From the time that I first saw a print ad with a photo of the new 457 American, I knew I wanted one. The appearance & proportions of the stock shape and the new action combined to give this sporter a lot of appeal to me. But it was the announcement of the 457 Varmint MTR with its tighter chamber & interesting stock design that really got me interested in owning a CZ 22RF rifle - trouble was, I had a tough time finding any of the MTRs in stock at the wholesale/jobbers I have accounts with. While waiting to find a Varmint MTR, I ordered in a couple of 457 Americans and a Varmint. One of the Americans had a very nice stock - nothing really fancy, but some nice grain, a good-looking stock. So I picked that one as my personal rifle, and put the other American & Varmint up for sale.
The weather in western Kansas in early February of 2019 when the CZ order arrived was not great for outdoor shooting of a 22RF, with highs in the low 20s. But I had the hots to get some rounds through the 457, so set up my portable bench just out the walk-in door of my heated garage/shop, and put up paper targets 50yds away. The first thing that impressed me about the 457 was how smooth it cycled, and how reliable it was - couldn't find any fault there. Secondly, after I'd pulled the bbl'd action out of the stock and gone through the process of adjusting the trigger's sear engagement, trigger return spring, and overtravel, the crisp, clean break measured 1-1/4lbs consistently, which I still think is excellent for a factory rifle in this price range. But the accuracy just plain sucked. Even shooting some pretty decent SK & Lapua ammo, I wasn't getting groups - they were more like patterns. Looking back, I don't believe I ever got a 5-shot group under 1-1/2" at 50yds, which was very disappointing. I put a few hundred rounds through it during several shooting sessions, cleaning the bore after every session. I got out my Hawkeye borescope and had a good look at the chamber/leade area & muzzle crown. I didn't see any obvious issues in the chamber, but the crown was a fugly mess of ragged, uneven cuts, so I pulled the bbl, dialed in the muzzle with a .0001" Brown & Sharpe test indicator, and cut a nice precision 11* crown. The new crown helped just a bit, but wasn't going to turn a sow's ear into a silk purse. So I ordered a Shilen #5 rachet rifled blank, parted off the 1.20" dia shank, then turned a snug-fitting tenon, chambered it with an EPS reamer, cut the extractor grooves, and finished the length at 23". I tried to match CZ's nitride finish with CeraKote by adding about 15% tungsten with graphite black, and after baking/curing, used a fresh bottle of LocTite #609 retaining compound to glue the new bbl into the 457 action. There were a couple of reasons to go this route - mainly, that I didn't want to screw around trying to cut the grub screw seats, and there's no pressure from the grub screws right there in the thinner cut-out area at the chamber. After a 24hr cure, I went to work sanding the stock's bbl channel out to float the slightly larger Shilen contour - that Turkish walnut is pretty hard wood. The finished rifle weighs about 1/2lb more than it did with the OEM bbl, and it now shoots at least as good as it looks. I wouldn't have gone to the time, effort, and expense if I weren't so pleased with the 457 action and the pretty stock, but I'm darned sure glad I did now.