So I just ordered a Remington MSR (MK21) earlier today. Looking forward to getting this beast out and about. Tangent Theta 5-25x H59 won't be in until February sometime though. Going to pop a S&B 5-25x MSR on it in the mean time.
This is going to be one bad-ass rig. Comes as a 338LM in this case. 300NM is going to be the first custom tube to be spun up for it I believe. Perhaps a 338NM also. I've already got more 300WM and 338LM rifles than I can handle lotting brass for.
I know there are older threads on this topic - I've seen them. Still, curious in this day and time if anyone out there is running a modern left-hand twist precision rifle barrel? I remember Frank doing a video about a progressive left-hand twist barrel, which I'll post also. A progressive twist 300NM would definitely be something to experiment with I think, probably considerably versus LH rifling (or do both too).
Talking with a very reputable barrel maker here earlier today, there are benefits of course but how tenaciously do you have to train yourself to make those windage calls at distance so backwards from what you're accustom to? I know it would be quite a reorientation experience for me personally having shot RH twist for so long. According to some random data, .1 L for Coriolis/Eötvös and .5 L for spin drift (0 MPH wind influence) at 1760 yards (285g A-MAX @ 2810 fps - 1-9.35" twist). Not really a good case example for using LH twist to correct for Coriolis/Eötvös, but .1 MILs at a mile is still 6.4 inches of drift.
.5 MILs @ 1 Mile = 31.7 inches
31.7 inches - 6.4 inches = 25.3 inches. A solid windage improvement none the less, not huge by any means.
I've been curious about the recoil impulse as well, as that would definitely be a bit different as Frank explains in his video.
Don't want to turn this into an ELR external ballistics discussion as it shouldn't be. More so of a benefit (however slight that might be) versus seasoned training topic. I'm not particularly looking for input or data for myself, mainly curious as to the number of people doing this with modern rifles and reasoning.
This is going to be one bad-ass rig. Comes as a 338LM in this case. 300NM is going to be the first custom tube to be spun up for it I believe. Perhaps a 338NM also. I've already got more 300WM and 338LM rifles than I can handle lotting brass for.
I know there are older threads on this topic - I've seen them. Still, curious in this day and time if anyone out there is running a modern left-hand twist precision rifle barrel? I remember Frank doing a video about a progressive left-hand twist barrel, which I'll post also. A progressive twist 300NM would definitely be something to experiment with I think, probably considerably versus LH rifling (or do both too).
Talking with a very reputable barrel maker here earlier today, there are benefits of course but how tenaciously do you have to train yourself to make those windage calls at distance so backwards from what you're accustom to? I know it would be quite a reorientation experience for me personally having shot RH twist for so long. According to some random data, .1 L for Coriolis/Eötvös and .5 L for spin drift (0 MPH wind influence) at 1760 yards (285g A-MAX @ 2810 fps - 1-9.35" twist). Not really a good case example for using LH twist to correct for Coriolis/Eötvös, but .1 MILs at a mile is still 6.4 inches of drift.
.5 MILs @ 1 Mile = 31.7 inches
31.7 inches - 6.4 inches = 25.3 inches. A solid windage improvement none the less, not huge by any means.
I've been curious about the recoil impulse as well, as that would definitely be a bit different as Frank explains in his video.
Don't want to turn this into an ELR external ballistics discussion as it shouldn't be. More so of a benefit (however slight that might be) versus seasoned training topic. I'm not particularly looking for input or data for myself, mainly curious as to the number of people doing this with modern rifles and reasoning.
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