Bob Gill Wins CA Fullbore Championship with .223 Palma Rifle
Report by Johnny Fisher
Here’s something you don’t see very often — a fullbore shooter with a .223 Remington topped a field of talented .308 Win shooters. Not only that, he scored more points than any F-Class competitor (however, F-Classers shot a smaller target). Bob Gill’s performance proves that, even in an era of high-BC .308 bullets, the little .223 Rem cartridge can still hold its own in the hands of a great shooter.
At last weekend’s California State Fullbore Championships, Bob Gill bested over 30 competitors for the championship with a .223 Palma rifle, only dropping 7 points over the weekend for a 993-56X. The event was sponsored by the California Rifle & Pistol Association and hosted by the Coalinga Rifle Club.
Bob Gill Talks about the ‘Mental Game’
Conventional wisdom when shooting any match is to just stay focused on each and every shot and let the scores work themselves out after all firing is complete. “Two To The Mound” shooting changes all of that, as each competitor is not only aware of their own standings throughout the course of the match – but also of their closest competitor during these pair-fire strings. With this championship never further out than a 2-point lead throughout the weekend, stress was high and every once of mental focus needed to be tapped.Bob recalls, “The entire match was neck and neck. After a few mental mistakes and a few wind mistakes, with three shots remaining the thought is three shots and a 1X lead. I need to shoot three 10s. Everything else goes away. Shoot three 10s and he can’t catch me.”
Three 10s later, Bob won the CA State Fullbore Championship by one point and one X. Well done!
Gun Specifications
Bob was shooting a 1970s-era .223 Remington B-40X action inside a Competition Machine R1 chassis. The barrel is a 30.5″ Heavy Palma taper, 1:7″-twist Brux with a Wylde chamber and .220 freebore done up by Randy Gregory at Accuracy Unlimited. The Tubb 7T7 two-stage trigger was set at 1 + 1 pounds.
.223 Remington Accuracy Load — Berger 90gr VLDS, Varget and BR4s
Gill loaded 90gr Berger VLDs in front of 25.0 grains of Hodgdon Varget powder, jumping 15 to 20 thousandths for a 2.708 COL with a BR4 primer inside Lapua brass. Bob uses a Redding Full-Length S-Die to push the shoulders back .004 to match that of new Lapua brass and a bushing chosen to achieve .004 neck tension. He sorts his brass by weight into 0.5 grain lots and each piece is trimmed on a Giraud trimmer after sizing because he says “it grows like crazy”.
Fullbore Course of Fire — Pair Firing on Day 2 at Coalinga
The Fullbore Course-Of-Fire for this match was squadded on the first day by classification for 15-shots string-fire at each yard-line: 300 / 600 / 900 / 1000 yards. These scores were then used to determine “two to the mound” squadding for the second day, when each competitor pair-fired with his closest competitor, and also kept score in between his own shots. In this “pair fire” arrangement, only 45 seconds are allowed between shots after a shooter accepts his shot score. This forces competitors to shoot through condition changes as opposed to waiting for a more favorable pattern.
CLICK HERE for CA Championship Individual Results | CLICK HERE for Team Results
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Tags: .223 Rem, Bob Gill, California, Coalinga, Fullbore, Johnny Fisher, Pair Firing, Palma
congrats Bob!
Bob,
Congratulations on a fine performance.
Congratulations, Bob. Fine shooting.
It is also worth noting that Greg Taylor won the 2015 California Long Range F-TR Championship with a .223 and Berger 90 VLD’s. Unless shooting 200 grain and heavier bullets, a .308 has no significant advantage over .223 and then there is that advantage of no recoil.
Thats a steaming load! Congratulations Bob!!
Interesting the 7 twist worked very well rather then a 6.5
A Remington action and .223. OooWee!
Congrats!
Congrats Bob.
Jeff Bouley just won the Orange Blossom Regional F-TR match this past week with his Kelbly .223. It has a 1 in 6.5 barrel.
Jeff also uses the Berger 90. These are like gold now because apparently Berger is only making them once every couple of years. They told us in a recent phone call, they would not be available again until summer.
Way to go Bob, hope to see you soon at the range.
Sierra 90`s work well
January 2013 rulebook
3.17 Ammunition –
(a) Target Rifle / International Target Rifle – .308/7.62mm with a maximum permitted bullet weight of less than
156 grains or .223/5.56mm x 45 with a maximum permitted bullet weight of less than 92 grains.
Great Job Bob
Bullet weight restriction does not apply in the US.
That Bob shot this well, and under the constraint of not picking your condition in pair fire, attests to great shooting and loading skills.
Way to go.