How to make a hunting rifle more accurate

Bolt action rifles, lever action, pump action, self loading rifles and other miscellaneous longarms.

Re: How to make a hunting rifle more accurate

Post by Wapiti » 29 May 2025, 6:29 am

MG5150 wrote:
Wapiti wrote:You can screw up a rifles consistency i.e. "accuracy " faster with an incorrect bedding job than if you'd left it alone.

Some rifle action designs, and stock construction they sit in are completely unnecessary to touch. Others sit in flexible, soft inconsistent compromises.

People will know that I'm all for doing it myself. If someone else can do it, so can you. But you need the knowledge, the right gear, and the right techniques.
Do a heap of research first as to what matters in a bedding job, why if anything it will actually change anything, and understand what the process is trying to achieve. Before you can make something better, you need to identify why it isn't achieving its best before you even start.

And whatever you do, filter what advice you choose to listen to. If you get advice from someone who admits to never have done it successfully themselves, well, go elsewhere.

And on trigger pull, it is the design of the trigger itself that dictates at what pull weight it becomes dangerous, not the number itself. Another half accurate statement.

I've seen plenty of very crack shots that have a rifle next to them every day handle standard 5lb triggers like nothing. And then there are the arguments raging about some ideal number from the opposite of that expectation.

The most accurate answer above I've seen is the best yet, that's adjusting your expectations. Most of these expectations are bulls**t.
And from the pics and info you've put up with bog-standard factory ammo, you've bought well.


Adjusting expectations is indeed great advice and I appreciate your additional input.

I think time spent practicing is going to be the biggest pay off. I could go down lots of gear and modification rabbit holes but at the end of the day, the buck stops with me and my skill level.

Prior to posting those more recent groupings I had a few weeks in a row of bad shooting. I was flinching and anticipating the shot which caused me to pull it to the right. I used double hearing protection and worked on my breathing to eliminate the flinch and that made a big difference.

How much of a step up does reloading make with the rounds? What makes them 'bog-awful'? (not being a smartass I am relativly green and want to learn)


Sounds like you are doing really well to me. You have an adequate cartridge, are taking plenty of deer and obviously have great stalking skills.
Your rifle shoots great with real genuine hunting ammo, so why mess with that outfit, as a suggestion.
To make quality handloaded ammunition, you will have to spend a small fortune on the gear needed. Remember, cheap handloading gear makes ammo no better than factory stuff for a number of reasons and will take 1000's of rounds to see benefit in cost savings.
Remember, the small savings you get mean a lot of shooting to get to the break-even point. But that costs more money to get there!

You seem very enthusiastic about getting deeper into the huge amount of information (and rubbish) out there in getting more precision from your gear, so maybe getting a dedicated, heavier barrelled rifle to learn on, load for and use. Dedicated scope to test all your gizmos and suggestions for improvement out there.
Maybe buy one in a smaller cartridge that is way easier to control under recoil, shoots consistently better, sitting in a nice alloy bedded, stiff stock with a flat bottom to sit on a rest steady so you don't have to bodge up some bog to bed it, of a great established quality brand.
Now that will generate from 10 different people, 10 different answers.

May I suggest a trip or two to your nearest large shooting range, and spend some time looking at what others are using, and importantly, separating the crap that comes from some of them by looking at the results they are getting? That will show you who the people to take advice from are. And you will have some definite strong ideas to chase up.
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Re: How to make a hunting rifle more accurate

Post by MG5150 » 29 May 2025, 6:54 am

Thanks for all the extra input over night.

I have a CZ 22LR and a Lithgow 223 with varmin barrel so I can do some shooting with less recoil in order to learn and practice for better groupings. I'm not rushing out to get a new gun which allows for samabr to be taken at greater ranges.

My scope came lose over the weekend and I'll need to re-zero. I thought if I was going to get some maintenance done before re-zeroing now would be a good time to do it. Being based in Melbourne I can drive an hour to our closest rifle range that allows centrefire, or I can drive an hour to a local state forest to practice/sight in. Neither are convenient.
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Re: How to make a hunting rifle more accurate

Post by Oldbloke » 29 May 2025, 8:06 am

Wapiti wrote:
Oldbloke wrote:
Die Judicii wrote:
Oldbloke wrote:"What counts as 'too light?'"
How long is a piece of string.

All my rifles are used hunting. All are abt 2.8lbs. Happy with that.

IMO 2lb - 3lb for hunting. Target a lot lower.

Geoff is right about groups and statistics,,,but, for hunting IMO if you can reliably put 3 shots into 35mm it's plenty good enough. (If on target) But that depends on how far you shooting and at what game size? 100 or 300yards?

Reloading is probably the most reliable way of improving accuracy. More experience may not agree.


Well mercy me,,,,, On a Sambar that would be even better (with a 35mm grouping)
So why cast dispersions on the OP by saying "depends on how far you shooting and at what game size ?"

Spend some energy and give the OP a pat on the back instead of being pedantic.


You need to get a life. I'm sure its better than trolling on forums.


Pull your head in mate.
You are talking to a bloke that is respected personally in a large rural area who is incredibly successful as a professional shooter. I put his opinion at the very top of the tree, in comparison to the bloke sitting in a lounge chair looking at that same tree through a window googling a response he calls his own.
You are the king of jumping in with advice from everywhere other than your own experience.
You did it - you hand out advice then admit you've never done it! Why? Because it's all self-appraisal.
Then give one opinion, then back out of it when the tide goes the other way.
You might have some others fooled, but not the people who have the experience - they see through you. Now back off.



Unbelievable!
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Re: How to make a hunting rifle more accurate

Post by bladeracer » 29 May 2025, 9:38 am

I think the primary way to make any rifle more accurate in the field is to practice with it as much as you can in as varied conditions as possible. Your potential accuracy will vary significantly depending on your shooting position and other conditions, like ambient light. Any rifle/ammunition combination will have its own accuracy potential under ideal conditions, if you determine what level of accuracy you require then you can restrict your opportunities to ensure you shoot under conditions that allow you to get all of that potential out of the rifle. For example, if you practice until you can consistently hit a 100mm target at 100m offhand and you are out head-shooting rabbits then you can restrict yourself to 40m offhand shots and you should be happy with the rifles accuracy. If you can consistently hit a 30mm target at 200m when prone supported then you can ensure you get into a good prone position when you need to take a long shot.

If you have just struggled your way up 600m of steep hill and immediately spot a target, don't expect that you'll be able to shoot as well as you can when you've been sitting at a bench for thirty minutes testing ammo.

You can improve the potential accuracy of the rifle by handloading _and testing_ ammo that works best in the rifle.
You can improve the sights to whatever works best with your eyesight in the conditions you want to shoot in.

During testing of the rifle and ammo you will have to address any deficiencies you discover within the rifle, like bedding, sights, stock shape, trigger pull, etc.

A well-designed brake can indeed help if recoil anticipation is causing your accuracy to suffer, and especially if you are having to make multiple fast shots.


MG5150 wrote:I recently watched a youtube video on how to make your hunting rifle more accurate...

The fella speaking mentioned three things:

1) adjust your trigger to be as light as possible
2) use bipods
3) get a supressor

Given that we can't use suppressors is a muzzle break a substitute for this?

Putting it back to you guys, are there any other things we can do make rifles more accurate?

Has anyone got experience using Timny triggers? I'm looking at getting one for my Browning X Bolt 30-06

Here is the original video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PuRvD73hlp4
Practice Strict Gun Control - Precision Counts!
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Re: How to make a hunting rifle more accurate

Post by Finniss » 29 May 2025, 10:16 am

MG5150, hopefully the problem was your scope loosening.
you mentioned a flinch. a lighter trigger can help. around 3lb was always promoted as a safe weight for hunting in the magazines and safety booklets when I was a young fella.
Mine is 2.7 and made a big difference to my shooting and flinch coming down from 7lb. Most modern factory triggers can be made pretty good, I wouldn't bother with a Timney, but if you adjust yours down make sure you drop test, bump test until you are confident it's safe.

If you can work out why your flinching you can address, a longer eye relief scope can help, double ear protection (as you've tried). I found I was pulling my head off the stock as i pulled trigger to see impact when dust and smoke filled my scope when shooting on still nights, bloody infected the rest of my shooting too.

Assuming the xbolt manual says its safe to do don't discount dry firing for practice. .Cheapest of the lot
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Re: How to make a hunting rifle more accurate

Post by Fester » 29 May 2025, 11:12 am

Most sporter hunting rifles off the shelf in an inherently accurate cal are capable of shooting a half MOA group at 100m.
Most shooters are not and it's not going to happen all day, every day.

Some of my fav rifles have never had the trigger touched, not even adjusted.
Tikkas are nice, so is my Weatherby. I like a good trigger, crisp and no creep but don't like touch triggers and if blokes need them in the bush, maybe they should invest in some range time to improve their marksmanship.
Scary when touch triggers are now the trend and do they even bump test their rifles and rely on a safety catch when hunting?

I would be less accurate as it is a full finger movement to take a shot where I have no movement as I have the trigger ready to let off, just a bit more pressure to let it go when everything is lined up and perfectly still, hand, rifle, head, and crosshairs.
If everything is adjusted correctly, I can aim at that hole and send another to touch it or better.
A decent .22lr is much the same at 50m with consistent ammo and in the right lighting conditions you can see the single ragged holes punching. Using CCI std, you will see the flyer that was not you as the crosshairs were on the mark.

Lots of blokes don't even shoot the 22 and develop their skills, just buy the 30-06 and expect it to happen.

Blokes like Aussie Reviews, that can make it happen with factory ammo are on top of their game.
Some factory ammo can shoot well, like OSA and Federal Powershok, but I reload to get that 1" shooter capable of shooting a few 1/2'' or better groups on a decent range day at 100.

You sort of need an under 1 MOA set-up to shoot longer ranges as you won't get a nice 500m group with a 2 MOA rifle.

Light mountain rifles can only shoot 3-shot groups as barrel heat will send them wondering by 4-5 shots as that's the compromise.
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Re: How to make a hunting rifle more accurate

Post by JohnV » 29 May 2025, 4:42 pm

1/The number one thing you can do to a factory rifle if it is not already pillar or al-block bedded is do a stress free bedding job and free float the barrel .
2/ The Next thing reload your own ammo and tune your ammunition to suit your gun .
3/ Buy or make precision made projectiles and have the correct barrel twist rate for the bullets to remain stable at extended range .
4/ Tune up the trigger so it has a no creep crisp let-off with little backlash . A hunting rifle should have a trigger that is not so light that it's dangerous .
5/ Use a quality scope that will hold zero under recoil and has accurate adjustments that track well .
6/ Set the scope up properly so your head position and with correct sight picture so as to reduce parallax errors .
7/ Don't keep firing rounds if the barrel is hot , the groups just get bigger . Slow down and let the barrel cool between rounds .
8 / If the gun has a fare amount of recoil then don't fire it free recoil because it will jump up and moves back too far and upsets rests , rear bags and bi-pods and you .
9/ In the field never put the forend on a bare hard surface it will shoot high , put a hat or something under the forend .
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Re: How to make a hunting rifle more accurate

Post by Bugman » 29 May 2025, 5:45 pm

JohnV wrote:1/The number one thing you can do to a factory rifle if it is not already pillar or al-block bedded is do a stress free bedding job and free float the barrel .
2/ The Next thing reload your own ammo and tune your ammunition to suit your gun .
3/ Buy or make precision made projectiles and have the correct barrel twist rate for the bullets to remain stable at extended range .
4/ Tune up the trigger so it has a no creep crisp let-off with little backlash . A hunting rifle should have a trigger that is not so light that it's dangerous .
5/ Use a quality scope that will hold zero under recoil and has accurate adjustments that track well .
6/ Set the scope up properly so your head position and with correct sight picture so as to reduce parallax errors .
7/ Don't keep firing rounds if the barrel is hot , the groups just get bigger . Slow down and let the barrel cool between rounds .
8 / If the gun has a fare amount of recoil then don't fire it free recoil because it will jump up and moves back too far and upsets rests , rear bags and bi-pods and you .
9/ In the field never put the forend on a bare hard surface it will shoot high , put a hat or something under the forend .

Yep. Good advice in my book. Simplicity can get you results you seek. :thumbsup:
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Re: How to make a hunting rifle more accurate

Post by Oldbloke » 29 May 2025, 5:47 pm

JohnV wrote:1/The number one thing you can do to a factory rifle if it is not already pillar or al-block bedded is do a stress free bedding job and free float the barrel .
2/ The Next thing reload your own ammo and tune your ammunition to suit your gun .
3/ Buy or make precision made projectiles and have the correct barrel twist rate for the bullets to remain stable at extended range .
4/ Tune up the trigger so it has a no creep crisp let-off with little backlash . A hunting rifle should have a trigger that is not so light that it's dangerous .
5/ Use a quality scope that will hold zero under recoil and has accurate adjustments that track well .
6/ Set the scope up properly so your head position and with correct sight picture so as to reduce parallax errors .
7/ Don't keep firing rounds if the barrel is hot , the groups just get bigger . Slow down and let the barrel cool between rounds .
8 / If the gun has a fare amount of recoil then don't fire it free recoil because it will jump up and moves back too far and upsets rests , rear bags and bi-pods and you .
9/ In the field never put the forend on a bare hard surface it will shoot high , put a hat or something under the forend .


Good advice
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Re: How to make a hunting rifle more accurate

Post by womble » 29 May 2025, 6:11 pm

Yes but which hat works best
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Re: How to make a hunting rifle more accurate

Post by GQshayne » 29 May 2025, 7:57 pm

MG5150 wrote:
GQshayne wrote:Well MG, before I gave you any tips I would want to know what you hunting you are doing, and what firearm you have. If you are like me, and hunting means kicking pigs out from under your feet in the thick stuff (my last one was about 3m away), then a light trigger for us is different to a long range rabbit busting varmint rifle. And a Model 94 Winchester trigger is a bit different to a Sako bolt action trigger. Likewise a 2" group at 100m is not bad for one, and not good for the other!

Hunting accuracy requires you to be able to effect clean kills on your target. In my experience, the shooter is never as good in the field as the rifle is. So your rifle may shoot MOA,but can you do this offhand???? No way I can, and no time for a bipod, and I would not want to carry one anyway. Best thing for accuracy for me is practice. Practice. And practice relevant ot the field, rather than punching holes in paper.

Anyway, if you tell us what you are up to that would help.


Hey Mate

I use a Browning X bolt in 30-06 for stalking deer (mainly Sambar). Almost all of my deer have been shot within 20-80m so far. The bush is pretty thick and there are a few valleys where I could glass up an animal and try a 300m-400m shot but I havn't had the patience to try that sort of hunting yet.

I've taken 14 deer for 15 shots with one I think I hit but couldn't recover. A couple of good hits where they dropped on the spot, and a few where they ran 100m before dropping due to being gut shot a little further back than I was aiming. Most of the shots were me standing with a few where I dropped to kneel.


Ok. So my view is that your rifle is shooting acceptably for your intended purpose. And being 30-06 I would think you can probably buy factory ammo that is suitable for the job too. So you just need to practice until you are happy with your field shooting. Reducing your groups on a target at the range will matter little, but practice will matter a lot. I will make the trigger an exception here, as I do not know what yours is like. Perhaps get another opinion from someone, and see if they think it needs improving.

Handloading is unlikely to save you any money unless you are shooting a lot. But it is very rewarding, and also allows for making up custom loads. This is especiialy useful when you desire to use a particular projectile that is not availabel in factory ammo. And if it floats your boat, you can works up tailored loads for your rifle that can shoot better than factory ammo. And many of us do just that, even though for a hunting rifle being used on large game, shootiong sub MOA groups at the range is not very important.
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Re: How to make a hunting rifle more accurate

Post by Oldbloke » 29 May 2025, 8:41 pm

GQshayne wrote:
MG5150 wrote:
GQshayne wrote:Well MG, before I gave you any tips I would want to know what you hunting you are doing, and what firearm you have. If you are like me, and hunting means kicking pigs out from under your feet in the thick stuff (my last one was about 3m away), then a light trigger for us is different to a long range rabbit busting varmint rifle. And a Model 94 Winchester trigger is a bit different to a Sako bolt action trigger. Likewise a 2" group at 100m is not bad for one, and not good for the other!

Hunting accuracy requires you to be able to effect clean kills on your target. In my experience, the shooter is never as good in the field as the rifle is. So your rifle may shoot MOA,but can you do this offhand???? No way I can, and no time for a bipod, and I would not want to carry one anyway. Best thing for accuracy for me is practice. Practice. And practice relevant ot the field, rather than punching holes in paper.

Anyway, if you tell us what you are up to that would help.


Hey Mate

I use a Browning X bolt in 30-06 for stalking deer (mainly Sambar). Almost all of my deer have been shot within 20-80m so far. The bush is pretty thick and there are a few valleys where I could glass up an animal and try a 300m-400m shot but I havn't had the patience to try that sort of hunting yet.

I've taken 14 deer for 15 shots with one I think I hit but couldn't recover. A couple of good hits where they dropped on the spot, and a few where they ran 100m before dropping due to being gut shot a little further back than I was aiming. Most of the shots were me standing with a few where I dropped to kneel.


Ok. So my view is that your rifle is shooting acceptably for your intended purpose. And being 30-06 I would think you can probably buy factory ammo that is suitable for the job too. So you just need to practice until you are happy with your field shooting. Reducing your groups on a target at the range will matter little, but practice will matter a lot. I will make the trigger an exception here, as I do not know what yours is like. Perhaps get another opinion from someone, and see if they think it needs improving.

Handloading is unlikely to save you any money unless you are shooting a lot. But it is very rewarding, and also allows for making up custom loads. This is especiialy useful when you desire to use a particular projectile that is not availabel in factory ammo. And if it floats your boat, you can works up tailored loads for your rifle that can shoot better than factory ammo. And many of us do just that, even though for a hunting rifle being used on large game, shootiong sub MOA groups at the range is not very important.


Sounds like good advice.
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Re: How to make a hunting rifle more accurate

Post by MG5150 » 29 May 2025, 9:23 pm

GQshayne wrote:
MG5150 wrote:
GQshayne wrote:Well MG, before I gave you any tips I would want to know what you hunting you are doing, and what firearm you have. If you are like me, and hunting means kicking pigs out from under your feet in the thick stuff (my last one was about 3m away), then a light trigger for us is different to a long range rabbit busting varmint rifle. And a Model 94 Winchester trigger is a bit different to a Sako bolt action trigger. Likewise a 2" group at 100m is not bad for one, and not good for the other!

Hunting accuracy requires you to be able to effect clean kills on your target. In my experience, the shooter is never as good in the field as the rifle is. So your rifle may shoot MOA,but can you do this offhand???? No way I can, and no time for a bipod, and I would not want to carry one anyway. Best thing for accuracy for me is practice. Practice. And practice relevant ot the field, rather than punching holes in paper.

Anyway, if you tell us what you are up to that would help.


Hey Mate

I use a Browning X bolt in 30-06 for stalking deer (mainly Sambar). Almost all of my deer have been shot within 20-80m so far. The bush is pretty thick and there are a few valleys where I could glass up an animal and try a 300m-400m shot but I havn't had the patience to try that sort of hunting yet.

I've taken 14 deer for 15 shots with one I think I hit but couldn't recover. A couple of good hits where they dropped on the spot, and a few where they ran 100m before dropping due to being gut shot a little further back than I was aiming. Most of the shots were me standing with a few where I dropped to kneel.


Ok. So my view is that your rifle is shooting acceptably for your intended purpose. And being 30-06 I would think you can probably buy factory ammo that is suitable for the job too. So you just need to practice until you are happy with your field shooting. Reducing your groups on a target at the range will matter little, but practice will matter a lot. I will make the trigger an exception here, as I do not know what yours is like. Perhaps get another opinion from someone, and see if they think it needs improving.

Handloading is unlikely to save you any money unless you are shooting a lot. But it is very rewarding, and also allows for making up custom loads. This is especiialy useful when you desire to use a particular projectile that is not availabel in factory ammo. And if it floats your boat, you can works up tailored loads for your rifle that can shoot better than factory ammo. And many of us do just that, even though for a hunting rifle being used on large game, shootiong sub MOA groups at the range is not very important.


I believe the xbolt's come with an adjustable 3lb-5lb trigger with a factory setting of 4lb
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Re: How to make a hunting rifle more accurate

Post by Wapiti » 30 May 2025, 9:44 am

Years ago, I learned how to do all the stuff to basically make stuff that was mass-produced and really inferior as to what it could be.
Bedding, trigger design and lightening safely, even blueprinting bolt actions, removing and re-headspacing etc to get the best from stuff that should've been addressed in the first place. A caveat to that is if the barrel is rubbish well, nothing can help that.
Stuff that you, as an owner, can legally do to your own stuff.

But for quite a few years, with what's going on and trying to make the most of farming, it's pretty hard to justify that time. But if you have it, play around. Hopefully you research first and don't irreversibly wreck things. With gun laws being so strict, and gunsmiths having years in their wait times, be careful.

I have given up on all that now mostly. Think about this and other options out there. Yes I know, quality is expensive, maybe twice as much as an A-Bolt with often dubious consistency, but in the end, how much does it all add up to achieve these results in factory off-the shelf rifles now?

This kind of performance is straight out of the box.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j5WN0lIa8qU&t=367s

Or if you don't like timber/blued rifles:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oLL7fHU2vG4

The first thing [people say, is "too much money!" OK then, how much does it cost in gear, experimentation and time, to get this otherwise?
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Re: How to make a hunting rifle more accurate

Post by Peter988 » 30 May 2025, 11:15 am

You’ve taken 14 deer with 15 shots. I wouldn't worry too much about chasing accuracy for your deer hunting. Seems pretty right to me.
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Re: How to make a hunting rifle more accurate

Post by MG5150 » 30 May 2025, 6:32 pm

Wapiti wrote:
The first thing people say, is "too much money!" OK then, how much does it cost in gear, experimentation and time, to get this otherwise?


you get what you pay for!
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Re: How to make a hunting rifle more accurate

Post by Die Judicii » 09 Jun 2025, 10:06 pm

Peter988 wrote:You’ve taken 14 deer with 15 shots. I wouldn't worry too much about chasing accuracy for your deer hunting. Seems pretty right to me.


At loooooong last some other members are giving the OP some recognition that he's doing pretty well considering.

While some are conspicuously absent in that bent. (maybe google doesn't do "unconditional congratulations")
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Re: How to make a hunting rifle more accurate

Post by Wapiti » 10 Jun 2025, 7:30 am

Die Judicii wrote:
Peter988 wrote:You’ve taken 14 deer with 15 shots. I wouldn't worry too much about chasing accuracy for your deer hunting. Seems pretty right to me.


At loooooong last some other members are giving the OP some recognition that he's doing pretty well considering.

While some are conspicuously absent in that bent. (maybe google doesn't do "unconditional congratulations")


:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

What, congratulate the bloke for a great post, with pics, and for a great result? For daring to learn how to be better?
A doer, not a pretender, and he deserves credit and praise.
More of it, people having a go and posting up the pics of their efforts, not screenshots from Google.

Actually, he's doing well. So many times I see someone put a great effort into a post, or take great pains to explain something, and get no recognition whatsoever. Take the time to praise the only people who really make the site great.
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Re: How to make a hunting rifle more accurate

Post by brinny » 14 Jun 2025, 11:03 pm

MG5150 wrote:
Oldbloke wrote:1) adjust your trigger to be as light as possible.
Yes, but not too light!


2) use bipods.
This is just assisting aim.


Start reloading.

In some cases floating the barrel helps,


Thanks for the feedback!

What counts as 'too light?'


Never wise to run a light trigger on a big cal rifle that you carry in the bush.....recipe for disaster....
I ran a 4oz Canjar trigger on a 17 mach 4 i had once back in the early 80s.....Custom made by Hambley Clarke in SA....many said that was too light but it was always used on the back of a vehicle on foxes...to me it was perfect
Had a gunsmith in Ballarat take a trigger on one of my Sako 204s down to 8 oz ....he refused to go any further with it...said even that was too light.....but the more weight you put on pulling the trigger the more chance you have of pulling yourself offline.....i like them light on my fox rifles....
A day without a hunt, is a day lost.....
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