While I don't regularly post to this site, I'm a long time member on Rimfire Central and have lurked for some time on Sniper's Hide. I've primarily visited the sight for the .22, scope and equipment section, but with the growth of .22 long range shooting, I have really been reading the rimfire section more than anything.
I'm not a competitor, but I did shoot CMP matches back in the late 80's and early 90's. Long range shooting is where it's at, but long ranges are difficult to find…. coupled that fact with the fact I have a 200 yard range, and I've found myself shooting pistol caliber carbines and .22 target rifles. .22 target rifles led me down the rabbit hole. I've owned several types of .22 rifles. Winchester 52's, Remington 40x, Sako Quad, Ruger 10/22's, BSA International, Russian Basic Biathlon with an Anschutz barrel and an Anschutz 1827 and 2007-2013. When the Ruger Rimfire Precision came out, I found it interesting enough to try. I had a Ruger American Rimfire that I'd set into a Boyd's walnut target stock and found it to be reasonably accurate, so I figured the Rimfire Precision would be worth a shot. With the factory barrel I had decent accuracy, but it was not sub MOA at 100 yards. Out of several attempts on the range, I had maybe one or two groups that were sub MOA. So once Lilja started producing RPR barrels, I jumped in with both feet.
Installation was straight forward, a good barrel vise is a necessity for installation. Once everything was together, I put on a favorite flashider for cool points and started shooting….. big groups. Blind to the fact it might be due to the flash hider, I tried all types of ammo. From SK std to Eley match. Nothing seemed to work. So, in an effort to determine why a $500 barrel shot like a scattergun, off came the FH, back on with the thread protector, and back to the range. With some good weather (overcast, 36-38 degrees, NO wind) I tried again. Nine groups with Eley practice 100 resulted in an average group size of .91" finally sub MOA!
Verdict? The jury is still out. If the rifle continues to perform as it does now, it's a keeper. If I continue to dial it in a bit (a better trigger would shave off .1 to .2) It'll start giving my Anschutz 1827 a run for it's money. Anyhow, For those of you who are on the fence about the Lilja barrel for your RPR, I'll try and keep this post updated with the performance of my RPR. Thanks for an interesting forum, keep it up!
I'm not a competitor, but I did shoot CMP matches back in the late 80's and early 90's. Long range shooting is where it's at, but long ranges are difficult to find…. coupled that fact with the fact I have a 200 yard range, and I've found myself shooting pistol caliber carbines and .22 target rifles. .22 target rifles led me down the rabbit hole. I've owned several types of .22 rifles. Winchester 52's, Remington 40x, Sako Quad, Ruger 10/22's, BSA International, Russian Basic Biathlon with an Anschutz barrel and an Anschutz 1827 and 2007-2013. When the Ruger Rimfire Precision came out, I found it interesting enough to try. I had a Ruger American Rimfire that I'd set into a Boyd's walnut target stock and found it to be reasonably accurate, so I figured the Rimfire Precision would be worth a shot. With the factory barrel I had decent accuracy, but it was not sub MOA at 100 yards. Out of several attempts on the range, I had maybe one or two groups that were sub MOA. So once Lilja started producing RPR barrels, I jumped in with both feet.
Installation was straight forward, a good barrel vise is a necessity for installation. Once everything was together, I put on a favorite flashider for cool points and started shooting….. big groups. Blind to the fact it might be due to the flash hider, I tried all types of ammo. From SK std to Eley match. Nothing seemed to work. So, in an effort to determine why a $500 barrel shot like a scattergun, off came the FH, back on with the thread protector, and back to the range. With some good weather (overcast, 36-38 degrees, NO wind) I tried again. Nine groups with Eley practice 100 resulted in an average group size of .91" finally sub MOA!
Verdict? The jury is still out. If the rifle continues to perform as it does now, it's a keeper. If I continue to dial it in a bit (a better trigger would shave off .1 to .2) It'll start giving my Anschutz 1827 a run for it's money. Anyhow, For those of you who are on the fence about the Lilja barrel for your RPR, I'll try and keep this post updated with the performance of my RPR. Thanks for an interesting forum, keep it up!
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