I have really liked Loker's new tuners. With the adjustable nut you can preload how much pressure you want on the tuner threads. I set mine up with enough tension so you can turn the tuner by hand without upsetting the rifle in the bags. No wrenches, no pins, just remove the bolt from the rifle and reach up and turn. It's fast and it works!
Butch Fjoser wanted me to try a new lot of 133 at the best of the west. I changed during the middle of the HV 100. On the sighter I had about .3 of verticle. Reached up and turned the tuner 3 marks and shot flat, maybe about .150 of verticle. No problem tuning at all. When I got home I tested the 10109 lot against my 78804 lot. It took .3 grains more of the10 lot to get the same fps. From all the testing I have done with Darrel's tuner, that is just about what I thought I would find.
During the 300 yard warm up match I shot a .6 with about .3 of verticle. I thought that was to flat for what we would shooting later on. Reached up and dialed in about a inch worth of verticle. It is just amazing to me how repeatable tuners can be if you are willing to take the time and effort to learn how they respond to your inputs
Richard
Butch Fjoser wanted me to try a new lot of 133 at the best of the west. I changed during the middle of the HV 100. On the sighter I had about .3 of verticle. Reached up and turned the tuner 3 marks and shot flat, maybe about .150 of verticle. No problem tuning at all. When I got home I tested the 10109 lot against my 78804 lot. It took .3 grains more of the10 lot to get the same fps. From all the testing I have done with Darrel's tuner, that is just about what I thought I would find.
During the 300 yard warm up match I shot a .6 with about .3 of verticle. I thought that was to flat for what we would shooting later on. Reached up and dialed in about a inch worth of verticle. It is just amazing to me how repeatable tuners can be if you are willing to take the time and effort to learn how they respond to your inputs
Richard
Last edited: