Boyd Allen
Active member
A while back I picked up an old benchrest rifle that is based on a DGA action and a Six thumb hole stock. I have shot groups in the low twos with it, but after spending some time getting more blue patches out of it during the first very thorough cleaning since I got it, I stuck a bore scope down the barrel and looked at the throat. Agggh! The rifle was built before gunsmiths commonly had scopes, and this one got by with a chambering error that I had not seen before. At the end of the case neck part of the chamber, there is a ridge that sticks up all the way around, right where the freebore starts. It even casts a shadow. Well, I guess that that means that I will be cleaning a lot for copper, and that I should be glad it shoots in the twos, and not worry about trying to get into the ones. Have any of you run into this? It seems to me that a dull reamer, pushed too hard, may have been the culprit.
Boyd
Boyd