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April 6th, 2007

Roger Ahrens' One-Piece Rest

Roger Ahrens’ One-piece Rest is a gorgeous piece of craftsmanship that functions as well as it looks. The machining is second to none. Used mostly by rimfire shooters, the Ahrens Rest will also work with PPCs and other light-recoiling centerfires. The rest is milled from 6061 T6 Aluminum, with Delrin slide points and skid plates. The entire front column/forearm platform rotates on bearings and is linked to the rear stock support, so as you adjust windage, the front and rear stock-contact points remain in perfect alignment. The controls are conveniently placed in the center, and can be switched easily for left-handed shooters. Roger Ahrens crafts each unit individually with mill and lathe. Production is very labor intensive, so you may have to wait a while for delivery. Price is $850.00 plus about $45 for shipping. Many top rimfire shooters feel the Ahrens Rest is the best of its kind currently available. Click HERE for BIG PHOTO.

Ahrens one-piece Rifle Bench Rest

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April 5th, 2007

Hickory Ground Hog Shoot–April 14th

2007 marks the 27th year for the Hickory Shoot, the nation’s most popular groundhog shooting competition. There were 242 entries last year and the number could top 300 this year. The match will be held in Vale, North Carolina. Every year valuable prizes are awarded for the top shooters. In the past, 6BRs, 6BR Improveds and the mid-size 6mms have been the calibers to beat. To see what it takes to win, read this article about Harold Seagroves’ Spencer-built 6BR, which has won the Hickory Shoot multiple times.

seagroves hickory groundhog shoot 2007

The range will open for practice April 9th through 13th. The match will start 8 o’clock sharp Saturday morning the 14th. If you have any questions call Larry Willis, Bulls Eye Sporting Goods, (704) 462-1948. This year the targets will be at known distances, 100, 300, and 500 yards. That should be a cake walk for you 1000-yard shooters.

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April 5th, 2007

Savage Barrel Wrench on Sale

Now through April 30, 2007, MidwayUSA has the Wheeler Engineering Savage Barrel Nut Wrench on sale for $21.99, a $14.00 savings. The double-ended Nut Wrench allows easy removal of the barrel nut on both early and late model Savage 10 and 110 series rifles. It features two 1/2″ square drive holes for a swing bar or torque wrench. Made from 3/16″ steel.

Wheeler Savage Barrel Nut Wrench

Permalink Gunsmithing, Hot Deals No Comments »
April 4th, 2007

Forming 260 Rem AI Cases

Chris Long (Techshooter) has produced a detailed article on how to form 260 Remington Ackley Improved Cases. With nice, big photos illustrating the process, Chris explains how to form your cases, using either bullets, or an inert filler (no projectile). Chris also covers how to place a false shoulder in the cases prior to fire-forming. This creates a slight crush-fit, helping the shoulders to form more reliably, with fewer split necks. Chris formed cases using both Remington-brand 260 Rem cases, and Lapua .243 Win cases necked up to 6.5mm. Chris discusses how doughnuts can form when necking-up .243 Win brass and how doughnuts can interfere with bullet seating. Chris then explains how to remove the doughnuts using inside neck reaming. Click HERE to read article.

Permalink Gunsmithing, News, Tech Tip No Comments »
April 4th, 2007

Free Ballistics Programs

On AccurateShooter.com’s Ballistics Page, you’ll find the excellent JBM Ballistics program. This not only calculates bullet trajectory with great precision, but will also output clicks so you can create your own “come-up” chart to keep with your rifle. In addition, you can download FREE versions of Pejsa and Point Blank ballistics software. Point Blank is also a database that stores your favorite loads. Pejsa, an Excel spreadsheet with a sophisticated drag formula, is a great choice for VLD bullets (.Zip version). We normally store loads in Point Blank (resident on the computer), and generate come-up tables with JBM or Pejsa (for VLDs).

Here are links to more FREE Ballistics programs:

Big Game Info Ballistics Calculator

NFA Ranging Ballistics Computer (Excel file Download)

Federal Cartridge Ballistics (for loaded ammo)

Remington Shoot Ballistics Software (Software Download)

Shooting Times Ballistics
(Choose caliber for sample ballistics by bullet weight.)

Permalink Tech Tip 4 Comments »
April 3rd, 2007

The $600 Sam's Club Gun Safe

We receive many reader inquiries about gunsafes. We often hear: “Look, I know I should get a bigger, more expensive safe, but I just can’t spend more than $750″. For those on a tight budget, Granite Security builds a quality 60″x30″x20″ Winchester Club Safe sold at Sam’s Club for just $599.99 (Pick-up Only price). Weighing 575 pounds, this will be much more secure than the thin-walled “gun lockers” that can cost $300-$400. The interior is about 56″ high, long enough for 30″-barreled guns if you use the pass-through in the top shelf. You can use both sides for guns or have rifles on one side and shelves on the other. The safe has a claimed 24 long-gun capacity, but realistically, figure 8-9 per side.

At 575 pounds, the safe is heavy enough that it would be difficult for a thief to move. The safe comes pre-drilled with holes for anchor bolts, plus a dehumidifier access hole. The safe has a UL-listed electronic lock, but we recommend upgrading to an S&G or LaGard commercial-grade digital lock (or dial lock). Commercial grade locks offer higher-quality keypads with much enhanced long-term reliability. We’ve talked to many gunsmiths who say the Sam’s Club safe (by Granite), is hard to beat for the price. Click HERE to read comments from many folks who own the Sam’s Club gunsafe. One owner writes: “The Sam’s Club Winchester safe is essentially a Granite Security Ranger, minus about $300. Probably one of the best values in the safe market today.” For general info about gunsafe features, read our Gun Safe Buyers Guide.

Permalink Gear Review, Hot Deals 4 Comments »
April 2nd, 2007

Best Extended Scope Rail for AR

If you mount a large, high-magnification scope on an AR15, AR10, or AR-based space-gun, you’ll need to set the scope well forward to allow proper eye relief while retaining normal length of pull. (Buttstock extensions will move you far enough away from the rear eyepiece, but then you may have to reach too far to the trigger.)

Robert Whitley, who regularly uses scoped ARs and spaceguns, recommends the GS-1 extended rail from GG&G. This allows you to put the front scope ring out front of the receiver. The rail fits any flat-topped AR receiver with a picatinny mount, and retails for $89.95 at 6mmAR.com and other vendors.

Permalink Gear Review 3 Comments »
April 2nd, 2007

Elastic Weight Ring for Rifle Balance

gunstock ankle weightCredit Joe Friedrich for this simple yet effective accessory for your benchrest rifle. Joe shoots a .22LR with a tuner. When he added weights to his tuner, he found his rifle no longer balanced well. He wanted to add a substantial amount of weight in the rear without drilling holes in the stock. He also wanted the weight to be removable, and easily placed on another rifle in his stable.

At a local sporting goods shop Joe found a 1.5-lb ankle weight that comes in a padded, tubular elastic cover. It’s like a 1.5-lb sausage in a soft, stretchy nylon cover. (Imagine a really fat, heavy bungee cord). Joe simply attached a plastic zip tie at the end to make a loop that fits perfectly over his buttstock. To “tune” the rifle’s balance, Joe just slides the ankle weight fore and aft on the stock. Yesterday we tried it on a variety of different BR stocks (including a McMillan Edge) and it worked perfectly. This is a great invention, and would work with sporter rifles and ARs just as well. Click HERE for big photo.

Permalink Gear Review, Tech Tip No Comments »
April 1st, 2007

New High-Tech German Heavy BR Rifle

The “star” of the recent IWA Euro Shot Show was the impressive new ZT (Zero Twist) ‘Valkyrie’ Heavy Gun from Deutsche Waffenwerkes. Innovative in the extreme, the Valkyrie fires a fin-stabilized 400gr .338-caliber projectile through a smoothbore barrel. Chief Designer Paul Ührleggen explained: “we saw the benefits Mr. Tooley has achieved with assymetric stocks in reducing rifle torque. We concluded that, with fin-stabilization, we could run the bullet through a Zero-Twist barrel. With no rifling to spin the bullet, there is no torque at all. Another problem solved by German engineering.” Accuracy remains elusive however: “Sub-MOA performance is hard to achieve with such a radical rifle. There are many bugs to work out. But we plan to offer the Valkyrie with an iron-clad .338 MOA one-shot group guarantee”. At present, with a weight of 40 kilos, the Valkyrie can only compete in Heavy Gun class. However, Waffenwerkes has teamed with Glock to build an all-plastic 4-kilo sporter version of the Valkyrie–but more fine-tuning is needed. According to Mr. Ührleggen, “there have been some minor barrel melting issues.”

We asked Mr. Ührleggen how Waffenwerkes selected the name Valkyrie for the new gun. “Here at Waffenwerkes we are all fans of your American cinema, and especially the movie Apocalypse Now — you know the scene with the helicopters and the Wagner music–Dum da da dum dum, Dum da da DUM dum. That’s Die Walküre–the Ride of the Valkyries. (Play MUSIC). It seemed apropos. Plus we enjoy playing that music really loud when we shoot this rifle.”

One very high-tech component didn’t make it into production. Ührleggen explained: “We engineered a voice-activated trigger, but we found that this was affected by ambient noise. To our surprise, field testing revealed loud noises to be a problem at shooting matches. Also, our engineers could not agree on the voice-activation command. I personally favored ‘She Bangs’, but my colleagues are not pop music afficionados.”

The Valkyrie’s most remarkable feature is its optical guidance system. Optics engineer Horst Nichtfarze explains: “We learned from your American gun forums about problems with benchrest scopes not holding zero, so we concluded ‘why use a scope at all’? Borrowing smart-bomb technology, we have placed a tiny camera inside the ceramic nose of our bullets. This feeds to a rifle-mounted LCD screen so the shooter can literally see the bullet fly into the target. Since the projectile is fin-stabilized, we don’t have spin issues.” The fins are controlled by a joystick on the buttstock, so theoretically, one can steer the bullet to the target. Nichtfarze admitted, however, “we do have a little response time issue at short range”. The cost of the in-bullet camera was prohibitive until Nichtfarze stumbled on a solution: “My girlfriend had this old cell phone that was kaput. We salvaged the phone’s camera very easily. In Germany everyone throws away their phone after a year, so there is no shortage of teeny weeny video cameras to put in the bullets.”

Waffenwerkes’ Valkyrie .338 ZT is an engineering tour de force, setting new standards for innovation. But this level of technology doesn’t come cheap. The rifle retails for 8,000 Euros, about $10,647 US Dollars. Mr. Ührleggen conceded, “Sure it’s expensive, but I have to pay for my Porsche somehow.” In the months ahead, Deutsche Waffenwerkes also plans to release a “Tactical” version of the Valkyrie. Mr. Ührleggen noted, “we are very anxious to get the Tactical rifle to market. Priced at 14,000 Euros ($18,632 US), it will be called the RT (“Rambo Tactical”) edition and feature 15 linear feet of Picatinny rails, a 3″-diameter depleted uranium bolt knob, Digital Flecktarn Camo paint scheme, and an X-Box compatible LCD screen. Our marketing director, Tella Liezig, feels this will be the real money-maker.”

Permalink Gunsmithing, News 6 Comments »