Penyard
Well-Known Member
Hi Guys,
As per title, I'm not looking for the Blaser haters to jump in but am interested to know if I am unique in have a Blaser R8 that just refuses to shoot well along with another annoying gremlin whereby with certain loads the safety catch comes on when fired.
It is a standard R8 Professional and I have 2 barrels for it. The .243 standard barrel is fussy but it shoots well enough and no issues with safety catch. The .30-06 semi-weight fluted barrel chambered in .30-06 is where the trouble starts. When I first acquired the barrel I worked up a load using 180gr Norma Oryx for a boar hunting trip a couple of years ago and eventually got it shooting about MOA (probably > MOA if I'm honest) but accurate enough for driven boar. I have since failed to work up an accurate load that I am 100% happy with using a multitude of components. Neither have a I found a factory load that will shoot close to MOA in it. The latest instalment in this sorry saga being to try and work up a load using 130gr Barnes TTSX as I am on my journey to non-toxic and was determined the invest the time and effort in to working up a load I would be happy with for this rifle which I really want to be an accurate all rounder that I can use for deer and the odd boar instead of my heavier rifles in other calibres. I achieved the velocity I desired for the Barnes bullets with no signs of pressure but then the rifle started putting the safety catch on when fired, even on mild loads way off max. The rifle was sent off under warranty and, eventually, returned with a new bolt assembly but with confirmation that it had been test fired with my original bolt and that there had been no sign of the safety catch issue that I had been experiencing. Regardless, the bolt assembly had been replaced FOC under warranty anyway just in case so fair enough, hopefully problem solved! Sadly not, First time back on the bench and no issues with Sako Factory although the groups were very poor and when I fired the Barnes home loads the safety catch came back on with most firings.
Next chapter is that I decide to abandon the Barnes 130gr TTSX and embark with fresh enthusiasm on a load development with 130gr Fox which I am reliably informed are prone to shoot better than Barnes. First development with N140 resulted in poor groups but no safety catch issue. Latest development with RL15 resulted in poor groups with intermittent safety catch issue even on the milder loads.
I appreciate that I have no leg to stand on with warranty as I am using home loads but am at a complete loss as to what is going on here. I am using loads below book and QL max, working up carefully in sensible increments using a chronograph and the issue occurs in some instances well below max and I have no signs whatsoever of excessive pressure even on the top weight loads. What makes the issue even more baffling is that the safety catch issue does not happen when firing 180gr bullets (factory and reloads) with the much greater recoil so it cannot be a product of just recoil but rather (I'm guessing?) resonance and recoil combined.
So we have a weird issue with the safety catch that seems to manifest itself (so far) only with 130gr non-toxic bullets with RL15 powder.
I am a reasonably experienced reloader having been taught well by an expert 15 years ago and have worked up many accurate loads for many calibres during my time. I suspect that it will be possible (with further effort) to work up a load that I am happy with accuracy wise and hope that a different bullet weight and powder combination do not cause the highly annoying safety catch issue! I am off to Newent shortly to HPS and intend to buy 20 Factory loaded Fox 150gr to see how they shoot and in the hope that they are somewhere close and I can then copy that load with possible refinements achievable.
Not sure if this would be better in the reloading section but post it here as I am really looking to establish if I am the only one who has experienced the bolt/safety catch issue and if anybody has any ideas on either that or the pursuit of an accurate non-toxic load.
Many thanks
Penyard
As per title, I'm not looking for the Blaser haters to jump in but am interested to know if I am unique in have a Blaser R8 that just refuses to shoot well along with another annoying gremlin whereby with certain loads the safety catch comes on when fired.
It is a standard R8 Professional and I have 2 barrels for it. The .243 standard barrel is fussy but it shoots well enough and no issues with safety catch. The .30-06 semi-weight fluted barrel chambered in .30-06 is where the trouble starts. When I first acquired the barrel I worked up a load using 180gr Norma Oryx for a boar hunting trip a couple of years ago and eventually got it shooting about MOA (probably > MOA if I'm honest) but accurate enough for driven boar. I have since failed to work up an accurate load that I am 100% happy with using a multitude of components. Neither have a I found a factory load that will shoot close to MOA in it. The latest instalment in this sorry saga being to try and work up a load using 130gr Barnes TTSX as I am on my journey to non-toxic and was determined the invest the time and effort in to working up a load I would be happy with for this rifle which I really want to be an accurate all rounder that I can use for deer and the odd boar instead of my heavier rifles in other calibres. I achieved the velocity I desired for the Barnes bullets with no signs of pressure but then the rifle started putting the safety catch on when fired, even on mild loads way off max. The rifle was sent off under warranty and, eventually, returned with a new bolt assembly but with confirmation that it had been test fired with my original bolt and that there had been no sign of the safety catch issue that I had been experiencing. Regardless, the bolt assembly had been replaced FOC under warranty anyway just in case so fair enough, hopefully problem solved! Sadly not, First time back on the bench and no issues with Sako Factory although the groups were very poor and when I fired the Barnes home loads the safety catch came back on with most firings.
Next chapter is that I decide to abandon the Barnes 130gr TTSX and embark with fresh enthusiasm on a load development with 130gr Fox which I am reliably informed are prone to shoot better than Barnes. First development with N140 resulted in poor groups but no safety catch issue. Latest development with RL15 resulted in poor groups with intermittent safety catch issue even on the milder loads.
I appreciate that I have no leg to stand on with warranty as I am using home loads but am at a complete loss as to what is going on here. I am using loads below book and QL max, working up carefully in sensible increments using a chronograph and the issue occurs in some instances well below max and I have no signs whatsoever of excessive pressure even on the top weight loads. What makes the issue even more baffling is that the safety catch issue does not happen when firing 180gr bullets (factory and reloads) with the much greater recoil so it cannot be a product of just recoil but rather (I'm guessing?) resonance and recoil combined.
So we have a weird issue with the safety catch that seems to manifest itself (so far) only with 130gr non-toxic bullets with RL15 powder.
I am a reasonably experienced reloader having been taught well by an expert 15 years ago and have worked up many accurate loads for many calibres during my time. I suspect that it will be possible (with further effort) to work up a load that I am happy with accuracy wise and hope that a different bullet weight and powder combination do not cause the highly annoying safety catch issue! I am off to Newent shortly to HPS and intend to buy 20 Factory loaded Fox 150gr to see how they shoot and in the hope that they are somewhere close and I can then copy that load with possible refinements achievable.
Not sure if this would be better in the reloading section but post it here as I am really looking to establish if I am the only one who has experienced the bolt/safety catch issue and if anybody has any ideas on either that or the pursuit of an accurate non-toxic load.
Many thanks
Penyard