I'm coming into this thread late, and have to say I only skimmed it.
If you are getting 1-inch plus groups, something is terribly wrong. You may need a new barrel, but I'd say you need an experienced gunsmith first. Something -- or several things -- are seriously mucked up. The pattern of shot dispersement may offer clues.
I think you are beyond internet diagnosis. It could be something in the action, the barrel, the glue-in job, etc. etc. IMHO, the only thing not really worth fixing is the action. The reason is it is often just so hard to diagnose an action problem. It's worth one try to fix an action, after that, sell it to a varmint hunter & tell them why.
Yes I know the person you bought it from said it shot fine. Either you trust him/her, or you don't. Presumably it is not too late to make contact with them again & find out the components they used, if you want to go down that path.
* * *
To answer your original question though, it never hurts to have an extra -- or 10 extra -- barrels. Right now I have three in 6PPC, and none of them are competitive for a bigger match. So, I too "need" a new barrel.
To add a thought to your original question, if/when you get a barrel that is just damn good, don't waste it practicing or shooting club matches. Save it for when you're competing at the highest level you want to shoot at. It is a fallacy to believe that you can't learn from a less-that-great barrel. The barrel will respond in certain ways, to tune and wind. You can learn from that, even if that barrel won't group in the .100s.
You will also learn that getting a load in tune for barrel seems to solve more problems than you might believe. Of my three barrels, one will agg .200 to .250 -- and on the lower side of that when in tune. That's good enough for club matches. Yes, there are a couple Southeastern Region "Hall-of-Famers" who shoot at my club, but usually only one or two at a "club" match. That's the difference -- it isn't that there aren't any good shooters, but there are fewer than at a big match.
I'll allow that I'm known for saying that equipment wise, winning is all bullets and barrels. But that's when you're in the ballpark, and with 1-inch (plus) groups, your not.
Good luck to you.
Charles
If you are getting 1-inch plus groups, something is terribly wrong. You may need a new barrel, but I'd say you need an experienced gunsmith first. Something -- or several things -- are seriously mucked up. The pattern of shot dispersement may offer clues.
I think you are beyond internet diagnosis. It could be something in the action, the barrel, the glue-in job, etc. etc. IMHO, the only thing not really worth fixing is the action. The reason is it is often just so hard to diagnose an action problem. It's worth one try to fix an action, after that, sell it to a varmint hunter & tell them why.
Yes I know the person you bought it from said it shot fine. Either you trust him/her, or you don't. Presumably it is not too late to make contact with them again & find out the components they used, if you want to go down that path.
* * *
To answer your original question though, it never hurts to have an extra -- or 10 extra -- barrels. Right now I have three in 6PPC, and none of them are competitive for a bigger match. So, I too "need" a new barrel.
To add a thought to your original question, if/when you get a barrel that is just damn good, don't waste it practicing or shooting club matches. Save it for when you're competing at the highest level you want to shoot at. It is a fallacy to believe that you can't learn from a less-that-great barrel. The barrel will respond in certain ways, to tune and wind. You can learn from that, even if that barrel won't group in the .100s.
You will also learn that getting a load in tune for barrel seems to solve more problems than you might believe. Of my three barrels, one will agg .200 to .250 -- and on the lower side of that when in tune. That's good enough for club matches. Yes, there are a couple Southeastern Region "Hall-of-Famers" who shoot at my club, but usually only one or two at a "club" match. That's the difference -- it isn't that there aren't any good shooters, but there are fewer than at a big match.
I'll allow that I'm known for saying that equipment wise, winning is all bullets and barrels. But that's when you're in the ballpark, and with 1-inch (plus) groups, your not.
Good luck to you.
Charles