Saw some pictures in another thread and the Harrell looks pretty adjustable and to have “clicks”. Also looked at the EC2. What do you have and would you get it again? Will put on a tikka t1x and a cz457 when I can find a threaded barrel for it.
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They add weight to the front if you need it. They can help a good ammo lot, be better. It’s just another piece to have to worry about. I’m not sold on it’s repeatability. I’ve found reducing variables helps consistency. I have one on a CZ457 Lilja barrel.Saw some pictures in another thread and the Harrell looks pretty adjustable and to have “clicks”. Also looked at the EC2. What do you have and would you get it again? Will put on a tikka t1x and a cz457 when I can find a threaded barrel for it.
F class comps are set ranges, no? OP is asking about 22LR T1X. Not BR material.Someone made this observation on another forum regarding F-Open class. It's been a long time since someone without a tuner made it past first round eliminations, and even longer since someone without a tuner won....
For 22LR PRS shooting, they are snake oil charms. They look nice though. Rimfire ammo consistency is the wildcard. Add short par times, wind, and multiple positions/stage, and tuners are a Gucci handbag in a 1978 single wide trailer.Saw some pictures in another thread and the Harrell looks pretty adjustable and to have “clicks”. Also looked at the EC2. What do you have and would you get it again? Will put on a tikka t1x and a cz457 when I can find a threaded barrel for it.
Please confirm, is this Fullbore or Smallbore. Thanks.Someone made this observation on another forum regarding F-Open class. It's been a long time since someone without a tuner made it past first round eliminations, and even longer since someone without a tuner won....
Curious what would you be testing? setting a tuner is not a magical art. if you understand that setting a tuner is about finding the optimum bullet exit timing out of the barrel. That optimum exit timing is the highest POI with your best lot of ammo.Just know that if you get one you will be doing a lot of testing. The proper way is not this 2 or 3 shots and move on deal. 22 ammo has so much inherent variance that it’s hard to see if the tuner is changing anything. Go look at the 6x5 thread… are all the groups .4 +/- .05. Nope. Many vary .2”. So when you change the tuner and you see a slight increase in accuracy that is most likely just statistics coming in to play. It will take a lot of shooting to verify the correct setting. Oh wait now it’s winter and the setting has changed…..
I will note the barrels I’ve tried the tuner on are MTU profile… maybe it’s easier to see something with a lighter profile.
Yes, F-Open is centerfire and what I was eluding to, but in all shooting disciplines, even PRS, where most all guns, ammo and gear are nearly equal between the competitors, not using a tuner is leaving a performance advantage on the table you are not going to have if you don't use one and your competitors are. There is too much documented proof, both in video form and other means validating they work, they repeat and win matches....F class comps are set ranges, no? OP is asking about 22LR T1X. Not BR material.
Yes, F-Open is centerfire and what I was eluding to, but in all shooting disciplines, even PRS, where most all guns, ammo and gear are nearly equal between the competitors, not using a tuner is leaving a performance advantage on the table you are not going to have if you don't use one and your competitors are. There is too much documented proof, both in video form and other means validating they work, they repeat and win matches....
Now shoot the same tune at 100, 150, 200, and 250. It shouldn’t have to be adjusted, no? Now do the same thing from a kneeling position off a step ladder. See what I’m talking about?![]()
Tuner settings in red. 295-300 works, 325 and 260, very close on tuner, are NFG.
Harrell's tuner on a 1965 Remington 40XB with the factory barrel.
What would be needed group size for a consistent hit at 250yds.? also, what size is the target at 250 yds. I understand what you are saying. but if you had a rifle that is capable of shooting consistent sub-0.500 groups at 100yds. shouldn't it do good at 250+Now shoot the same tune at 100, 150, 200, and 250. It shouldn’t have to be adjusted, no? Now do the same thing from a kneeling position off a step ladder. See what I’m talking about?
Anyone who can shoot 22LR consistently into 0.5moa at 100 will quickly become the shooter to beat in any discipline. As soon as anyone can show that consistently I will spend the $$. Even BR struggles to keep a 10 shot group average of 1 MOA@100 with 22LR.What would be needed group size for a consistent hit at 250yds.? also, what size is the target at 250 yds. I understand what you are saying. but if you had a rifle that is capable of shooting consistent sub-0.500 groups at 100yds. shouldn't is do good at 250+
Maybe I am misunderstanding PRS & NRL I thought hits and not group size is how it is shot.
Lee
A couple of things to know about Harrell vs EC:
Experiences (all barrels 1:16" twist):
- Harrell tuners extend out past the muzzle. EC tuners extend back from the muzzle to facilitate use of a brake (usually on centerfire rifles, of course).
- Harrell tuners clamp on the muzzle - no threading needed, but the muzzle diameter needs to be included when ordering. EC tuners have a bizarre .850x24 thread profile so they can sell you a 1/2x28 or 5/8x24 adapter.
- A buddy of mine machined a 1/2x28 adapter to which he clamped the Harrell tuner so he could screw the thing on&off his threaded muzzles.
- I just had my Vudoo rebarreled; the muzzle was threaded .850x24 so the EC v.1 tuner screws on with no adapter.
So - I'm a believer in tuners, albeit with acknowledgement that not all tuners work on all barrels.
- I tried a Harrell tuner on my Vudoo with original Ace barrel (19" Kukri) and on my now-departed CZ-455 "Tacticool" with 16" barrel. After nearly two boxes of Center-X, I couldn't make the Harrell do anything pro or con with the Vudoo. But it made a very significant positive difference with the CZ.
- I had the EC v.1 tuner installed at Vudoo as part of the rebarreling (22" Bartlein, MTU). This tuner absolutely makes a difference. The barrel is pretty well broken in now with something over 500 rounds on it and I have settings that seem to work with the Lapua/SK and RWS labels I have on hand. I tune at 100 yards on an indoor range.
- Settings seem to be associated with velocity, which makes sense. With the EC, my setting "20" is best so far with Center-X, Standard+, R50, etc. with velocities in the 1085fps range. "16" looks optimal for the faster R100 ammo; will be interesting to see if this carries over to SK Long Range Match.
- I also have a KSS tuner which I've tried on multiple centerfire rifles and on my RimX... this tuner is a bit lighter than Harrell or EC and doesn't seem to be as effective. However, @Rob01 has enjoyed good success with the tuner and factory ammo.
(Edit: I saw a difference of 25% or so from "worst" settings to "best" settings with the EC tuner.)
The photos below are with RWS R100 ammo, which has shown a 15-shot ES of 15fps. I held straight up on paster for all shots, no attempted wind correction.
(Another edit: I dislike photos of one 5-shot group. I want to see 10, 20, 30 shots in aggregate. But, with this RWS ammo at $.42 per round shipped, I'm being stingy with it. These were first attempts at 200-400 yards. The two 400-yard groups were awful in the wind and ok in calm condition.)
View attachment 8233698
View attachment 8233699
This is where the tuner can help. the rifle that shot this group was tuned at 50yds. 7 years ago tuner has never been adjusted since. the lot that was used for the 50 shots was the first time it was shot in the rifle. granted this is a BR rifle but what I learned if the rifle is tuned. shooting at 100yds. it is all about the ammo and of course the shooter to call the condition.Anyone who can shoot 22LR consistently into 0.5moa at 100 will quickly become the shooter to beat in any discipline. As soon as anyone can show that consistently I will spend the $$. Even BR struggles to keep a 10 shot group average of 1 MOA@100 with 22LR.
Another good example that tuners will work.![]()
Tuner settings in red. 295-300 works, 325 and 260, very close on tuner, are NFG.
Harrell's tuner on a 1965 Remington 40XB with the factory barrel.
If you are shooting for groups at 250 yards, does target size matter? You have the rifle and capabilities to find this out on your own. I have found that ammo at 50 yards may be terrible father out.What would be needed group size for a consistent hit at 250yds.? also, what size is the target at 250 yds. I understand what you are saying. but if you had a rifle that is capable of shooting consistent sub-0.500 groups at 100yds. shouldn't is do good at 250+
Maybe I am misunderstanding PRS & NRL I thought hits and not group size is how it is shot.
Lee
What I have found if the rifle is tuned at 50yds. and you have a lot of ammo that can shoot sub.0.150 that lot should do good at 100yds. beyond that I don't see why the same lot wouldn't do well.If you are shooting for groups at 250 yards, does target size matter? You have the rifle and capabilities to find this out on your own. I have found that ammo at 50 yards may be terrible father out.
But sub 1/2 moa groups at 100 are damn right impressive!
Maybe to terrain feature, the range I frequent, I can shoot far better groups at 250 than I can at 200, It may be me, the rifle, the ammo, or the fact that my tuner is set to be better at longer distances.
I will say this, I don't believe 100% positive compensation is achievable. I do believe you can get a slower round to have a higher POI then a faster round by timing the bullet's exit from the barrel.Positive compensation, where faster rounds and slower rounds line up it doesn't compensate so much that the slower round is going to be able to be above the faster round. So at 50/100 yards you're just shrinking groups. Smaller groups at 100 means smaller groups at 200,300,400.
The only time I seen tuners not really help is when the barrel was not capable of maintaining the accuracy. both times they were damaged factory barrels.I think that tuners can be useful in some barrel/cartridge configurations. But with .22 and a straight taper barrel of .800+ I don't think they are helping much, at least not in the way I have seen many people test. Most of what people see in the differences between different tuner settings on those configs are just the random dispersions of small group sizes. If you are not comparing at bare minimum 20 round groups between tuner settings you are getting shit data and being mislead while wasting money and time.
I think it can be done with a threaded barrel. but the approach will need to be like how they counter bore sporter barrels. otherwise, as you pointed out you can have issues with the bore at the muzzle.If your PRS rifle/ammo is precise enough for your game without a tuner - don't use one (i.e. 1.200" Bartlien). But if you are needing more precision from your system, and have the time, patience and available ammo(!), you can almost always improve rimfire precision with a tuner. Think about it - would the difference between .4 and .6 MOA precision never make a difference in PRS? (And if you are shooting UL BR, you are not going to be top competitive without a tuner and a tuned rifle. (BTW - I shoot PRS and UL BR.)
As for screw-on vs. clamp-on, ask any top tier gunsmith or barrelmaker what happens to the bore diameter when you remove metal . . .
USMC22, I would just get a Harrell clamp on to try first.Saw some pictures in another thread and the Harrell looks pretty adjustable and to have “clicks”. Also looked at the EC2. What do you have and would you get it again? Will put on a tikka t1x and a cz457 when I can find a threaded barrel for it.
The only issue with removing material from the end of the barrel is ones that are made with button rifling, cut rifling barrels are not affected by material being removed. Watch the Eric Cortina podcast with Frank Green from Bartlien barrels, Frank discusses this in great detail....If your PRS rifle/ammo is precise enough for your game without a tuner - don't use one (i.e. 1.200" Bartlien). But if you are needing more precision from your system, and have the time, patience and available ammo(!), you can almost always improve rimfire precision with a tuner. Think about it - would the difference between .4 and .6 MOA precision never make a difference in PRS? (And if you are shooting UL BR, you are not going to be top competitive without a tuner and a tuned rifle. (BTW - I shoot PRS and UL BR.)
As for screw-on vs. clamp-on, ask any top tier gunsmith or barrelmaker what happens to the bore diameter when you remove metal . . .
The only issue with removing material from the end of the barrel is ones that are made with button rifling, cut rifling barrels are not affected by material being removed. Watch the Eric Cortina podcast with Frank Green from Bartlien barrels, Frank discusses this in great detail....
The only issue with removing material from the end of the barrel is ones that are made with button rifling, cut rifling barrels are not affected by material being removed. Watch the Eric Cortina podcast with Frank Green from Bartlien barrels, Frank discusses this in great detail....
I have 2 EC V2 tuners on my 2 Bergara B14R. The main thing about a tuner, is they will tune in your lot of ammo, then the next lot, then the next lot. I have tuned in 3 lots of SK Long Range, one after the other as I ran out.Saw some pictures in another thread and the Harrell looks pretty adjustable and to have “clicks”. Also looked at the EC2. What do you have and would you get it again? Will put on a tikka t1x and a cz457 when I can find a threaded barrel for it.
I've often thought about that very thing, but the weird thread pitch and expensive adapter always steer me away. It shoots really well as is, and that's $250 worth of ammo instead.Get a EC V2 for the Tikka