I suppose it would be to naïve to think that I could drop a .22 barreled action into my factory HMR "bedded" 6.5 Bergara stock and expect accurate results? or does the .22 barreled action dimensions closely match the 6.5 barreled action? Thanks.
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Even short action and long action? 6.5 is a short action, right? Honest question...I'm a rimfire addict.All Rem 700 footprints are interchangeable.
Mike
Yes, the B14R action shares the same external dimensions as other Rem 700 pattern short actions, which could be chambered in 6.5 CM, .308 etc. The stock on the B14R HMR is the same stock as found on the centerfire HMR rifles in short action sizes.
At aprox. $650 for the .22 barreled action I'm not to keen on taking the chance. My goal would be to shoot ARA factory benchrest with it so accuracy is the upmost important.I misunderstood - might as well give it a try. You're correct that there might be minute differences, but worth a shot!
That certainly has crossed my mind. Having the one stock for the 2 barreled actions was the allure. I'm not necessarily attached to the B14R enough to have two identical stocks.It’s not hard to find another HMR stock if you decide the one you bedded for a CF action isn’t working out. Buy the BA and see if it works, then buy a take-off HMR stock if it doesn’t.
Makes sense. If you want one stock for two actions, with minimal concerns about bedding mismatches. you'll probably want to avoid bedding altogether. The HMR stock as-is takes a little love to optimize sometimes (mostly removing paint under the action); a V-block style stock/chassis might give better results, but it also might not. Frankly, I think that the HMR stock is one of the best factory offerings once you add a full-length (or longer) ARCA rail; it has a ton of the core features of a good stock/chassis at a highly competitive price. My vote is to buy the B14R barreled action and see what happens. If you don't like the answer, sell the HMR stock and put the proceeds to something else.That certainly has crossed my mind. Having the one stock for the 2 barreled actions was the allure. I'm not necessarily attached to the B14R enough to have two identical stocks.
You better check the rules for ARA factory class before you start spending your money. Technically, taking a barreled action and dropping it into a factory stock is violating the rules. You're building a rifle, so by definition, that rifle isn't factory.At aprox. $650 for the .22 barreled action I'm not to keen on taking the chance. My goal would be to shoot ARA factory benchrest with it so accuracy is the upmost important.
You know you are absolutely correct. That would be "building a gun" and as such I'm not going to do that. I really don't need another .22 for ARA I already shoot a factory CZ 457 Varmint in ARA that has the mods permitted....bedding and trigger spring mod. Thanks for bringing this to my attention (not sure why I didn't figure this out myself) before I made a stupid purchase.You better check the rules for ARA factory class before you start spending your money. Technically, taking a barreled action and dropping it into a factory stock is violating the rules. You're building a rifle, so by definition, that rifle isn't factory.
Having said that, take your barreled action and put it in a factory stock, and keep your mouth shut about what you did. I'm not the ARA police.
Accuracy? Buy all you can of the lot # of ammo that your rifle shoots the best and spend hours learning how to read the wind.
I've been shooting ARA factory class for a few years and I'm really enjoying it.