Danny Boy,
In my experince, this BAR was much easier to find ammo that was accurate/consistent,
than the 7400s/742s I have had experience with. Using the last 7400, in .270 Win,
as an example, I had to go through about 5 different load combinations, to finally
get a 130 gr load that consistently shot 1 MOA. Also, the Remington was a little
fussier about how the forearm screw was tightened. If I got it too tight, the groups
opened up some. I disassembled the BAR several times to clean it and have not
had the groups open up, and I have taken little care to tighten up the forearm
scew to a specific torque. Actually the Browning came out of the box, shooting
some plain jane 150 gr, Hornady SPBT bullets over some average velocity loads,
into 1 MOA groups. I load several other .30 cal guns with Barnes, and Nosler,
bullets, so I will work up some premium loads, for the BAR, over winter, but for
this season, I will be shooting these plain jane loads, since they group so pretty.
I never had problems with the 7400/742 Remingtons jamming, as some have, but
I once spent some time in Arctic conditions, in the military, so I know how to keep
a rifle functioning in cold weather. And I am very fussy about cleanliness, and
proper lubrication. From my short experience, with the BAR, given what I see
in the operating mechanism, I believe I will not have any problems with the BAR,
either. As for a "brush" gun, every time I pull this new BAR LW Stalker off the
rack, my love affair deepens :grin:
I still have a 760 Remington, in .30-06 Sprg, that belonged to my father, that I
will never sell, and only occasionally hunt, but I believe going forward, any new
"brush" guns will be a BAR. I have not warmed up to the "Short-Trac" look,
but maybe I just need to shoot one, and that could change. I am not much for
pretty, except if the gun can shoot pretty groups :lol: With all of this said,
if some one wanted a good "Brush" gun, and wanted a semi-auto, and was
on a tight budget, I would not hesitate to suggest a Remington 7400. I would
caution them, if they planned on doing a lot of shooting, then maybe saving
longer for the BAR, would be a better value. In my expereince, the Remington
7400/742 will eventually fall off accuracy wise, but in most people's useage,
it will last a life time. I probably shoot my rifles 2 to 4 times more often than
"most people". Having a range on my property, and always tinkering with loads,
runs the total of rounds fired up on most of my rifles. If one shoots 20 to 40
rounds a year, for scope zero checks/practice, and hunting, a properly maintained
7400 would be good for at least 25 years before I would expect to see the groups
open up some. And even then, it would still be plenty fine for shooting Minute
of Deer. I am kind of spoiled, since I have several AR-15's, that shoot well
under 1 MOA, and now I have a BAR, that looks like it will be at least a 1 MOA
semi auto, with a variety of load combinations.
I do like semi autos for brush guns. Not having to break a fluid swing,
to cycle an action, has factored heavily for more than one fast moving whitetail,
to end up hanging at my hunting camp. This soft shooting .308 Win. BAR
swings SOOOO sweet!
Squeeze