Gentlemen,
There comes times in each of our shooting lives when we must ask what may seem to others as ludicrously basic questions. Nonetheless, they beg answers and the truly stupid question is the one unasked.
My Gunsmith buddy, with whom I have been associated for 25 years, recently advised me on a sniper rifle purchase, my first non-sporting in 300 WM. On his suggestion I bought a new Remington 700 SPS SS in the above calibration. My questions do not involve the esoterica of loads and sighting but on the basic configuration of the rifle itself. Let me mention that I am a lifelong big bore shooter and enthusiast proud of saying that the .375 H&H is the smallest caliber I shoot. So, other than some involuntary "hunting" with the .7.62 and 5.56, elsewhere and as a much younger man, my hunting rounds over the last 40 years or so are and have been large calibers. Thus endeth the disclaimer.
The rifle I have, which I immediately re-stocked in a B&C Medalist, sports a 26" sporting contour barrel. I was about to buy the 26" Rem. 700 XCR but they were unavailable in the current market. My buddy said that that was ok as he reckoned the $1,250 XCR was overpriced for what amounts to, in our case, a barreled action. I must admit that the $638 I paid for the SPS was very reasonable but when I questioned the relatively slender profile of the SPS he replied "Barrel weight has little to do with accuracy in modern rifles and is mostly a holdover from black powder." He did acknowledge that the difference in contour does affect the barrel harmonics but otherwise has no measurable effect.
He said that barrel length only affects velocity while barrel weight only provides the immediately obvious: more weight forward for off hand shooting, damping of barrel harmonics for consistency (un-measurable) and a certain aesthetic.
He also said that the lighter barrel's contribution to easier handling and carrying more than compensates for any perceived increases in performance.
So, Oh Wizards of the long poke, what say you? I've downed a big old Eland at 500m with my 375 H&H out of its 24 in barrel and my wife and I compete, she as spotter, in long range BPCR competitions where we ring the ram at 500m with lead bullets over black powder using open sights. Do it all the time, so long range, so to speak, is not foreign to me but this barrel stuff begs education. Enlighten me, please.
With Thanks,
Viper1
There comes times in each of our shooting lives when we must ask what may seem to others as ludicrously basic questions. Nonetheless, they beg answers and the truly stupid question is the one unasked.
My Gunsmith buddy, with whom I have been associated for 25 years, recently advised me on a sniper rifle purchase, my first non-sporting in 300 WM. On his suggestion I bought a new Remington 700 SPS SS in the above calibration. My questions do not involve the esoterica of loads and sighting but on the basic configuration of the rifle itself. Let me mention that I am a lifelong big bore shooter and enthusiast proud of saying that the .375 H&H is the smallest caliber I shoot. So, other than some involuntary "hunting" with the .7.62 and 5.56, elsewhere and as a much younger man, my hunting rounds over the last 40 years or so are and have been large calibers. Thus endeth the disclaimer.
The rifle I have, which I immediately re-stocked in a B&C Medalist, sports a 26" sporting contour barrel. I was about to buy the 26" Rem. 700 XCR but they were unavailable in the current market. My buddy said that that was ok as he reckoned the $1,250 XCR was overpriced for what amounts to, in our case, a barreled action. I must admit that the $638 I paid for the SPS was very reasonable but when I questioned the relatively slender profile of the SPS he replied "Barrel weight has little to do with accuracy in modern rifles and is mostly a holdover from black powder." He did acknowledge that the difference in contour does affect the barrel harmonics but otherwise has no measurable effect.
He said that barrel length only affects velocity while barrel weight only provides the immediately obvious: more weight forward for off hand shooting, damping of barrel harmonics for consistency (un-measurable) and a certain aesthetic.
He also said that the lighter barrel's contribution to easier handling and carrying more than compensates for any perceived increases in performance.
So, Oh Wizards of the long poke, what say you? I've downed a big old Eland at 500m with my 375 H&H out of its 24 in barrel and my wife and I compete, she as spotter, in long range BPCR competitions where we ring the ram at 500m with lead bullets over black powder using open sights. Do it all the time, so long range, so to speak, is not foreign to me but this barrel stuff begs education. Enlighten me, please.
With Thanks,
Viper1