Re: Truing Remington 700 Question
Insayn-
If I may offer some of my experience dealing with superanal gunsmiths, cost effective ones, and DIY.
I'd hazard to say your gunsmith is a good fit for 95% of us in here. Very few here can shoot the difference between a .25 and .5 moa rifle. Very few matches are won because one guy had a .25 rifle and the other guy had a solid .5 one. Ask winners and the guys who came in 2nd, 3rd, and 4th- muffed wind calls, rough mirage on the UKD range, I KNEW I should have not pushed the make it and take it dots, and just plain trigger jerkitis. See it way too many times, but ask around and check for yourself.
Guys with HUGE amounts of experience, highly honed skills and the ability to maintain an even strain under pressure win. Unless you are shooting some camera shutter benchrest the rifle is a tool, not a magic wand. That the upper tier have super custom rifles is more a tribute to the years spent shooting, stay in anything long enough and the tendency to upgrade is undeniable.
I like the crawl, walk, run concept.
First start with a good factory rifle. Get the trigger worked on because even the superanal gunsmiths will agree THE most cost effective upgrade is a sweet trigger- tweeked or replaced. Learn to judge wind, distance and log a year's worth of dope on how temp affects the round.
In other words, become a shooter.
THEN go to that gunsmith you cited and have him rebarrel the thing. Get out there and match your mad skills against others. Dont much care what venue, but practise is like masturbation- alot more fun when done with others.
If you are still at it when that custom barrel gets hinky then buy a REAL action, barrel, stock, trigger and run with the big dawgs. Keep the rem700 for its sentimental value, like your first love you will never forget her.
Everyone climbs the hill to accuracy from different sides with their training as their guide. A machinist will lathe the shit out of it and make a sweet rifle. An old school smith might BUY a reciever thats was manufactored to be true and forgo the sow's ear routine. A stock master might saddle bed the reciever/barrel mating area and be just as happy as all that thread machining.
I have never gotten a quantifiable breakdown on what each machining step adds to the aggregate accuracy. Perhaps oneday a machinist will give us the breakdown.
I hope to develop some skills to make owning a Terry Cross rifle a need instead of a want. Until then, and until I hit a lottery I never buy tickets for, I think your gunsmith would work for me.
Good Luck