I am having a 14.5" LaRue stealth barrel converted,...
...Looking at Bartlein and Krieger barrels, they are about twice the price and the wait for the barrel to be made plus converted isn't that great for my lack of patience.
Do y'all think this setup will do the job or do I really need to start looking into a different barrel. Remember the goal is 0.5-0.9moa with something like FGMM or mk262. Thanks
Okay. So first, I know some of what I will say may have been covered, albeit in a different way. But here's this...
750 yards is a long goddamn way for a 22. You need to gitcher head straight on that, or you're setting yourself up for frustration. 600 yards was about the designed limit of effectiveness of the round and
20" platform; despite the intervening decades and technological improvements, 600 yards is
still where shits starts to get hurriedly hairy.
I shoot the round in high level competition at 1,000 yards, and do so pretty regularly. The rifle I use is probably an 8" gun out there, if I get ideal conditions....then again, I'm only an 8" holder, so wtf...
What is also no bullshit is that it took the last 1% of specialization of EVERYthing the industry can muster to bring me to that point. The barrel and chamber got everything that can be had, smithed by a man who has himself won what I aspire to win. The loads are Benchrest grade... Custom Arbor dies, pin gauges, PMA Turned Lapua, 3x sorted Berger 90s...quite literally ad nauseum. The shooter also has somewhere north of 14,000 trigger cycles on this rifle.
The loads I use at long range are good enough for groups at 100 yards with verticals in
the zeroes and teens, and overal groups in the
threes.
I'm not bragging, I'm stating truths so you understand what a pain in the ass long range .223 AR-15's can be.
I'm also gonna tell you---against some of the things in this thread---that Long Range ARs can be just
goddamned brilliant at times. Truly laugh-on-the-drive-home shit, right? Just yesterday, I punched a ~1.8" group at 300, from magazine, with 77 Sierras that are jumping probably 0.200".
That rifle and I are best of friends, but she was a costly bitch.
So now this:
You're going to be chasing your ass in circles trying to get a .5MOA semi auto in 5.56. Then it may not like FGMM or MK262 on top of that. Way too many variables.
But again, realistically, you need to think of a semi as a 1MOA-1.25MOA gun or you'll burn your barrel out trying to find a load and 'fix' the gun.
I think German here is being a little conservative. Maybe he doesn't have a rifle that will do it, or maybe he doesn't choose to build handloads at a level to get it done, but either way, his advices are not too terribly off.
If you intend to use FACTORY ammunition, then you damned well better be custom chambering for THAT round. The trouble, then, is that building a reamer for a given round is predicated on the idea that you actually KNOW what the round needs.
You, presumably, do not know that for any of the above match-ish grade rounds.
Now, it CAN be done. Look what Mike Rescigno pulls from 168 GMM .308. But to do that, he has had to accumulate a fair pile of knowledge on WHAT to do to the reamer for an INDIVIDUAL type of barrel blank...who's, nobody knows.
Man, it's a helluva lot easier to just load for one.
And yes, anyone who thinks 750 yds is mid-range is somewhat misled.........maybe it's mid-range for a highly accomplished military shooter or high end competitor, but it's surely not mid-range for the average Mall Ninja with a mid-range AR (pun intended).
Montana, maybe you read what I said above. Don't sell yourself short...750 is not mid-range for anybody. Not military, not competition. Not for this cartridge, nor this rifle. "Mid" range ends at 5-600 yards for a
20" AR.
Revise that to about 400 yards for a 14" door-kicker.
Last bit for the OP:
Build a rifle to do what you are asking. Or don't.