At 0.43 i saw he knew what he was doing. Using a cloth towel to catch the spent brass shows thinking that few shooters posses. Too many eject the brass onto a hard bench where it gets dings and dents, rolls off the bench into the dirt and is lost in the grass. A simple, yet good practice. Admiration ...
Very nicely done video...excellent editing and timing. Great shooting...I am so glad you did this at 500 yds to show some serious skill and what the 6 BR is capable of
Nice shooting! Is their a certain target that shows up better at longer ranges (500 metres).. squares? Round? Paper colour…. I like hi vis green(on yield signs when driving example) B Deacon Manitoba Canada 🇨🇦
@@willb8684 It is possible to shoot in free recoil just because of the stock and the tripod system. In this situation it its still very important to pull the trigger very straight without jerking if you wanna get very tight groups, but the wind management is the factor number one !
I see a good many br shooters manually remove the spent shell from the action, why is this? Don't want to lose shells? extractor claw might damage a shell?
As a br shooter, most of us form our own brass, and take the sport very seriously, and damaging a case would be detrimental to accuracy, plus it's a major PITA to form that brass!
How are you seating them 87 gr vlds? I have a cooper 6br with a 1-10 twist and its super accurate. But I'm using varget. Also what powder charge you using?
Beautiful rifle and great results. Not sure but by looking you are neck sizing, try partial FL sizing so closing the bolt is much less disturbing to your setup.
Tim Claunch the bolt is a little bit harder to close because he is jamming them 25 thou in the lands. So it is the COAL, nothing to do with neck sizing
In Europe this kind of benchrest rifles can cost 4000 euro brand new, without the scope and the tripod 😅 These are the most accurate rifles in the world