
Originally Posted by
blades
quite some time ago this same style test was run it was published in either Shooting Times or the American rifleman ( somewhere in the early 80's. Increments were one inch. It was controlled enough that Anshutz repeated it in their facilities. Upshot was that around 19-20 inches gave the optimum velocity and "accuracy" deemed acceptable to their standards at that time. There were a series of rifles produced with barrels in this length and a sight tube on the end( bloop tube was the common name in referance to the sound) the tube was there only to extend the sight radius for Irons so the clicks were the same as before ( although many other ideas were ascribed to the tube- they were not tuners nor there to keep wind deflection to a minimum at the time of projectile exiting the barrel). One little tidbit, Annie barrels are slightly choked. Many Annie barrels were promptly wacked off ( but forgetting the slight choke) so the response a bit later was that it was so much black magic. I have an acquaintance that did that and bitched about it forever afterwards. At the time I had a very rough 52c- bull barrel that had been unkindly treated- the barrel was shortened to 20" restocked and a Canjar LP trigger installed it became my heavy siilly-wet gun and still is. Putting it back in the original prone stock it would produce 100- mutiple x count on the A36 target @ 50 ft or at 50 yards outdoors, providing of course that this operator did his part. Primary ammo feed to this rifle was Elely Practice 100 , Club, or RWS Match it also did well with CCI standard of that vintage.