, wrap around handguards, accessory mounting points, etc. That's why I shoot with the Fix and have no intention of switching any time soon. Seekins' new SIC rifle is a very similar concept and they supposedly have a lighter version coming up that I am very curious about. Sig Cross is the same basic idea, but I have no spent any time with recent variants. I really need to fix that.

In principle, I can get all of that out of a high quality chassis gun, but there is always the weak point of the interface between the action and the receiver in play. Now, there are clearly plenty of rifles out there, like the Seekins rifles I mentioned here that maintain a a very solid connection between the action and the stock, but there is a reason this comes up all the time. Monoblock receiver guns engiener it out of the system "a priori".

Somewhat paradoxically, optics selection here is relatively uncomplicated. If this is a hunting gun, and we are looking at $1000 to $1500 price tag (that is what remains out of our original $5k budget), we are looking at Leupold VX-5 3-15x44 SFP, Vortex Razor HD-LHT 3-15x42 SFP, Tract Toric 2.5-15x44FFP, Vortex Razor HD-LHT 4.5-22x50 and a few other similar models. https://eurooptic.sjv.io/2RaNx0

Depending on how you like to shoot and what reitcle you prefer, they all work well. Peronally, I am probably mosrt partially to the Vorex Razor HD-LHT 4.5-22x50 https://eurooptic.sjv.io/X4YM94 if we are looking for a precision optic for a mountain hunting gun.

With mounts, I have been nearly exclusive with Area 419 recently and I have no regrets.

With suppressors, there are several option, but for a hunting rifle I would be hard pressed to overlook Thunder Beast's tiny and lightweight Ultra 5.

On my hunting rifle, I mostly use Q's Half Nelson and Jumbo Shrimp depending on caliber, but eventually I'll add an Ulra 5 to my collection.

With all of that said, what would I do with that $5k budget if it were me:
Thunder Beast Ultra5 suppressor or Q Half Nelson that I use is around $1k or thereabouts.
Vortex Razor HD-LHT 4.5-22x50 is just under $1400 with the discount Eurooptic currently has on it.
Area419 Hunt rings are $180. That leaves me about $2400 for a rifle.

I went onto the EO website and filtered for approximately that price range and three calibers: 300WM, 300WSM and 300PRC since we started out looking at 30 cals.
https://eurooptic.sjv.io/GbK9Lm

There are quite a few options, but if it were me, I would likely be choosing between the Seekins Pro Hunter for $1895 and Element M3 for $2895.
https://eurooptic.sjv.io/0G9a4R

The Pro Hunter is a steel PH3 action with fluted steel barrel.
Element M3 and the more expensive Element Hunter use a hybrid steel/aluminum action and carbon fiber wrapped barrel.

It is an extra grand for one pound of saved weigh between Pro Hunter and Element M3: 7.8lbs vs 6.8lbs.

I'd probably up my budget a bi and squeeze the Element M3 or Element Hunter in, but that's a personal choice.

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Nuclear Bright FFP LPVOs

This is a re-upload, so if you receive two notifications, my apologies.
The original upload got stuck on processing the video.

This originally started as a review of the Vortex AMG 1-10x24, but ended up being more of a direct comparison of what you get with these three modern LPVOs that have nuclear bright reticle illumination:

Vortex AMG 1-10x24 https://eurooptic.sjv.io/rEQm1y
Primary Arms PLxC 1-8x24 https://alnk.to/9xnqt1y
Vortex Razor Gen3 1-10x24 https://eurooptic.sjv.io/rEQm1y black anodize or https://alnk.to/4XzIXQ9 for bronze anodize

The first question will always be why I selected these specific three scopes. The obvious answer is simply because I had them. I was really hoping to get the new SAI10 here since it goes head to head against these group, but that was delayed. I will do an update when it gets here.

Why did I not include the two Nightforce options: NX8 and ATACR? Several reasons. Mostly because they have been around for a while and are a known quantity. I have looked at both...

00:28:27
Flashlights: Olight Odin Mini and PL X

Late last year Olight reached out to me and asked me if I want to review a couple of flashlights. I had never spent any time with any Olight products, so I took a quick look at the available specs and decided to give it a shot.
I suspect that Olight is quite irritated with me since, apparently, the stipulate a specific timeline to reviewers when they send them products. I was blissfully unaware of that (maybe I should have read the fine print) and did my usual thing where I spend an ungodly amount of time with whatever I happened to be reviewing before I run my mouth.

This video is long. I have hundred of rifle rounds and well over a thousand of handgun rounds behind each light. They shook a little loose, but not too much.

Beam evaluation you see in this video was done after lots of shooting.

Beam quality is quite good, but these are relatively budget lights, so I was pleasantly surprised. Build quality is also quite respectable

https://amzn.to/4x7Wpnt
https://amzn.to/3REL51O...

00:53:50
Long overdue: Element Theos 2-10x42

The amount of time I spent on this scope trying to find something really significant to nitpick on is borderline embarrassing. Yet, other than the original observations on it being a little heavy and that the reticle could have benefited from a couple more numbers, I really did not come up with much of anything.

It is decidedly a precision-oriented MPVO, yet it does everything well. In terms of pure optimization and understanding the real purpose of what these scopes are used for, the baby Theos is just superb.

While the current iteration of the excellent Primary Arms 1.5-12x36 PLxC is aimed at AR guys stepping up, the Theos is set up just right for precision guys trying to equip their accurate semi-auto with something a little smaller and lower magnification.

It is an absolutely exemplary design for stretching the range of an accurate DMR.

At the time when this is written EO has one for $2049, https://eurooptic.sjv.io/enEP06 which is an exceptional price for this scope. I thought it was...

00:22:35
Happy Father's Day!

Happy Father's Day gentlemen!

Yes, I know it is a day largely invented to keep hardware and gun stores in business (just like Mother's Day is a handout to florists), but I suppose it is better than nothing.

I am going to head out in the general direction of Texas at some point today, so I may be somewhat scarce for a few days while out hunting.

Before I go, on this Father's Day, while it is customary to give a shout out to your family, that's just a given. My family is awesome.

I thought I'd give a shout out to the people at Phantom Defense. I needed some 8.6BLK ammo in hybrid cases for this hunt and they were extremely courteous and accommodating in getting it to me on time (and they do not know me from Adam, so I think that is just how they treat customers).

This 210gr ammo is averaging 2270fps out of my 16" Boombox with single digit SDs. I might just stop reloading for supersonic 8.6 now that I have this.

...

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Father's Day Sales are upon us

As is usually the case, I am going to keep this post pinned for a couple of days to list some of the more interesting Father's Day discounts that cross my paths. Since I am still on travel, I am afraid a truly exhaustive coverage is somewhat beyond what I can pull off, but there are a few things here and there.

Primary Arms has some USA-made HTX-1 red dot sights in stock again. Those kinda come and go and as far as pistol mounted optics go, it is easily one of my favourites: https://alnk.to/8tSXL1f
Also at PA, VTX15 code gets you a Vortex Razor Gen 3 4-24x44 riflescope for $2379. It is an exceptional compact precision riflescope. I expect to release a review on the new crossover scopes featuring the Vortex and S&B in July. For under $2400, I am not aware of any 40-ish mm objective scope out there giving the new Razor any semblance of a run for its money.
Those two were what stood out to me, but generally PA has quite a lot of interesting stuff on the Father's Day sale page: https://alnk.to/dWgsapa

...

Hi Ilya,

What is your take on the DBH D12 thermal scope? I like the high thermal sensor resolution and baseline 3x zoom. This is for night hunting coyotes out to 500 yards max with a very accurate 6GT bolt rifle.

BTW, after trying every which way to purchase an EU (wider FOV) version of the S&B Meta FFP, I gave up and purchased a US version for DMR/SPR 556 AR15. Really liking it as an upgrade from the XTR IIIi for long range AR use cases. Photo attached.

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Spartan's CP Brace: Initial Impressions
In pursuit of stability

It has been a little time since I talked about Spartan Precision bipods and tripods.  That is largely due to my preoccupation with precision shooting during the last year and a half or so. 

I have two pieces of gear from Spartan: Ascent tripod https://alnk.to/28VEg3S and Javelin bipod https://alnk.to/gVPiEBd Both are very well made and rather quick to deploy, but they are not quite stable enough for the competition oriented endeavors I have been focusing on.  

For competition, it has been predominantly large diameter inverted leg tripods, like Zeiss' Max Duty kit and Triple Pull Ckyepod.  Inverted leg tripods are measurably faster to deploy and adjust when on the clock.  Triple Pull Ckyepod gives me the flexibility to shoot prone, sitting or kneeling in a pinch.

For hunting, however, I have been using the Spartan gear I listed above because it is light, easy to pack, fast to deploy and exceedingly well made.  It also really helps that the legs of the Ascent tripod come off for easier packing and for use as hiking sticks (that is highly useful when packing meat out and I like the idea of not needing to carry around separate walking sticks.

Most of my hunting rifles that I am not willing to attach a bipod to on a mostly permanent basis are set up for Spartan's Magnaswitch adapter.   It is slick, unobtrusive and can be used to snap either a bipod or tripod in.  It is not quite as stable at distance as a proper large diameter match tripod, but it is very fast to deploy and stable enough for my hunting purposes.

In the last few years, tripods have become an indespensible tool precision shooting when terrain is not conducive to shooting prone.  We use tripods for observation and target ID with binoculars and then immediately switch to using them for shooting support.  That is where things start to diverge a bit.

Some people clip the rifle into the Arca head of the tripod (that's what I have been doing lately).

Some keep a tripod table clipped in and do both glassing and shooting off of a bag sitting on top of the tripod table (that's what I started out with originally, but managing extra gear took too long.  I am more efficient now, so it might be time to re-visit this).

Some of the top competitors use two tripods for front and rear support (that's more gear manipulation than I am comfortable with).

When there is a front support, whether a tall bipod or a prop of some sort or just a convenient terrain feature, tripods are routinely used as a rear support to stabilize the butstock of the rifle.  That is what's commonly referred to as "tripod rear".

I have been trying to keep things simple and mostly just shot with the rifle clipped into the tripod.  I got quite competent at it when shooting at the range, but it has been a bit of a struggle in the last two matches (I also had some health issue in parallel, but I suspect that it had more to do with me screwing things up under time pressure than health concerns).

Still, while I continue to practice shooting with the rifle clipped into the tripod, both standing and kneeling, it was time to expand my horizons and try to master various variants of "tripod rear" support.

That is when I stumbled onto Spartan's CP Brace that offers a completely different approach to using a tripod for two point rifle support.

 It is a very clever idea.  They are, essentially, creating a bridge betweeh two legs of the tripod that has a compact tripod head attached to it.  That is the front support.  The rear support is the tripod's third leg where, similarly to the conventional "tripod rear" setup, you use your support hand to anchor the buttstock of the rifle to the leg of the tripod.

Like everythign Spartan makes, CP Brace is not cheap, so I figured I should take one for the team, do some experimentation and let you know what I find.

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Will HICAR and 6.5CM+Peak kill the M7 and 6.8x51?
One part of my hopes that it will. On the other hand, I hope that it will not.


Either way, it is going to continue to be a mess.

Last month, powers that be issued a solicitation for the HICAR program:
https://sam.gov/workspace/contract/opp/b1a57529aa574e8ba220e0311434733e/view

HICAR stands for "Hypervelocity Improved Capability Assault Rifle"

The solicitation is specific to SOCOM, rather than the larger branches of the military.  However, I strongly suspect that it is a harbinger of smarter things to come than the general issue of anything chambered for the 6.8x51 (aka as 277 Fury in the civilian world).

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Visiting with TacomHQ

This week was my kids' spring break, so we ended up going on a road trip of sorts.  We flew to Houston, rented a car, visited the Space Center, checked out Galveston, then drove up to Dallas.  My dayjob is in Dallas and I need to visit the office occasionally.  Truthfully, I need to visit the office more often than I currently do, but given my family situation that is a little tricky.

My kids are very good travel companions, so we decided to drive back to Albuquerque instead of flying.  The way the timing worked out, we had a day to make a detour and drive up to Arkansas to visit John Baker and his Tacom HQ operation.

I've known John for a few years.  He has visited with me about three years ago to talk about his their reticle idea and a few other things  

I think the reticle idea is sound and we should see a version of it in a scope soon enough.  I'll do a thorough coverage at that point.

This time around, the reticle was not the main reason behind my visit.  John is a creative guy and they do several interesting things there.  Everything they do is clever and outside the box.  For example, to the best of my knowledge, they were the first to come up with different ways to shift the POI for ELR shooting with their TARAC devices.  Alpha and Bravo TARAC devices use prisms to shift the zero of the optic, but a predetermined angle.  I have a flip-up Alpha TARAC set up to help with my subsonic ELR pursuits.  Bravo TARAC attaches the prism to the objective of the riflescope which works beter with large objective designs.  Since Tacom came up with it, the idea has been pirated by a couple of people, most prominently by Nightforce.  Technically, Tacom has a patent on it, but this appears to be a situation where a large company (Nightforce) shamelessly muscled a small company (TacomHQ) out of their IP, knowing fully well that they have more money for lawyers.  To be fair, John does not talk about it too much, so this is just a guess on my part (although I am sure I am going to get a nastygram from Nightforce lawyers for posting this.  They seem to really enjoy pushing small independent guys around).

Charlie Tarac uses a periscope instead of a prism to optically add slope for ELR shooting.  Delta Tarac does mostly the same things except it also offsets the line of sight laterally to avoid the mirage from the barrel.

The new thing with TARAC devices for this year seems to be an adjustable version of the Charlie.  There is a large side wheel that allows you to dial up to 900MOA of extra slope.

The reason I wanted to spend a little time with Tacom was the structured barrel.  I first ran into this concept a few years ago and thought it was an interesting idea.

Initially, my plan was to pick an appropriate action and have John make me a 300NM structured barrel for an ELR bolt action rifle.  I still want a 300NM and I might put one together eventually.  However, I never quite pulled the trigger on that for a few reasons.  One is that I simply have very limited use for such a gun.  I still want one, but I do not have easy access to a place wehre I can really stretch the legs of a caliber with that kind of capability.  The reason I wanted to put one together with a structured barrel is that they are are getting very good lifetime out of these and they are very easy to get to shoot properly.  

They have several version of the structured barrel design, but fundamentally they start with a 1.5" diameter barrel blank and mill out a bunch of material.  The most disinctive features are deep longitudinal cylindrical channels drilled parallel to the bore.  The start at the muzzle and go back toward the chamber.  They do not make it all the way to the chamber.  On the outer surface of the barrel, there are additional featuers designed for eliminating vibrational nodes and increasing surface area for better heat exchange.  There is quite a lot of technical informaiton on their website: https://tacomhq.com/structured-barrels/

Structured barrels look very beefy because they start out from large diameter blanks and they are decidedly not light-weight barrels.  However, by the standards of typical match barrels they are on the lighter side of things because of how much material has been removed.  Given their impressive vibration dampening advantages, a few months ago I shifted gears and started leaning toward putting together a large frame AR around Tacom's structured barrel.

With the precisely calculated mechancial structure, these barrels acomplish two very complicated things simultaneously: they are harmonically dead and they do not get hot.

During my visit, we shot two guns with structured barrels: a 6.5CM AR-10 and a 300NM bolt gun.

We did not do mag dumps or anything that silly.  However, after 10 rounds of rather rapidly fired 6.5CM, the barrel was warm, but not hot.  Temperature distribution was arguably the most remarkable part.  Using an infrared thermometer, it was easy to show that the warmest part of the barrel was around the middle (near the gas block on the semi-auto),  The breech end of the barrel was cooler to the touch and measure at a lower temperature.  Basically, the barrel never got very hot and whatever heat it accumulated was shed very rapidly.

The feel of the recoil impulse is really odd in that it is completely muted and there was no muzzle rise to speal off.  I suspect a part of the was the muzzle brake, but this lack of discernible resonant frequencies made the recoil cycle extremely gentle.  I was shooting an IPSC at 350 yards and the recoil impulse never moved the reticle off the plate.  I fired the last four shots as rapidly as I could pull the trigger.  Everything was on the plate.  The rifle was not light at right around 14lbs with the scope, but I expected a lot more movement out of it even with the muzzlebrake.  Most gas guns have this slight "pitchiness" to them and I saw none of that.

The 300NM boltgun was slightly heavier, but with the much more powerful round the recoil did move the reticle off of the target, but not by much. 

I never lost sight of the target during the reocil impulse and the feel was, again, very muted and controllable.  I am not sure how heavy the boltgun was, but definitely less than 20lbs.  I would guess it was around 17lbs, but I'll check with John.

While both guns were very impressive, the semi-auto shot unlike any other gas gun I have ever pulled the trigger on.  No gas gun ever has a truly free floated barrel, since there is a gas block attached to it.  However, the combination of the structured barrel with a unque way that John has of putting the upper together, is the closest I have seen to date.

He bonds the barrel extension to the upper receiver and then screws a shouldered barrel into that.  The upper receiver is the Aero M5E1 Enhanced since the beefy upper receiver extension helps decouple the handguard from the barrel.  Also, the rather beefy structured barrel needs a large diameter handguard which this is.  The gas block they make is a custom affair that is probably better described as "tunable" rather than adjustable.  It is not designed for making frequent adjustments.  The idea is to tune your gas system for perfromance and reliability, then leave it alone.  I plan to do exactly that.

Since I was heading this way, I brought the necessary pieces with me for John to put together a 6.5CM upper for me.   Originally, I was thinking of doing it in 6XC for local PRS matches, but now that I shot with it, I want to try using it for NRL Hunter as well.  I think I can make weight without too much trouble.  I'll stick with 6.5CM in order to make power factor for Hunter matches.

Saying that I was impressed would be a gross understatement.  The feel of this gun is absolutely unique and it has recoil control behavior of a 25lbs gun in a 14lbs package.  It is quite remarkable.  Now, in the grand scheme of things, with my nearly 300lbs bulk backing up the gun, recoil control is a relatively straightforward affair.  Since my kids were there with me, I had both of them shoot both guns and watched the recoil cycle very carefully.  The guns barely moved even with a much smaller human behind them.

I know it sounds like magic, but it isn't.  I am not a mechanical engineer, but I spent a good amounf of time going over the materials and thinking through what they are doing with these barrels.  The science behind it is pretty solid.  I am not seeing any obvious holes in their foundational reasoning.  The execution is difficult and the barrels are not cheap.  Aside from good ideas, it takes a lot of skill and know-how to make these.  There is a good chance I will make a permanent switch to these barrels on what I consider my "heavy" precision guns while sticking with the Fix as lighter guns they way they were originally intended to be.  When I say heavy, I mean sub-20lbs with everything and light is sub-13lbs with everything (scope, suppressor, bipod).

Before I wrap up, let's get back to the heat management argument for a moment.  The 300NM I shot was significantly accurate and it is at a bit over 2800 rounds.  That sounds outlandish given that is nearly triple of I would expect out of this caliber.  However, if the chamber never gets very hot, it is possible.  I really want to know how long the 6.5CM John is building for me will last.  I have high hopes.

 

 

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