Leeman
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NRA survey on a limited September TR Imperial
Leeman replied to RobinC's topic in Target and F-Class
'It's always been mentioned before that shooters would have to supply markers for competitions, if there was a shortage of NRA markers, it's in the NRA Bible.' I don't believe that is the extent of the wording, that shooters have to supply markers. The intent is that shooters themselves do the marking if there is a shortage of paid markers, unless they have a disability that would prevent them from marking. -
Is this something peculiar to the 223 sized cases as I've had a Remington 40X, just a single shot 700 since 2000 or so and never had a problem with the extractor, still the original one after probably 6000 or so rounds, but .308 sized bolt face. I clean out the bolt face every so often to remove the odd brass shaving but other than that it just seems to work fine, as good as the sliding extractors on other rifles I own.
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There's also the Redfield 3200. I've had them in 16x & 24x on a Ruger No. 1, should be a bit easier to find than the other two.
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Sinclair Lug Recess Tool
Leeman replied to Novice1's topic in Suppressors / Moderators, Bipods, Anything else
Yes, Sinclair was absorbed by Brownells a few years ago but you should be able to get a response, I presume they still sell the item, otherwise a trip to a engineering supply shop with the tool should work. I'm fortunate in that they are deemed essential, or the one near me is, one of the best tool shops in the North West. -
Sinclair Lug Recess Tool
Leeman replied to Novice1's topic in Suppressors / Moderators, Bipods, Anything else
I just measured the one on mine and it is .134" with a very coarse thread. A 6-40 screw seemed to be a close match on diameter but the thread is too fine so I'm guessing 6-32 although putting it alongside an 8-32 screw the pitch seemed coarser than that. -
Choice of 6.5
Leeman replied to Popsbengo's topic in Target Shooting & Informal Long Range Shooting Practice
Guys, TR is a British discipline and .30-06 was never used, it was .303 before the 7.62mm became the service round and as TR mirrors the service round of the day, the use of 7.62 target rifles became the norm and then 5.56mm could be used as it was introduced into the services. I'm not sure how long after the change to 7.62 the .303 could be used for TR, it may still be an option for the die hard luddite. .30-06 was always an American target round but you won't see that used much, even the .308 has been put on the back burner for most competitors other than Palma, the 5.56 is predominant in ATC as the AR15 dominates and most other disciplines allow any cartridge so the 6mm & 6.5mm rounds are widely used. -
6mm JLK 105gr and 107gr Sierra Matchking diameters
Leeman replied to That bald headed Geordie's topic in General Discussion
Les, 107 SMK 243" 105 Lapua Scenar 2425" Never used the JLK 6mm so can't help there. -
I'm not aware of any changes to the F class target but I understand the TR bull and V bull may have become smaller, not sure by how much though.
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You'll only know for sure when you measure your brass with a seated bullet, otherwise you're just guessing. Measure a dummy round and subtract 2 thou if using neck turned cases, if not turning necks I'd assemble three dummy rounds and take the average, then subtract two thou. Having said that I've used cartridges with 1, 2 & three thou tension at various times so IMHO and for my rifles, the exact tension wasn't that important, or at least not as important as say charge weight and bullet seating depth. Some people recommend buying two or three incremental sizes to experiment with anyway.
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Clover, Just one correction is that .223 can be used in TR although it's generally only a few hard core individuals that use it and mostly at club level and regional comps, that allow handloads, the ammunition offered in most national events, being issued is not conducive to high scores!
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Pat, I have a RB L3 trigger which may not be the model you have but there are three adjustment screws on the front face of the trigger body. Top is weight of pull, clockwise increases this, middle is overtravel, clockwise reduces this, bottom is sear engagement, clockwise reduces this. I made some notes on the instruction manual that weight and overtravel require a 5/64 allen wrench and sear requires 1.5mm/.060". I'd recommend a mid strength thread lock if you're going to adjust these, but I found them relatively easy to set up and mine is very reliable, it's been on my 40X since 2003 or so and never malfunctioned, just clean it with lighter fluid every so often. Richard.
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I also have both and they are 35 degrees, the reamer prints also show that, it's the KMR that changes it to 40, not sure about the other wildcats based on that case.
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6.5 Creedmoor dies
Leeman replied to Leeman's topic in For Sale (Free Adverts for Private Secondhand Items only)
Dies now sold, Thanks for looking. -
284Win - Primer Choice
Leeman replied to mole-e30's topic in Target Shooting & Informal Long Range Shooting Practice
Another one for N165 & KVB-7 in the Shehane -
See if you can smash a slightly oversize torx bit into what's left, clamp the base in a drill press and using downwards pressure on the handle use a suitable spanner to turn the bit .
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Used both, first the Winchester M70 .30-06, then the Remington 700, 7.62, the Winchester with an 8x Unertl scope, the Remington, Redfield 3-9x.
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Hornady recommend a 1:8.5 twist for this bullet.
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Sloppy firing pin - any UK remedies?
Leeman replied to MikeJ's topic in Varmint Rifles & Heavy Plinkers
It's not a problem for Remington or the majority of their customers!- 18 replies
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- remington
- firing pin
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Thanks Vince.
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Montey, The Kongsberg system has been in use at Brockholes range near Huddersfield for over fifteen years, I helped install it, nobody would even think about going back to manual markers, plus several international level shooters regularly use it, they simply wouldn't bother if it was anything other than better than manual marking. I've marked in the butts at various ranges for years and have always been amazed at the inconsistencies and 'tolerances' used by human markers, electronics, in my opinion, are much fairer for everybody. I shot on the Silver Mountain Targets at Diggle a few weeks ago and they were just as good, if not better than the Kongsberg as they don't use a soundbox, just use existing frames and calibrate correctly. (Apologies to those guys at Diggle who set up the targets, just and calibrate make it sound very easy, I know a lot of hours were spent making the system work). You also get to see the velocity of the shots if your device has a large enough screen to take advantage of it, unfortunately, my Iphone didn't. The only question now is which tablet to buy? Richard.