I have recently decided to build a 6mm Tac match rifle for myself and have done a bit of research to see what was doing well and what viable options are out there. My intention was to build something that was easy to shoot, little/no recoil, and to be used on slightly shorter matches. There are plenty of choices and all the info I seemed to find was one vs another, and info about one, but not a more comprehensive evaluation of overall choices. There may exist something similar to this comparison somewhere, but life keeps me extremely busy and therefore I haven't found the info I was looking for.
SO...
I decided to do what any red-blooded, compulsive, persnickety, American with a lathe and barrels would do- I made one of each.
The Cartridges
The cartridges considered for this evaluation were decided to be mag fed short action chamberings with "reasonable" barrel life and a speed that would be able to compete in many/most matches encountered (I believe the PRS limit is 3150FPS?). Barrel life is a relative term, but I usually find myself changing barrels in 1000-1200 rounds anyway, so I need it to last competitively for that duration. I'm sure many of you will scoff at this, but if I have a barrel thats lost a 1/4 MOA of its accuracy, its coming off! Despite the fact that there are many possibilities, I decided to go with the 6XC (6XC), 6mm Creedmoor (6CM), 243 Winchester (243Win), and the 6-6.5x47 Lapua (6x47L). There are several secondary considerations for all these chamberings that will be reviewed in each subcategory mostly having to do with brass availability, quality, and fire forming requirements. . The test went forward on the premise that all components would be held as equal as possible; all barrels, actions, bullets, powders, will be from the same "lot".
COMPONENTS
The barrels used in this test were provided by Bartlein. All the barrels are spec'd to be cut from the same bar of steel with the same cutter hook, and to the same dimensions (bore/groove). I'm aware that this doesn't exactly create a "level playing field", but it's the closest I could come. The barrel blanks provided were all stainless 29" 8 twist M24s, 5R rifled and finished at 27". Dimensions requested were .2370/.2432, I believe going a little over on the groove size helps the barrel to be more forgiving during load development. All barrels were threaded 5/8-24, have an R&D Mrad brake, and have a contoured and sanded thread protector. A side note, when I discussed the project with Bartlein, they immediately offered to provide the barrels. I have installed many Bartleins but have shot very few, they were extremely generous when they offered to provide these barrels at no charge, and I was very much looking forward to shooting a sample of their barrels. Visual inspection of chamber throats showed similar bore shape indicating that they were indeed cut with the same cutter hook, all barrels took the same bore pilot.
The actions used were Defiance Deviants, all short action repeaters made to the spec that we currently keep in stock. I have used several Deviants, some on my own rifles, but welcomed the opportunity to look at a sample of several actions to evaluate uniformity and accuracy. These actions will come from two seperate batches of actions as I didn't want to set aside 4 actions for the duration of the project. Aside from that, there should be no variables from batch to batch that should affect accuracy and uniformity of these actions so I dont feel this will effect the end results.
The stocks used were AICS 2.0 chassis, primarily because I had two of them on hand. I will note that this is not the most comfortable stock for me, but I couldn't justify the cost of using 4 seperate stocks, bedding etc, to move forward with this. Both chassis were modified by milling out the trigger pocket to accept the Jewell tigger safety linkage; there was no other modifactition or bedding preformed. All action screws were torqued to 65 in-lb
Jewell HVR-TS-A triggers were used for this evaluation, both set at approx 8 oz
Nightforce NXS scopes were used on each rifle, 5.5-22 x50 and 8-32x56. Both scopes always ran on 22 power and both have a proven record as good scopes
LOAD DEVELOPMENT
I have little/no shooting experience with most of these cartridges, and load information was collected from friends, smiths, and the Internet. Generally when I'm working with cartridges that I'm unfamiliar with, I shoot 2 shot groups to move quickly through load development, looking for nodes and pressure limits. Once this is achieved I shoot 3 shot groups to explore nodes, and 5 shot groups to verify loads (when time is available). All testing began at 100 yards; I can shoot suppressed in the back yard safely without bothering the neighbors, therefore all rifles were shot with one suppressor to maintain uniformity. I do not have a reliable resource to shoot year round beyond 100 yards without significant travel, so I explore the areas around the best 100 yard loads at 500-600yds whenever possible. Components were kept as similar as possible to simplify load development and maximize success. A note on chronograph data, I shoot in a pine forest, light can be inconsistent. I use the velocity data as a generalization, often trajectory indicates a higher muzzle velocity than the chronograph indicates. Ive been told I need a "more optimistic" chronograph- so don't pay too much attention to ES numbers, etc
These will be sold when I can get a for sale post together, I will link the sale thread here soon
there will be a lot of info here, so Im going to break up the thread in multiple posts as I go along, please be patient. In addition, posts will be edited as I insert missed/forgotten info, etc
SO...
I decided to do what any red-blooded, compulsive, persnickety, American with a lathe and barrels would do- I made one of each.
The Cartridges
The cartridges considered for this evaluation were decided to be mag fed short action chamberings with "reasonable" barrel life and a speed that would be able to compete in many/most matches encountered (I believe the PRS limit is 3150FPS?). Barrel life is a relative term, but I usually find myself changing barrels in 1000-1200 rounds anyway, so I need it to last competitively for that duration. I'm sure many of you will scoff at this, but if I have a barrel thats lost a 1/4 MOA of its accuracy, its coming off! Despite the fact that there are many possibilities, I decided to go with the 6XC (6XC), 6mm Creedmoor (6CM), 243 Winchester (243Win), and the 6-6.5x47 Lapua (6x47L). There are several secondary considerations for all these chamberings that will be reviewed in each subcategory mostly having to do with brass availability, quality, and fire forming requirements. . The test went forward on the premise that all components would be held as equal as possible; all barrels, actions, bullets, powders, will be from the same "lot".
COMPONENTS
The barrels used in this test were provided by Bartlein. All the barrels are spec'd to be cut from the same bar of steel with the same cutter hook, and to the same dimensions (bore/groove). I'm aware that this doesn't exactly create a "level playing field", but it's the closest I could come. The barrel blanks provided were all stainless 29" 8 twist M24s, 5R rifled and finished at 27". Dimensions requested were .2370/.2432, I believe going a little over on the groove size helps the barrel to be more forgiving during load development. All barrels were threaded 5/8-24, have an R&D Mrad brake, and have a contoured and sanded thread protector. A side note, when I discussed the project with Bartlein, they immediately offered to provide the barrels. I have installed many Bartleins but have shot very few, they were extremely generous when they offered to provide these barrels at no charge, and I was very much looking forward to shooting a sample of their barrels. Visual inspection of chamber throats showed similar bore shape indicating that they were indeed cut with the same cutter hook, all barrels took the same bore pilot.
The actions used were Defiance Deviants, all short action repeaters made to the spec that we currently keep in stock. I have used several Deviants, some on my own rifles, but welcomed the opportunity to look at a sample of several actions to evaluate uniformity and accuracy. These actions will come from two seperate batches of actions as I didn't want to set aside 4 actions for the duration of the project. Aside from that, there should be no variables from batch to batch that should affect accuracy and uniformity of these actions so I dont feel this will effect the end results.
The stocks used were AICS 2.0 chassis, primarily because I had two of them on hand. I will note that this is not the most comfortable stock for me, but I couldn't justify the cost of using 4 seperate stocks, bedding etc, to move forward with this. Both chassis were modified by milling out the trigger pocket to accept the Jewell tigger safety linkage; there was no other modifactition or bedding preformed. All action screws were torqued to 65 in-lb
Jewell HVR-TS-A triggers were used for this evaluation, both set at approx 8 oz
Nightforce NXS scopes were used on each rifle, 5.5-22 x50 and 8-32x56. Both scopes always ran on 22 power and both have a proven record as good scopes
LOAD DEVELOPMENT
I have little/no shooting experience with most of these cartridges, and load information was collected from friends, smiths, and the Internet. Generally when I'm working with cartridges that I'm unfamiliar with, I shoot 2 shot groups to move quickly through load development, looking for nodes and pressure limits. Once this is achieved I shoot 3 shot groups to explore nodes, and 5 shot groups to verify loads (when time is available). All testing began at 100 yards; I can shoot suppressed in the back yard safely without bothering the neighbors, therefore all rifles were shot with one suppressor to maintain uniformity. I do not have a reliable resource to shoot year round beyond 100 yards without significant travel, so I explore the areas around the best 100 yard loads at 500-600yds whenever possible. Components were kept as similar as possible to simplify load development and maximize success. A note on chronograph data, I shoot in a pine forest, light can be inconsistent. I use the velocity data as a generalization, often trajectory indicates a higher muzzle velocity than the chronograph indicates. Ive been told I need a "more optimistic" chronograph- so don't pay too much attention to ES numbers, etc
These will be sold when I can get a for sale post together, I will link the sale thread here soon
there will be a lot of info here, so Im going to break up the thread in multiple posts as I go along, please be patient. In addition, posts will be edited as I insert missed/forgotten info, etc
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