Scopes. Nope, not that kind.

At a certain age the doc wants to check things under the hood. Well, more like via the tailpipe. Since I’m scheduled for one soon, it got me thinking about scopes. In this case, a borescope.
I hadn’t scoped the 6.5 in a while, so I fired up my Teslong bore scope. No, not Tesla, and if anyone keys any of my stuff . . .

Anyway, I did a quick bore clean so the scope could get a good look. First thing I noticed – lots of copper on the lands. A little copper smooths out imperfections in the rifling, but too much is counterproductive.

Next, check the throat for erosion. Not much at all. What you’re seeing is the end of the chamber, the leade, and the ramping up to the rifling.

Here’s the crown at the end of the barrel:

And the blowout hole in the chamber wall:

So, best tool for the job:

WIPEOUT!!! (The Surfaris?) With Wipeout, you spray the stuff down the barrel and up the breech. It immediately foams out everywhere, which explains the paper towels.

I’m going to let it soak overnight and then do another rifleoscopy. With before and after pix, of course.

Long Range Reopens

Despite the best efforts of some ne’r do wells, the upper range opened today – I was the first to go up.

I did 6.5 CM and .308 Win. Lot of crosswind and difficult lone spotting, with damp berms. Still, got the 6.5 out to 533 and the .308 out to 750. No time to send the drone dowrange to spot for me. Tomorrow.

Predator Precision Presently

Yesterday at the range, shooting to compare from five years ago:

Center – fouling and sighters, plus one round with damaged meplat Still, .763”.

Upper left – Hornady 140 ELD Match. Cases sorted and bullets weighed. .459”.

Upper right – Nosler Competition 140 HPBT. .281”. Yes, that is three shots.

Lower left – Hornadys, again, but unsorted brass and loaded ages ago. The flyer puts it at 1.033”, but .226” without.

Lower right – My last two Hornady 140 SSTs from the bullet shortage during the Plandemic; they were all I could find at the time. .742”.

I think I’m going to write to Ruger to tell them that this 5 year old rifle, with over 3,000 rounds through it, still shoots well.

Predator Precision

As I was falling asleep last night, I was trying to remember all of the upgrades I did to the rifle. Of course, I bedded it. Then, I

  1. Changed out the magazine from four to AICS and ten rounds.
  2. Adjusted the stock trigger down.
  3. Added a muzzle brake.
  4. Ordered a suppressor.
  5. Received the suppressor 14 months later.
  6. Swapped out the trigger.
  7. I forget.

Let’s see about photos during this process:

Then I went to Texas with some shooting buddies/budettes.

I was the only one to engage the 750 target out next to the big tree. First shot left edge. Adjust. 3 good ones. A buddy knew I could shoot ok, but didn’t know how much. He brought back this pic:

I went out today to see if my 5 year old rifle with over 3000 rounds through it was still functioning. I’ll show you tomorrow.

Predator Precision

I remember seeing the first ads come out for the 6.5 Creedmoor round in about 2008. Usually second page on the right side of American Rifleman or other magazines – the best ad placement. I didn’t pay much attention as it did not seem to be anything I needed or wanted. It looked sort of funny with all that bullet exposed, compared to sensible rounds like 5.56.

But I kept noticing it over the years, and it gained in popularity. In the 20 teens I was reloading for 5.56, .243 Winchester and .223 Winchester Super Short Magnum (that was a real barn burner at over 4,000 fps muzzle velocity. Barrel burner, too.) When I decided to reach out very long distances, the 6.5 Creedmoor seemed like the way to go.

But pricing of those rifles was just out of reach. That is, until Ruger came along. The Predator was well under a grand, and it was getting great accuracy reviews. But it had a really crappy, flimsy plastic stock and a tiny 4-round magazine. Still, it had a rep for shooting straight.

When I took mine out of the box, the first thing I noticed was that the free-floated barrel wasn’t. The right side of the fore-end was right up against the barrel. Thus began the first of many fixes/improvements/upgrades. Sandpaper took care of the first.
So, how did she shoot. First shots:

Two sighters, then three vertically. OK! We can work with this. Then a dining room table picture to show 1 MOA:

And I shot Federal Premium until I had enough brass to start reloading.

Now we are cooking.

Ooh! A quarter MOA.

And at 300 yards?

Yep, fairly accurate. Tomorrow, we’ll talk about upgrades. And then maybe some long distance shooting?

Predator Teaser

As part of my 2020 New Year’s resolution, I resolved to hit steel at 1,000 yards.
At Christmas 2019, Santa brought me a Vortex Viper 6×24 second focal plane scope. That was go time to order a Ruger American Predator in 6.5 Creedmoor from my LGS. It showed up in February.

And that is where the glass is going to go.

Getting level (I now have a Wheeler tool that does this a lot better).

Yup. Still level.

Getting there.

Let’s add a bipod.

Looks pretty. I wonder how she’ll shoot?

Find out tomorrow in Part 2: The Hunt for Predator Precision!