
A little about me:
I have been involved in the shooting sport for a very long time. I always liked guns but also took into account the safety, handling, and proper use of guns. I cannot stress this enough. About a decade ago I got myself a Remington PCR. I took that to the range and was instantly drawn to the precision and accuracy aspect. That rifle shot so well right out of the box my head was spinning. And that was with factory ammo. I thought at the time that a 1 or 2 MOA group at 100 yards was great. Little did I know how much an improvement could be made by reloading yourself.
So I went down that rabbit hole and did so much research, and found so much conflicting advice. I had to learn and decipher everything. I took the plunge and started buying equipment and watching hundreds of Youtube videos. There are some good ones, but most don't cover theory and why and why not. I built a very sturdy bench and dedicated one side of my basement to this alone. So for a year or so I was buying equipment was replacing it all along with better equipment and the groups were shrinking to 1/2 MOA now. I was quite impresses with myself:) Although I did learn one important factor: Buy the best equipment right from the beginning. Pay once, cry once:)
Then I went all out and built my first F-Class rifle. You can find the details of that here. It was chambered for .284 Winchester and I started competing at the range I belong to. This was at 300 yards as it is the longest they had. I noticed most of the guys were shooting 6BR and my .284 was just too much for 300 yards. So I got a barrel chambered in 6BR, since the boldface is the same, and this rifle became a switch barrel. So the rest is history. I am now down to 1/4" to 1/8" MOA and still improving. If any of you are planning a gun build, please take into account that it takes a year or more to get all your parts.
So if you want to learn in an enjoyable way, with feedback from me and viewers, join us on Youtube. Lets have some fun and educate ourselves in finding that center "X" on the target!

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