Newbie needs direction.

Superdog

Private
Minuteman
Jul 29, 2018
92
11
I inherited a rifle from my dad who got it from his last fall. It's an old Sako .243. I have some experience with bench shooting a couple other Savages I own, and can repeatedly shoot sub 1/2 moa. I absolutely cannot get this rifle to shoot. I've cleaned the snot out of it, tried different weight bullets, even did a couple of paths of bedding to float the barrel. Still 2 to 3.5 inch groups at 100. Do you think new barrels are available for an old gun like this? Should an average smith be able to change it out? I wanna keep it as an heirloom, but find an inaccurate rifle worthless. Thanx for any ideas.
 
243 is not a terrible barrel burner, but it is very possible it is shot out. A good smith should be able to check the bore with a bore scope and determine if you need a new barrel, then fit it to your rifle. I would make sure the smith has a good reputation and does rifle rebarreling work frequently. Last thing you need is a smith that takes your gun all apart and cant get it back together.
 
Well Sir, that's what I'm afraid of. There's people who know more than I, but still aren't good capable smiths. I'd be great to get grandpa's ol rifle shooting nice. At least moa. I'm in now Ohio. Anybody know a guy?
 
Does the barrel have sights on it? If so do you want to keep them? If you want it to look original a new barrel will get complicated. Are you using the original scope? Crown good?
 
Teslong makes a great bore scope. They are $50 on Amazon. Cheapest way to determine if the barrel has issues.

It will let you see if there is a carbon ring in the throat which can cause issues.

A bore scope is good to have, not just for looking down the bore.
 
Superdog, I was in the same boat. Had a .243 that I was going to set up for the nephew. However the barrel was so pitted and when I checked into the cost for a new barrel I decided to keep it as a "memento" rifle instead of spend the money. To really get it up to what I wanted out of a rifle would have required a new stock, trigger, and bottom metal.
 
No sights on barrel. I know enuff it has to be a barrel issue. I tried diff weights again today with diff scope. Same shit. 2-2 1/2" groups. I might have a lgs scope it. I'm guessing it's gonna end up a momento, I can't sell a rifle that won't shoot better than that. End up buying another Savage, or Ruger, $500-$600 gun. I like the 243 cartridge. Prolly get a set of dies too.
 
Barthel's Gunsmithing
330-499-4171
Weekdays

I realize it will be a little bit of a drive, Bob is in N. Canton. However he has done lots of work for me, I even had him rechamber a higher end 1874 Sharps reproduction rifle. Yes I trust his work.
 
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I had an L579 Forester in 308 with similar problems. It was shot out. I weighed up my options, it didn't belong to my grandfather or anything, and ended up just using the action and trigger for the base of a custom build. Sako actions are phenomenal as was the trigger on this rifle. New barrel and off she went. I didn't bother looking for a barrel that said "bofors steel" on it, just went with a new production barrel.