Originally posted by Lastrites
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Need Info on Truing an Upper Receiver
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3holes 1222018.jpg5.56 long range.jpg
Took my lapped and squared 5.56 out today with the new S&B PMII scope. It was on the paper at 25 yards with the scope at factory Zero. At 100 yards it was .3 mrad right and since it has a 20 moa mount it was 9.5 mrad high. Here's the group I shot after 60 break in rounds of green tips and then Hornady SuperPerfomance match 75gr BHTP. This gives plausibility to the need for lapping and truing. It also busts the myth that you need glues as fillers or lubricants. This barrel slid in easily but was installed using a reaction bar so it is centered in the hole and did not move one bit after 100 slow fire rounds with not appreciable cool down time.
Looks like three holes but it's actually 4, look really close.Last edited by sschefer; 01-22-2018, 10:48 PM.
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Nice shooting, and glad to see you built an accurate rifle.
Not sure, though, how you can unequivocally state that the idea of bedding is busted. If your barrel needs none, then all the better. If it can benefit, then again, all the better.
In the grand scheme of things, what works for your rifle is what works for yours.
Here is what works for mine.
BHW 22" 264LBC
Lapped (horizontal)
Bedded with LT Blue (Cured overnight)
Scope rings lapped (to 70% contact)
Vortex 6-24x50 Viper PST Gen 1
Hand Loads (123 Amax, 28.2 gr 8208, seated 2.250")
39136749614_48e1bc49dc_o.jpg
Three shot group @ 100 yards
39814419132_cd46066c24_o.jpg
5 shots @ 300 yards.
Do these groups prove bedding will cure your accuracy ills? Of course not.
Have others benefitted from bedding? Yes they have. (Don't ask me, ask them.)
So quick back story. Spent over a year collecting quality parts. Assembled them all about 2-3 months ago. Went to the range and accuracy sucked. 8" groups of complete randomness at 50 yards. I was extremely disappointed. Several YouTube videos, lots of research here, and more tools ordered. On Monday I took the
Hi everybody, I'm in the process of getting my upper parts together to build a Grendel. Does anyone want share any tips to help make the gun more accurate. I heard to use locktite when mating the barrel in the upper receiver. Does this sound right? Anything else I need to do to help with accuracy. Thanks,
(take note of post 12)
Will everyone get an accuracy boost? Not in my lifetime.
Can it hurt to bed a barrel? I can't see how.
Long and short of the subject of bedding is that there is no "right for every situation" answer to it.If it's true that we are here to help others, then what exactly are the others here for?
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Considering the great improvement in accuracy just changing barrels and using blue Loctite on the barrel and gas block, I'm going to hold off on lapping the upper and do more break in and load development/accuracy testing at 200 yards and beyond.
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Originally posted by sschefer View Post[ATTACH=CONFIG]10871[/ATTACH][ATTACH=CONFIG]10872[/ATTACH]
Took my lapped and squared 5.56 out today with the new S&B PMII scope. It was on the paper at 25 yards with the scope at factory Zero. At 100 yards it was .3 mrad right and since it has a 20 moa mount it was 9.5 mrad high. Here's the group I shot after 60 break in rounds of green tips and then Hornady SuperPerfomance match 75gr BHTP. This gives plausibility to the need for lapping and truing. It also busts the myth that you need glues as fillers or lubricants. This barrel slid in easily but was installed using a reaction bar so it is centered in the hole and did not move one bit after 100 slow fire rounds with not appreciable cool down time.
Looks like three holes but it's actually 4, look really close.
I find it interesting to listen to guys who have spent their entire professional lives chasing accuracy in the AR15 all agree on tightly fitting the extension into the upper somehow, whether it be thermo-fit, shimming, bedding, or combination of these techniques, but still see those who refuse to acknowledge cumulative centuries of accuracy work by armorers who are paid to chase every fraction of an inch of accuracy they can supporting competitive teams and shooters.
Some of the most accomplished engineers in this field also acknowledge the benefits of bedding the extension into the upper, along with balanced torque on the nut, as proven techniques they have tested across large fleet samples of rifles that showed demonstrable changes in group sizes as a trend in the fleet, not anecdotally with one or a few rifles.
It doesn't mean that you can't build an accurate rifle without bedding, but I have yet to see a valid argument that shows how bedding does not increase accuracy, and certainly have never seen a coherent argument that bedding hurts accuracy.
In all the rifles I have bedded-both AR15s and AR10s, I have seen group sizes shrink, sometimes from 1.7 MOA 5rd groups down to .75 or better with a random load not even tuned for the gun.
.223s are very easy to get to shoot because of the small mass projectile causing minimal whip and recoil effects-very forgiving.
Once you spit a larger projectile with more mass, the guns are very unforgiving of build approach and fundamentals of marksmanship.
For those that want to learn more, watch these videos.
NRA Basic, Pistol, Rifle, Shotgun, RSO
CCW, CQM, DM, Long Range Rifle Instructor
6.5 Grendel Reloading Handbooks & chamber brushes can be found here:
www.AR15buildbox.com
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Originally posted by LRRPF52 View PostFor those that want to learn more, watch these videos.. I have not had adequate time to see final results, other than remounting the scope resulted in a 1.5mil change in windage (15 clicks).
Last edited by Sticks; 01-29-2018, 10:41 AM.Sticks
Catchy sig line here.
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Originally posted by LRRPF52 View Post, but still see those who refuse to acknowledge cumulative centuries of accuracy work by armorers who are paid to chase every fraction of an inch of accuracy they can supporting competitive teams and shooters.
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