How A Remington 700 Gunsmith Can Improve Weapon Accuracy

By Phyllis Schroeder


In order to any firearm to be the practical weapon of self-defense that it was designed to be, it must have precision and accuracy. Real fans of marksman shooting will seek after-market upgrades for their weapon in order to maximize the consistent accuracy of their weapon. True marksmen either are, or they seek a professional such as a Remington 700 gunsmith in order to bring out the best their gun can offer.

Professionals will tell you that maximizing accuracy in a firearm is delicate work, requiring the hand of an expert. In order for a shooter to consistently hit whatever target they aim upon, thus firing bullets in groups or clusters, precision is key. Even if one is firing an older revolver that tends to fire the bullet a few feet to the right, the distance off-center should be consistently the same distance.

There are a few factors involved, the first of which being the grip that one has on the weapon. Installation of a better grip which allows for comfortable holding without clenching the weapon is ideal. If the grip is comfortable then the shooter should be able to fire the weapon with a consistent degree of pressure.

When firing a rifle or an airgun, the vibrations traveling down the barrel can impact how the gun fires greatly. By minimizing the recoil, or harmonic effect, one is better able to control where the barrel is pointed at the moment the bullet exits. A longer barrel reduces the harmonic effect, resulting in less recoil, which ultimately helps prevent the shooter from becoming uptight or afraid of the weapon.

There is a level of kinetic energy which is lost with a longer barrel, however, and this loss of speed and power can mean a clean kill versus a messy injury to big-game hunters. In order to make up for the loss of speed, they will generally change the ammunition they use. An armor-piercing slug will do much more damage on impact than buck shot, but one is warned to make sure such ammunition is legal in their jurisdiction.

Creating the greatest tolerance in a firearm is an art to many gunsmiths, and they will cite this as reason enough for hiring a professional rather than attempting to obtain pinpoint accuracy by installing upgrades themselves. The tolerance means that the moving parts fit together so well that they have less shift under recoil. All guns must have moving parts, but getting these parts to move much less is the goal for anyone looking to fire round after round into a grouped cluster.

Consistency of the ammunition quality is a factor which surely cannot be ignored. Gun manufacturers have ammunition that they recommend because those bullets have shown themselves to perform consistently well with a particular weapon. This type of accuracy is more than adequate for most afficionados, leaving the high-precision professional shooter as the only one likely to hand-load ammunition of their own making.

With the best possible precision and accuracy, any experienced gun slinger should be able to achieve clusters on their target. This is especially true for those wise men and women who practice with a particular weapon on a regular basis. Having an expansive knowledge base about firearms is always good, but only an intimate relationship with a particular weapon is likely to result in true precision.




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