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Dan Conzo
Guest
Anyone that calls other people "children" and presents no statistics, competitive personal experience or competitive experienced opinions isn't worth listening to anyway.
How much bigger? Are you talking 1.5 versus 1.4, or could you go all the way up to 2-3 inches without upsetting the stock?
As far as I know, no. This not only from the testing of people like Danny Brooks & Jerry Stiller & Joe Salt (who might have reached a different conclusion, but he *did the work.*) It also comes from the good theoretical engineers, like Mann and Harold Vaughn.
But there are almost always compromises, and the bigger the barrel usually the greater the compromise. Moreover, the gains aren't an "always" matter. By that I mean they're on the small side, so a "really good" 1.450 barrel will beat a "pretty good" 2-inch barrel. Just what anyone would expect. A larger barrel is not an automatic formula for success.
Depends on what you think causes vertical. There is the modeling work by Varmint Al, but that assumes (1) barrels flex significantly, and (2) barrels are a single cantilevered beam. There have been a number of rifles with barrels built on a double cantilevered beam model. With tension, Pendergraft in the U.S, Tony Z and Jeff Rogers in Oz. With compression, Tooley in the States (that I know of), and using neither tension or compression, Phil Jusilus in the States, who essentially put a cats head (aka spider), via a 3-inch diameter pipe, on each end of the barrel.
All worked, and about equally well. And in spite of the theory, with a large enough pipe, all shot essentially round groups; tuning just shrank/expanded the size of the group.
For a smaller, single cantilevered beam model, Vaughn pointed out you can just change the location of the barrel in the block a little bit.
But I sense that you're not after experimenting, testing, but are rather looking for a sure-fire, "always better" answer. And if that's the case, I'd say the answer is no. Use the 1.4-inch barrel. Remember the compromises.
I'd say too there are people in Australia who would be better sources than the internet. Annie Elliott is shooting some long-range now. Dunno about Stuart, I only met him once, and long ago, but he seemed very approachable. As I said, Jeff Rogers & esp,. Tony Z for technical help. The man I knew best was Alan Peake, but he's passed on.
BTW, you can get a bit of help on who's apt to know things in the states by looking at the Williamsport Hall of Fame site (you'll find Joe Salt(alamachia) there), or for IBS, the Long Range Marksman site (You'll find Danny Brooks there, one down from the top.)
http://internationalbenchrest.com/results/shooter_rankings/PrecRifLD.php
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Danny, Joe:
I try not to post to the long-range forum anymore. Occasionally I get drawn in by accident when using the "New Posts" feature, and forget to see what forum the thread is in. You can probably figure out why...
I get along well with the Elliots, aJR and TonyZ and they always have a lot of good information, really technical people.
Two things I would think about are putting a tuner on this big barrel and cryo freezing the barrel.
For anyone that has the book, what did Mr. Vaughn say, if he said anything at all, about for instance, a tension barrel rifle? Or water cooled? Or some of the other newer ideas(or in the case of water-cooled, newly rediscovered)?
Also, Mr Charles, when you say he put a "cats head" via 3" diameter pipe on each end of the barrel, what do you mean by this? Im having a hard time picturing what that looks like.
Speaking of, if you have a tension or compression barrel system, would it not be stiffer to just have a barrel that is the same diameter as whatever pipe/shroud you are using provided you can get the rifle to break loose and track straight? Or are those setups more for the tuning ability than stiffness?
Thanks.
Jay I wish I lived close enough to one of the Cryo places cause I would try it again. Had one done years ago and it shot very well after that, probably the same reason some rifles like tuners! Sold the rifle to Ken Ridenour he sold it to a guy down in I think Vergina his first name was Jim can't think of the last. He called me and wanted to know why I sold it cause it shot so well, Told him I needed to sell that to buy another Action. So it may help some , you're out a few buck but like I've always said try it you might like it!
Hay Charles don't let them get you down, gives me something new to talk about. I get a few chuckles and say wish they were next to me on a bench!
Joe Salt
What would yall say offers the most options for fine-tuning, between a barrel block, a barrel tuner, and a free-floated barrel?
Obviously the free-floated is gonna be the most simple, but which would allow you to squeeze the most accuracy out of the rifle in yalls` experience?