Ok, short story first, then questions. I have a cz455 Tactical that's turning into a perpetual project rifle. I shot it stock out of the box for about a month before I started tinkering with it. Initially, it shot about as well as the test target that it came with, roughly 2 MOA with some vertical stringing. Fair enough but I wanted better. So I stripped down the rifle, deburred everything (not that there were many burrs to take down), recrowned the muzzle, cerakoted the bolt, barrel, and receiver (which actually really tightened up the barrel fit in the receiver so there's no wiggle there), and pillar bedded the stock. I even drilled and tapped a set screw to reduce the over travel on the trigger. Now it's a true 1.5 MOA rifle, skirting on 1 MOA if the wind plays nice and the stars and moon line up right.
After reading through all the wisdom the internet has to offer, setting back 10/22 barrels seems to have been a thing that people did/do to shorten up the long chambers they have in the quest to improve their rifle's accuracy potential. Anywhere from .050"-.080" seems to be the norm. So I had to ask myself, would this technique work on my rifle too? For the sake of brevity, I made a gauge to measure the length of my chamber to the start of the rifling and another one to measure 22 ammunition from the forward face of the rim to that lip on the bullet where the ogive begins.
My chamber measured out to .731" putting it right in line with a stinger chamber of .735" (Google also found me a list of 22LR chamber dimensions)
SK Match measured at .728" rim to ogive
Norma Match at .7325"
CCI Green Tag at .7305"
Now, here's where I'm getting confused. PTG and Lilja Match chambers show a rim to rifling length of .630"-.635" and the old Winchester 52 D Match at .580"
Basically it looks like match 22LR ammo is getting jammed into the rifling .100"+ with these chambers. I get they're nice soft lead bullets, but still. I'm fairly new to precision rimfire shooting so I'm just curious if this is normal or a known thing. Would I be wasting my time setting my barrel back .010"-.025"? Are there any safety issues with jamming a 22LR that far into the rifling? Also, I get it's a factory rifle with a factory barrel blah blah blah. I know if I want the best in accuracy I could buy a better barrel and trigger..., but thats not the point here. Just looking for knowledge and insight. Has anyone else tried anything like this?
After reading through all the wisdom the internet has to offer, setting back 10/22 barrels seems to have been a thing that people did/do to shorten up the long chambers they have in the quest to improve their rifle's accuracy potential. Anywhere from .050"-.080" seems to be the norm. So I had to ask myself, would this technique work on my rifle too? For the sake of brevity, I made a gauge to measure the length of my chamber to the start of the rifling and another one to measure 22 ammunition from the forward face of the rim to that lip on the bullet where the ogive begins.
My chamber measured out to .731" putting it right in line with a stinger chamber of .735" (Google also found me a list of 22LR chamber dimensions)
SK Match measured at .728" rim to ogive
Norma Match at .7325"
CCI Green Tag at .7305"
Now, here's where I'm getting confused. PTG and Lilja Match chambers show a rim to rifling length of .630"-.635" and the old Winchester 52 D Match at .580"
Basically it looks like match 22LR ammo is getting jammed into the rifling .100"+ with these chambers. I get they're nice soft lead bullets, but still. I'm fairly new to precision rimfire shooting so I'm just curious if this is normal or a known thing. Would I be wasting my time setting my barrel back .010"-.025"? Are there any safety issues with jamming a 22LR that far into the rifling? Also, I get it's a factory rifle with a factory barrel blah blah blah. I know if I want the best in accuracy I could buy a better barrel and trigger..., but thats not the point here. Just looking for knowledge and insight. Has anyone else tried anything like this?