Gents, I am at a loss here. My final answer to this problem is that I just ordered a Brux barrel, and will get it chambered in 6.5x47 and spun on by Matt Stewart of Stewart Rifles.
However, that doesn't guarantee that my problem will go away, so I'm reaching out to see if anyone else (I'm sure) has encountered this problem, and what it eventually turned out to be.
Background: I have an FN SPR A1 that I bought in "as new" condition from a police supply place in FL. I have bedded the action and adjusted the trigger to 2-1/2lbs.
Accuracy: This rifle is not the tack driver that other people report (I have three FN SPRs myself). It will at least throw "normal" groups in the 1.5 MOA range, but in search of acceptable accuracy I've noticed an extremely wierd phenomenon...I have never, ever shot an otherwise good group that didn't contain a wild flier...like 1/2 - 1 mil off. At this point I have at least 7-8, (5) shot groups that have four rounds in a half inch or less...and one that is 2-3" out of the group...and never in the same direction. The other wild part is that this rifle just flat out shotgun patterns with any load that is even the slightest bit into the medium-range of charge weights.
Example: with 168gr Nosler Custom Competitions, over IMR-4064 in Federal brass, I have a node from 42.1 - 42.8gr where I get the 4+1 fliers. From 43.0 - 43.5 it just shoots 1.5 MOA. From 43.5 - 44.5 we're talking progressively opening up to 3 MOA. I've used 168gr and 175gr SMK as well, and Varget powder too. Same results.
Troubleshooting: 1) ammo: I tried my 168gr handloads for this SPR in one of my others, and shot all five shots into a .7 MOA group at 170 yards the other day. I then put five rounds of 175gr factory FGMM into my bad SPR and got another 4+1 group with a shot 3" out at the same distance. I repeated this process again the next day with a 168gr Hornady AMAX handload, but the bad SPR printed a 5-1/4" SHOTGUN PATTERN. I did it a third time with a proven load in one of my other SPRs, and got the same result for the third time. I've reloaded tens of thousands of rounds for many rifles over the last few decades, and while nobody is immune to a stupid moment...I think we can rule out my handloads at this point. I'm literally using the same components from the same tray, box and jug.
2) skill: I'm no Eric Cortina or whoever is the bad-ass marksmanship dude in your mind. However I have a decent background in marksmanship myself. This is an area where people often refuse to believe that they could be the problem. I still throw fliers, but that is a 2-3% of the time deal, not a 20% of the time problem. Let's just say that I have several rifles that are reliable 1/2 MOA or better.
3) Addressing the shot: I have this accuracy problem with the rifle shot off a rest, or a bipod. It makes no difference here. Bench or prone - no difference either.
4) Optics: I was using a Burris XTR II, which was on another rifle for a while and never gave me issues. I checked all screws twice, and nothing was loose (I use blue Loctite).
5) Bedding: I've bedded a dozen rifles or so in my life, and while I'm no amazing gunsmith I've never had a problem yet. When I pulled this rifle apart the bedding looked fine as in nothing had chipped etc... For being a McMillan stock, this A3 is the roughest I've ever seen in the action inlet (I've owned 4 not including the factory FN rifles). The barrel actually sits a few thousandths off in the channel, but is still fully free floated. It was one if the reasons why I bedded the action.
6) Crown: I swabbed the crown of the barrel with a q-tip and nothing caught.
***
So that leaves me with guessing if I have a problem with the barrel (which is my guess), or potentially somewhere else that I can't think of (firing pin spring?).
The fact that this rifle turns into a Mosin Nagant the moment you get halfway up the charge weight is enough for me to rebarrel, but I'm sitting here wondering if I've overlooked something common that is going to turn this into another headache once I get the new tube screwed on.
I know that there were a few years where the chrome was coming off inside the barrel, but this rifle is a USRAC, New Haven gun and an FN 103xx serial. I think this was before the issues, and I've certainly never seen anything wierd coming off on the patches.
I really need to buy a borescope.
Sorry for the length, but I don't want to waste anyone's time on a suggestion that I might have already addressed.
So what do the experts think is going on here?
However, that doesn't guarantee that my problem will go away, so I'm reaching out to see if anyone else (I'm sure) has encountered this problem, and what it eventually turned out to be.
Background: I have an FN SPR A1 that I bought in "as new" condition from a police supply place in FL. I have bedded the action and adjusted the trigger to 2-1/2lbs.
Accuracy: This rifle is not the tack driver that other people report (I have three FN SPRs myself). It will at least throw "normal" groups in the 1.5 MOA range, but in search of acceptable accuracy I've noticed an extremely wierd phenomenon...I have never, ever shot an otherwise good group that didn't contain a wild flier...like 1/2 - 1 mil off. At this point I have at least 7-8, (5) shot groups that have four rounds in a half inch or less...and one that is 2-3" out of the group...and never in the same direction. The other wild part is that this rifle just flat out shotgun patterns with any load that is even the slightest bit into the medium-range of charge weights.
Example: with 168gr Nosler Custom Competitions, over IMR-4064 in Federal brass, I have a node from 42.1 - 42.8gr where I get the 4+1 fliers. From 43.0 - 43.5 it just shoots 1.5 MOA. From 43.5 - 44.5 we're talking progressively opening up to 3 MOA. I've used 168gr and 175gr SMK as well, and Varget powder too. Same results.
Troubleshooting: 1) ammo: I tried my 168gr handloads for this SPR in one of my others, and shot all five shots into a .7 MOA group at 170 yards the other day. I then put five rounds of 175gr factory FGMM into my bad SPR and got another 4+1 group with a shot 3" out at the same distance. I repeated this process again the next day with a 168gr Hornady AMAX handload, but the bad SPR printed a 5-1/4" SHOTGUN PATTERN. I did it a third time with a proven load in one of my other SPRs, and got the same result for the third time. I've reloaded tens of thousands of rounds for many rifles over the last few decades, and while nobody is immune to a stupid moment...I think we can rule out my handloads at this point. I'm literally using the same components from the same tray, box and jug.
2) skill: I'm no Eric Cortina or whoever is the bad-ass marksmanship dude in your mind. However I have a decent background in marksmanship myself. This is an area where people often refuse to believe that they could be the problem. I still throw fliers, but that is a 2-3% of the time deal, not a 20% of the time problem. Let's just say that I have several rifles that are reliable 1/2 MOA or better.
3) Addressing the shot: I have this accuracy problem with the rifle shot off a rest, or a bipod. It makes no difference here. Bench or prone - no difference either.
4) Optics: I was using a Burris XTR II, which was on another rifle for a while and never gave me issues. I checked all screws twice, and nothing was loose (I use blue Loctite).
5) Bedding: I've bedded a dozen rifles or so in my life, and while I'm no amazing gunsmith I've never had a problem yet. When I pulled this rifle apart the bedding looked fine as in nothing had chipped etc... For being a McMillan stock, this A3 is the roughest I've ever seen in the action inlet (I've owned 4 not including the factory FN rifles). The barrel actually sits a few thousandths off in the channel, but is still fully free floated. It was one if the reasons why I bedded the action.
6) Crown: I swabbed the crown of the barrel with a q-tip and nothing caught.
***
So that leaves me with guessing if I have a problem with the barrel (which is my guess), or potentially somewhere else that I can't think of (firing pin spring?).
The fact that this rifle turns into a Mosin Nagant the moment you get halfway up the charge weight is enough for me to rebarrel, but I'm sitting here wondering if I've overlooked something common that is going to turn this into another headache once I get the new tube screwed on.
I know that there were a few years where the chrome was coming off inside the barrel, but this rifle is a USRAC, New Haven gun and an FN 103xx serial. I think this was before the issues, and I've certainly never seen anything wierd coming off on the patches.
I really need to buy a borescope.
Sorry for the length, but I don't want to waste anyone's time on a suggestion that I might have already addressed.
So what do the experts think is going on here?