My father bought a Ruger Hawkeye FTW in 375 Ruger for an upcoming hunt in Africa. We put a Razor HD LH 2-10 on it for glass. It shot like holy hell straight out of the box, and after about 50 rounds down range and no change in accuracy (shot 6 MOA at best) he sent it back to Ruger to have them check it out. They sent it back about a month later, with notes that said the following:
"REPAIRED BOLT, POLISHED CHAMBER, FEED RAMP, RAILS, REPAIRED WOOD FIT."
They returned it with a target that shows it shot a 3/4" group at 50 yards with Hornady 300gr DGS - same ammo we shot. (Target looks like it was scanned in and then printed off - the actual target was not returned.)
He shot it this evening only to find out it still shot horribly - 6 MOA or so at 100 yards. Double check scope rings, mounts, etc and that all check out. He check to see if the barrel is free floating and it is not.
Does anyone know if Ruger does their accuracy testing with only the barreled action in a vise/jig of some sort, or do that do it with the stock on? The only thing I can come up with is that the barrel not being free floated is making it shoot horrible and they tested it without the stock on.
"REPAIRED BOLT, POLISHED CHAMBER, FEED RAMP, RAILS, REPAIRED WOOD FIT."
They returned it with a target that shows it shot a 3/4" group at 50 yards with Hornady 300gr DGS - same ammo we shot. (Target looks like it was scanned in and then printed off - the actual target was not returned.)
He shot it this evening only to find out it still shot horribly - 6 MOA or so at 100 yards. Double check scope rings, mounts, etc and that all check out. He check to see if the barrel is free floating and it is not.
Does anyone know if Ruger does their accuracy testing with only the barreled action in a vise/jig of some sort, or do that do it with the stock on? The only thing I can come up with is that the barrel not being free floated is making it shoot horrible and they tested it without the stock on.