Rifle shot out?

Personally I would check the scope and rings then take it to a rifle Smith get the barrel bore scoped first for your piece of mind .
Then let them carry on with it if it's not the barrel .
Could just be a simple fix
 
you’re right. I wouldn’t sell it knowing it doesn’t hold zero. But as a donor action if that is a thing, fine.

i think it is the lack of Metal end cap. I’ve tried all sorts. The business cards u der the barrel got it grouping at 2”. I shot a red with it near home and a few roe up north but it has been in the cabinet for 12-18 months And the next time I use it the poi has moved a foot and the group is 8 inches.

they can’t all be like this or no one would use them in Europe like they do. I don’t think Stutzens a flawed fundamentally but this one has a problem. I’m not emotionally attached to it and can’t use it on game so will replace.
Now have the faff with variation for the same calibre which I hadn’t realised.

A 1-for-1 isn't really a faff. Simple form, no payment, no FEO visit. Dependingwhere you live, shouldn't take long either. Just bear in mind that that some FLD put a seven-day time limit for a free variation (although I believe the HOG don't mention any time limit?).
 
My research showed you had to be pretty committed to a rifle to rebarrel as the cost usually is comparable to a pretty decent rifle
 
Would it be possible to get a cheap/loan stock to fit the action that really floated the barrel and find out what happened then? If it shoots then at least you know where the problem lies. Another option would be to do what people used to do with Lee Enfields in Africa years ago, cut it down (butcher it) into an ordinary stock.

David.
 
I run a business card down the length of the barrel/stock right to the action & you can feel if the stock tightens against the barrel.
If it tightens & doesn't allow the card right down smoothly without interference, it's usually where the problem is found.
If there is interference, it will upset barrel harmonics when shots are fired & throw the bullets from the expected POI.

The next thing I'd do is strip the action out of the stock & check the barrel & action for witness marks where the wood interferes with the stock.
If you see signs of witness marks, remove wood from the inner stock to ensure it's allowing the barrel to completely free float.
Re-assemble, check the card runs smoothly to the action & test.

I've found this to be a problem twice before in Steyr Mannlicher stutzens and completely resolved the problem.
 
You say the action is smooth and you like that aspect of the gun. Why not rebarrel and put it in a different stock? Using a take off barrel and used stock would keep the cost fairly low, certainly no more than buying a mid range new one which will be built to a budget with modern (read corner cutting) methods.
 
The cost to re-barrel a rifle £600 upwards.
The cost of a new Mauser M18 (10 year manufacturers warranty) just under £600. :-|
That would depend on many variables. But I didn’t pay that much for mine and I ended up with a better than factory rifle.

There are plenty of secondhand ie “take off” barrels in the right chambering and with plenty of life left in them. Sat around in gunsmiths workshops. The cost will vary but it will be far less than a new barrel.
If you take out the cost of chambering, you have to check head spacing if it is good (your lucky) it saves some more money. If not you have some machine time setup and cutting to suit. Followed by proof which is a fixed cost regardless of what you get.

In this case I would be more inclined to think that it is either a victim of rust.
Or more likely something is loose. If it were mine I would strip it out of the stock and put it back together checking the correct torque and alignment as I did. The last thing if all that was correct would be to suspect the scope, uncommon but not unheard of. But a known good scope substituted would check that.
 
I priced around a few years back when I needed to replace the barrel on a rifle and the cheapest re-barrel (new barrel) was £600 plus. I didn't consider a used barrel. It was cheaper for me to buy a new budget rifle.

I agree with your approach to dealing with this rifle and that is exactly what I would do in the first instance well before coming to any conclusion about the barrel being shot out. Examine and eliminate.

However if the final conclusion is to re-barrel or replace this is how I would look at it.
£600 for a new rifle with a ten year manufacturers warranty equals £60 per year of what should be trouble free shooting.
£60 equals 19 pints of beer per year.
After 10 years of use you will still have a rifle sitting in the cabinet.
After 10 years of drinking 19 pints of beer a year the best you will have is a p**s stain on the wall. :)
 
I priced around a few years back when I needed to replace the barrel on a rifle and the cheapest re-barrel (new barrel) was £600 plus. I didn't consider a used barrel. It was cheaper for me to buy a new budget rifle.

I agree with your approach to dealing with this rifle and that is exactly what I would do in the first instance well before coming to any conclusion about the barrel being shot out. Examine and eliminate.

However if the final conclusion is to re-barrel or replace this is how I would look at it.
£600 for a new rifle with a ten year manufacturers warranty equals £60 per year of what should be trouble free shooting.
£60 equals 19 pints of beer per year.
After 10 years of use you will still have a rifle sitting in the cabinet.
After 10 years of drinking 19 pints of beer a year the best you will have is a p**s stain on the wall. :)
I don’t disagree with your reasoning. After all rifles and particularly the barrel are a perishable item. You use it till it wears out and replace all or parts thereof.
The quality of new off the shelf rifles does make a rebarrel job questionable on face value price alone.
I suppose I am spoiled by having a riflesmith within reasonable distance who has always had something that suited me and my budget at the time.
You can I believe buy off the shelf Mauser barrels from Walther that are pre chambered that compare well in the price stakes to other blanks. But it is the ‘smith’s time that adds up to a fair lump of the bill. So one of these or a good condition secondhand barrel. Which I was led to believe there’s usually a few available due to the action being used for customers after the controlled feed action for their build.
I probably wouldn’t bother with a custom job unless I was keeping it as a Stutzen or maybe going for sentimental reasons. Unless I could find something at the right price to tempt me otherwise.
 
I’m hoping for some advice from anyone who has been in this position before please.
I have a Zastava 308 Stutzen which I think has reached the end of its life. I bought it three yrs ago and had the devil of a job getting it zeroed well enough to hunt with. I sorted the stock problem ( it lacks end cap so never fully floating OR securely clamped)

last time I zeroed it was 2-3 in groups at 100yd which was just about ok. I’ve taken several deer with it but sometimes shot placement was not as I expected and I had my doubts so I just used it for running deer targets at the h4h days.

a nice sunny day today so took it with me to test and do some gong shooting between stalks and found poi a foot low and had six rounds widely spread apart. Some pairs went 4” apart. The next or an inch and the third or a few inches again. I think that’s it for me. I definitely can’t shoot deer with it like this, and I’ve spent far more on cartridges trying to get it right than it cost me. (£100) it is about 40 yrs old or more and belonged to a retired forestry ranger: it has had a lot
Of use.
In the photo I have numbered each pair of shots. Ignore the holes nr the mark, they are from last time I used the target with the 243.

it was a ‘starter stutzen’. I’d always wanted one and nearly swapped/sold my silver pigeon for a lovely männlicher Stutzen but thought I’d try a cheap one and if I love having one get something better later.


to get to the point, does my experience above suggest a worn barrel?
And, if so, how does one dispose of a rifle. The Mauser action is lovely and smooth and it closes like a safe. I don’t know anything about customs but it might be that scrapping it it a waste and someone could use it as a base for a new rifle. But I don’t know enough about that.

I’m sure I could go to a gun shop and ask them to scrap it. That would be my first option, I imagine they write it off your ticket and I notify the police. But can I then go and buy another 308? It seems logical that scrapping a rifle opens up a slot in that calibre.

i no longer enjoy the noise of 18” barrelled unmoderated rifles so may look at Bergara single shot or a short bolt action. I’ve loved using a short, light 308 and would like that again but in something with a mod but still some character.

Sorry for the jackanory, in summary, is a wandering poi a sign of a worn out rifle? And does anyone know the process for getting rid of one before buying another of the same calibre.
Thank you chaps.
If the loss of accuracy was sudden it does not suggest a worn barrel. Cracked stock, poor bedding. loose scope and mounts, faulty scope etc . With all the rifles which I have shot out, the first thing to go is accuracy with streamlined or boattail bullets. I have managed to keep them going by changing to round nose bullets with long bearing surfaces. This has been strikingly successful! ( 2x .308, .300 Win Mag, and 7mm Rem Mag.
 
I’m hoping for some advice from anyone who has been in this position before please.
I have a Zastava 308 Stutzen which I think has reached the end of its life. I bought it three yrs ago and had the devil of a job getting it zeroed well enough to hunt with. I sorted the stock problem ( it lacks end cap so never fully floating OR securely clamped)

last time I zeroed it was 2-3 in groups at 100yd which was just about ok. I’ve taken several deer with it but sometimes shot placement was not as I expected and I had my doubts so I just used it for running deer targets at the h4h days.

a nice sunny day today so took it with me to test and do some gong shooting between stalks and found poi a foot low and had six rounds widely spread apart. Some pairs went 4” apart. The next or an inch and the third or a few inches again. I think that’s it for me. I definitely can’t shoot deer with it like this, and I’ve spent far more on cartridges trying to get it right than it cost me. (£100) it is about 40 yrs old or more and belonged to a retired forestry ranger: it has had a lot
Of use.
In the photo I have numbered each pair of shots. Ignore the holes nr the mark, they are from last time I used the target with the 243.

it was a ‘starter stutzen’. I’d always wanted one and nearly swapped/sold my silver pigeon for a lovely männlicher Stutzen but thought I’d try a cheap one and if I love having one get something better later.


to get to the point, does my experience above suggest a worn barrel?
And, if so, how does one dispose of a rifle. The Mauser action is lovely and smooth and it closes like a safe. I don’t know anything about customs but it might be that scrapping it it a waste and someone could use it as a base for a new rifle. But I don’t know enough about that.

I’m sure I could go to a gun shop and ask them to scrap it. That would be my first option, I imagine they write it off your ticket and I notify the police. But can I then go and buy another 308? It seems logical that scrapping a rifle opens up a slot in that calibre.

i no longer enjoy the noise of 18” barrelled unmoderated rifles so may look at Bergara single shot or a short bolt action. I’ve loved using a short, light 308 and would like that again but in something with a mod but still some character.

Sorry for the jackanory, in summary, is a wandering poi a sign of a worn out rifle? And does anyone know the process for getting rid of one before buying another of the same calibre.
Thank you chaps.
First prove your scope ie fit another proven optic. I would then check action screws and float. If all is well with those it looks like a new barrel .
Barrel ware is usualy a progresive deterioration in accuracy and not a sudden leap off the cliff.
Good luck.
 
Get it looked at by a rifleSmith somebody who knows what there talking about.
As someone who has shot out a few barrels in my time ! shot our barrels usualy start throwing ( fliers ) randomly . you may have a good group of 5 or 6 then one fliere !! In a 308 that's a fair few rounds . As one post has said once you have lost your confidence in your rifle it's finished !!.
 
First prove your scope ie fit another proven optic. I would then check action screws and float. If all is well with those it looks like a new barrel .
Barrel ware is usualy a progresive deterioration in accuracy and not a sudden leap off the cliff.
Good luck.
I agree its nearly always progressive but I've seen it suddenly drop off the cliff in a couple of instances. One was with my Tikka 595 and the other was with a Sako 75.
 
Bore scope it - that will tell you. If you don't have one, this is a decent investment. Small enough to bore scope even a .22


If you want an idea what to look for:

 
If the bore isn't 100% toast, you could try lapping it with some JB Bore compound:


Do some google on this stuff for more info. Lots of videos on YouTube.
 
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I’m hoping for some advice from anyone who has been in this position before please.
I have a Zastava 308 Stutzen which I think has reached the end of its life. I bought it three yrs ago and had the devil of a job getting it zeroed well enough to hunt with. I sorted the stock problem ( it lacks end cap so never fully floating OR securely clamped)

last time I zeroed it was 2-3 in groups at 100yd which was just about ok. I’ve taken several deer with it but sometimes shot placement was not as I expected and I had my doubts so I just used it for running deer targets at the h4h days.

a nice sunny day today so took it with me to test and do some gong shooting between stalks and found poi a foot low and had six rounds widely spread apart. Some pairs went 4” apart. The next or an inch and the third or a few inches again. I think that’s it for me. I definitely can’t shoot deer with it like this, and I’ve spent far more on cartridges trying to get it right than it cost me. (£100) it is about 40 yrs old or more and belonged to a retired forestry ranger: it has had a lot
Of use.
In the photo I have numbered each pair of shots. Ignore the holes nr the mark, they are from last time I used the target with the 243.

it was a ‘starter stutzen’. I’d always wanted one and nearly swapped/sold my silver pigeon for a lovely männlicher Stutzen but thought I’d try a cheap one and if I love having one get something better later.


to get to the point, does my experience above suggest a worn barrel?
And, if so, how does one dispose of a rifle. The Mauser action is lovely and smooth and it closes like a safe. I don’t know anything about customs but it might be that scrapping it it a waste and someone could use it as a base for a new rifle. But I don’t know enough about that.

I’m sure I could go to a gun shop and ask them to scrap it. That would be my first option, I imagine they write it off your ticket and I notify the police. But can I then go and buy another 308? It seems logical that scrapping a rifle opens up a slot in that calibre.

i no longer enjoy the noise of 18” barrelled unmoderated rifles so may look at Bergara single shot or a short bolt action. I’ve loved using a short, light 308 and would like that again but in something with a mod but still some character.

Sorry for the jackanory, in summary, is a wandering poi a sign of a worn out rifle? And does anyone know the process for getting rid of one before buying another of the same calibre.
Thank you chaps.
Before deciding the barrel is done for why not replace any missing parts and clean the barrel until no copper fouling remains, do some shooting and check the results.
 
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