My friend Brad inherited his dad's BSA .222 when his dad died 5 years ago. He's been using it for foxes and four legged crop raiders under the spotlight but results have been inconsistent.
I suggested that unless completely shot out .222s are usually accurate enough for his intended use so something is probably amiss. I said bring it around and I'll have a look.
Sooooo....... it's an CF2, and is a typical cockies rifle that hasn't been coddled.
I haven't played with one of these before.
The bore was pretty ragged. Brad can't remember ever cleaning it, and apparently his dad wasn't big on gun maintenance. We ran quite a few patches through it a got some beautiful blue patches.
Shot some groups which were terrible.
Marcus
The crown looked a bit sad so took the barrelled action down to a clever fella to get an inch or so lopped off the end.
He took a look through it with the borescope and it was a waste of time, the barrel was completely stuffed.
Later he sectioned the barrel which tended to confirm his diagnosis (https://emoji.tapatalk-cdn.com/emoji1787.png)
So rebarrelling would be the only way to resurrect the old girl, but was it worth spending money on? I asked if he had any take off barrels that might suit.
The key constraint is the shank diameter on these BSAs - at 1.235" outer diameter, 1.115" outer thread diameter there are not many candidates.
After some head scratching and searching he did manage to dredge up an ex-F-class .224 cal barrel on a SMLE No.4 action which had enough meat and length. For the princely sum of $100 fitted it was too good an opportunity to pass up.
It took a few weeks for the work to get done, primarily because I hadn't taken the bolt down with the barrelled action. In the meantime I stripped the stock.
After stripping the old finish back, steaming dents, a light sanding and two coats of Tru-oil
Got the rebarrelled action back, adjusted the trigger, and put it back together - looks good with the heavy barrel.
Tried it out with a variety of factory loads and reloads and it is shooting much better and showing potential for more load development.
Marcus
Wow,... That's a peach!
Well done sir.
Jamie