Recently drove over to Hephzibah, GA to see Robert Gradous of Gradous Rifles. I had been contact with him about my build for the last few months as the parts arrived. I chose to have Robert make my parts into a .260 Rem masterpiece. I had done my research on Robert and concluded that he was a solid smith and a solid person. We settled on a date and after waking up at 0230 hours, I made the 3.5 hour drive.
Robert's shop
We laid out all the parts:
Surgeon 591 S/A
Krieger 6.5mm 8.5 twist MTU 29" blank cut to 24"
Surgeon bottom metal
Mcmillan A-5 loaded out in GAP camo (thanks JW Precsion!)
Jewell HVR set to 1.25lbs. (best trigger I have pulled)
Robert began taking all the necessary measurements of the action, bolt lugs, and face to ensure an optimal action/barrel fit. Next came squaring up the blank in the lathe.
First cut
Now all threaded up and ready to be chambered.
A rather intriguing process.
All done
Now for clean 45 degree recessed crown
I watched Robert thread, chamber, and crown my barrel for 2.75 hours. He was very precise and I was most impressed by his craftsmanship. I do a pretty good job at reading people and their intentions. I could tell that Robert cared about his work, like he was working on something for himself. And not just job. Anyways on with it...
The action was mated up the barrel and checked for proper fitting with the stock.
The stock was then stripped of its hardware (thumbwheel, nuts and, bolts).
The barreled action, bottom metal, and stock hardware were sandblasted and ready to be painted.
I chose OD Cerakote. Robert was meticulous about the humidity and temperature of his custom made paint booth during painting.
All of the parts were then baked/cured for over an hours at 300 degrees.
Might machine oil was massaged into the Cerkote to help removed any over spray.
I thought it looked perfect, but it wasn't good enough for Robert's taste. I thought he did an excellent job on the application of the Cerakote.
After everything cooled down, Robert began whipping up some Marine tex. Robert applied the bedding and tightened things down to let it set up over night. One again he was meticulous on where and how much of the bedding was applied. He did an excellent job on cleanup.
He taught me a few things about the right way to bed a rifle. These are characteristics that I did not see in other bedding jobs including one I had done by a well known smith and paid a pretty penny for it. The things Robert showed me made complete sense.
Next day we pulled it down and the bedding was beautiful and stress free. Robert began to clean it up.
Next was the engraving process...making it a complete Gradous rifle.
Now ready to be shot.
Not quite.
Robert reminded me that the bedding still need to cure to be 100%. Robert thought I "was in the ditch" about not being able to shoot it. Well who wouldn't...
But I understood. And as much as it was killing me, I drove her home. Then had to wait several more days at work without being able to shoot it.
Finally I got to the range and was immediately impressed. Second load I tested (3 rounds only just to get a feel for things) was .25 moa.
I have Put 165 Rounds through it to date. H4831SC and H4350 are what I have tried so far with 139 Scenars, 142 SMK, and 140 Berger BTLR. Using only Norma brass and neck sizing only. My batch of Norma is very consistent and as about 7-8 grains heavier than Remington brass. There is no drastic shift in POI from load to load at most .5moa shift. It pretty much shoots everything in the same spot and nothing has shot over .6moa. 90% of the groups so far are sub .4moa. I have achieved several amazing 5 round groups in the high .1s and mid .2s at 100y. It's a friggin hammer. I have not taken it further yet. Chrono'ed some of the loads and already have SDs or 6 and 9. More pics to come of the targets, but I wanted to get this thread up and running.
This is my first experience with Robert Gradous and God willing not the last. I think he is a top tier smith without a doubt, and builds a serious piece of craftsmanship. A few things I learned quick about Robert Gradous: He says what he means and he means what he says, If he ain't worried neither should you, he's a simple guy, and very smart. I would recommend him to anyone.
Robert's shop
We laid out all the parts:
Surgeon 591 S/A
Krieger 6.5mm 8.5 twist MTU 29" blank cut to 24"
Surgeon bottom metal
Mcmillan A-5 loaded out in GAP camo (thanks JW Precsion!)
Jewell HVR set to 1.25lbs. (best trigger I have pulled)
Robert began taking all the necessary measurements of the action, bolt lugs, and face to ensure an optimal action/barrel fit. Next came squaring up the blank in the lathe.
First cut
Now all threaded up and ready to be chambered.
A rather intriguing process.
All done
Now for clean 45 degree recessed crown
I watched Robert thread, chamber, and crown my barrel for 2.75 hours. He was very precise and I was most impressed by his craftsmanship. I do a pretty good job at reading people and their intentions. I could tell that Robert cared about his work, like he was working on something for himself. And not just job. Anyways on with it...
The action was mated up the barrel and checked for proper fitting with the stock.
The stock was then stripped of its hardware (thumbwheel, nuts and, bolts).
The barreled action, bottom metal, and stock hardware were sandblasted and ready to be painted.
I chose OD Cerakote. Robert was meticulous about the humidity and temperature of his custom made paint booth during painting.
All of the parts were then baked/cured for over an hours at 300 degrees.
Might machine oil was massaged into the Cerkote to help removed any over spray.
I thought it looked perfect, but it wasn't good enough for Robert's taste. I thought he did an excellent job on the application of the Cerakote.
After everything cooled down, Robert began whipping up some Marine tex. Robert applied the bedding and tightened things down to let it set up over night. One again he was meticulous on where and how much of the bedding was applied. He did an excellent job on cleanup.
He taught me a few things about the right way to bed a rifle. These are characteristics that I did not see in other bedding jobs including one I had done by a well known smith and paid a pretty penny for it. The things Robert showed me made complete sense.
Next day we pulled it down and the bedding was beautiful and stress free. Robert began to clean it up.
Next was the engraving process...making it a complete Gradous rifle.
Now ready to be shot.
Not quite.
Robert reminded me that the bedding still need to cure to be 100%. Robert thought I "was in the ditch" about not being able to shoot it. Well who wouldn't...
Finally I got to the range and was immediately impressed. Second load I tested (3 rounds only just to get a feel for things) was .25 moa.
I have Put 165 Rounds through it to date. H4831SC and H4350 are what I have tried so far with 139 Scenars, 142 SMK, and 140 Berger BTLR. Using only Norma brass and neck sizing only. My batch of Norma is very consistent and as about 7-8 grains heavier than Remington brass. There is no drastic shift in POI from load to load at most .5moa shift. It pretty much shoots everything in the same spot and nothing has shot over .6moa. 90% of the groups so far are sub .4moa. I have achieved several amazing 5 round groups in the high .1s and mid .2s at 100y. It's a friggin hammer. I have not taken it further yet. Chrono'ed some of the loads and already have SDs or 6 and 9. More pics to come of the targets, but I wanted to get this thread up and running.
This is my first experience with Robert Gradous and God willing not the last. I think he is a top tier smith without a doubt, and builds a serious piece of craftsmanship. A few things I learned quick about Robert Gradous: He says what he means and he means what he says, If he ain't worried neither should you, he's a simple guy, and very smart. I would recommend him to anyone.