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Rosco
05-17-2015, 11:15 PM
So in a nutshell here is the story, I have had an Axis action from a 22-250 for quite a while. The original plan was to use it as a donor for a 6.5 Creedmore build. Unfortunately, finances didn’t pan out the way I had hoped and had set to the side. Then about 2 months ago a friend with 65 acres right outside of Shelbyville KY, let me know that I was welcome to come hunt on their property for all manner of Varmints including Coyotes, Raccoons, Fox and Bobcat and whatever else. Needless to say, I was pleased. I have a Savage 93R17 HMR which I am very happy with and would have been fine , but truth is I just wanted something with some more zing to it and that I had built myself.

Enter the Varmint Cartridges. Now I don’t have a ton experience with these, and there were quite a few that I was interested in including a 220 Swift, which I found out needed a long action, .223, 22-250ai, 204 Ruger, 222 Remington and a few others. Hadn’t narrowed it down to anything specific but while doing all this research and trying to decide on which one I wanted, ran across a pretty good deal on a barrel on Ebay for a .204 Ruger. So that was easy!!

The Build:

Primary Purpose: Varmint hunting specifically Coyote, Bobcat, Fox , etc..up to and around 200-250yds. Also, would be used for some paper punching practice at the range out to about 350yds.

Rifle System Components:

Stock: Boyd's Pro-Varmint Custom 12 ¾ LOP
Barrel: 24’’ Stainless Steel Fluted 1:9 Twist threaded 1/2x28 tpi
Muzzle Break: Ross Schuler
Barrel Nut: Stainless Standard Savage
Trigger: Rifle Basix SAV-1
Trigger Guard: Stainless Steel Boyd’s
Action: Stainless Steel Savage Axis (previously a .22-250)
Bolt Handle: Stainless Steel Glades Armory with crosshatch pattern. The one made for the Axis with primary extraction.
Scope Mounts: SS DNZ Hunt Reaper
Scope: BSA Tactical Mil-Dot Rifle Scope 30mm Tube 6-24x 44mm Side Focus Glass Etched Mil-Dot Reticle Matte

Costs including taxes and shipping.

Original Axis: $285.14
Rebate: $50.00
Sold Stock: $35.00
Sold Barrel: $70.00

204 Ruger Parts:

Axis Action: $130.14
Barrel: $162.99
Muzzle Break: $45.00
Boyd's Pro-Varmint Stock: $154.00
Glades Armory Bolt Handle: $70.99
Scope Mounts: $73.82
Go and No Go Gauges: $8.00 Rented
Bolt Head: $36.12
Trigger: $89.00
Mag and Follower: $47.00
Scope: $130.00

Total Cost: $964.06

http://i263.photobucket.com/albums/ii157/hcoltrain/Mobile%20Uploads/Ruger%20204%20Axis/IMAG0806.jpg

Rosco
05-17-2015, 11:21 PM
The scope rings are wrong in this picture, and I am missing the mag, but you get it! :smile-new:

Rosco
05-17-2015, 11:26 PM
Rifle Assembly Steps


Clean and Polish Barrel and Receiver
Remove Axis Trigger and Install SAV-1 Trigger
Remove .478 Bolt Head and add .223 bolt head for headspacing.
Assemble barreled action and headspace
Disassemble bolt and clean and lube
Add new bolt handle and assembled .223 bolt head.
Stock modifications, install Pillars and Bed(More on this later)
Install SS Trigger guard.
Install Scope Mounts.
Mount Scope
Install and Time Muzzle Break


Step 1
So when I got the barrel it had quite a few scratches probably from field use. Some were very minor but two of them were noticeable to point it was affecting my OCD. These needed to be removed!! Also, there was a small burr on the threads for the break and some unbeknownst sticky gunk near the shank.

http://i263.photobucket.com/albums/ii157/hcoltrain/Mobile%20Uploads/Ruger%20204%20Axis/IMAG0809.jpg

http://i263.photobucket.com/albums/ii157/hcoltrain/Mobile%20Uploads/Ruger%20204%20Axis/IMAG0807_1.jpg

Time for a cleaning, so took the barrel, soaked it in some scalding hot water along with the receiver and barrel nut. Added some Dawn liquid soap with and cleaned up the barrel, muzzle, nut and receiver threads with a Nylon brush and used some Scotch-Brite to remove whatever that stuff was. Then used a towel to dry them off and used a hair dryer at high power to make sure I got all the moisture out.

The polish came next; really I just wanted to remove the scratches as I wasn’t looking to buff it up for a high luster look. After searching around the ole’ internet to find what might work best without causing any damage the finish this is what I came up with. '

http://i263.photobucket.com/albums/ii157/hcoltrain/Mobile%20Uploads/Ruger%20204%20Axis/IMAG0836.jpg

http://i263.photobucket.com/albums/ii157/hcoltrain/Mobile%20Uploads/Ruger%20204%20Axis/IMAG0837.jpg


These were purchased on Amazon, got two of them, for $5.99 each from Sally’s Beauty Supply. You can see that it has 4 different sections each one progressively getting finer. Not exactly sure what grit they correspond to but I would guess somewhere along the lines of 1000, 1500, 2000 and 3000 . So started with the coarsest, and moved to the finer one by one. Each scratch only took about 10 minutes to remove, so hell I just went over the rest of the barrel as well, and I couldn’t be more pleased, and also, used this to remove the small burr on the muzzle thread. It was like magic!!

http://i263.photobucket.com/albums/ii157/hcoltrain/Mobile%20Uploads/Ruger%20204%20Axis/IMAG0843.jpg

Rosco
05-17-2015, 11:30 PM
Step 2
Removing the original Axis Trigger and installing the SAV-1 for the most part was a breeze. Added some Blue LockTite to the screws and checked my pull weight. After having used the standard Axis trigger, without any mods, the SAV-1 was an immediate joy. I don’t own a Trigger pull gauge, so I couldn’t fine tune, but I imagine it is coming in somewhere around 2lbs which is fine by me. If there was one thing that got under my skin it would have be that **** E-Clip, it was one the two things in this build which just annoyed the hell outta me. At least once it shot across the room, and I ended up crawling around at 1 in the morning till I found it.

http://i263.photobucket.com/albums/ii157/hcoltrain/Mobile%20Uploads/Ruger%20204%20Axis/IMAG0851.jpg

http://i263.photobucket.com/albums/ii157/hcoltrain/Mobile%20Uploads/Ruger%20204%20Axis/IMAG0850.jpg

With Trigger and new Glades Armory Bolt Handled installed.

http://i263.photobucket.com/albums/ii157/hcoltrain/Mobile%20Uploads/Ruger%20204%20Axis/IMAG0868.jpg

You see their is no E-Clip in this picture, because I was still looking for it!!

Rosco
05-17-2015, 11:35 PM
Step 3
I decided to go ahead and headspace with the extractor and ejector not installed. So removed the original bolt head, added the .223 bolt head and reassembled. Went off without any problems.

http://i263.photobucket.com/albums/ii157/hcoltrain/Mobile%20Uploads/Ruger%20204%20Axis/IMAG0816.jpg


http://i263.photobucket.com/albums/ii157/hcoltrain/Mobile%20Uploads/Ruger%20204%20Axis/IMAG0838.jpg

Rosco
05-17-2015, 11:41 PM
Step 4.
Got everything staged, put the barrel in the vise, added some Kroil and Anti-Seize onto the barrel threads, since I figured this was going to be removed here in the future. Screwed the action onto the barrel most of the way then inserted the .204 Go Gauge and tightened it till it was snug. Next, put the bolt in made sure it would close, ever so tightly on the gauge. Then inserted the No-Go and found it only would run down about 20 degrees before it would not close. Screwed the barrel nut on, took the barrel wrench and started to tighten. As I was doing this I was thinking how easy this was! Right up until, I was tightening it down it and threw it off just a little. Now had to do this process all over again, but this time, I held the action/barrel more tightly and when it was screwed in and then took a mallet to it and gave it good whack to make sure it was nice and tight.

http://i263.photobucket.com/albums/ii157/hcoltrain/Mobile%20Uploads/Ruger%20204%20Axis/IMAG0869.jpg

Rosco
05-17-2015, 11:52 PM
Step 5 and 6

So re-disassembled the bolt, cleaned it with hot soap and water and wiped the parts down, turned on the oven at 175 degrees and cooked the parts for about 20 minutes. Next was the fun part, I mean how much you can really say about bolt assemblies!! Normally, it would be a real snoozer except for the good times I had installing the extractor ball bearing. I mean seriously wtf, those freaking videos and tutorials make it look so **** easy. Even inside a freezer bag, the little sucker shot out onto floor. It got so bad; I decided it had to be done in the kitchen which had a hardwood floor, so when it took off on me I could hear it hit the floor and at least kind of somewhat follow where it went. Finally, after 5-6 tries, I quit counting, she went it in. Installing the ejector was not nearly as bad. lol

http://i263.photobucket.com/albums/ii157/hcoltrain/Mobile%20Uploads/Ruger%20204%20Axis/IMAG0835.jpg

Lastly, I lubricated with some Break Free, wiped the parts down lightly and added some White Lithium grease to mating surfaces( cocking ramp, extractor, bolt heads etc..)

Rosco
05-18-2015, 12:02 AM
Now that the barreled action was ready to go I wanted to see how she fit in the Pro-Varmint stock. The first try didn't go so well, it ended up looking like this with the action not being able to seat into the stock.


http://i263.photobucket.com/albums/ii157/hcoltrain/Mobile%20Uploads/Ruger%20204%20Axis/IMAG0832.jpg

At first I thought it had something to do with the stock or maybe even the trigger, but upon closer inspection the culprit was this pin sticking out.

http://i263.photobucket.com/albums/ii157/hcoltrain/Mobile%20Uploads/Ruger%20204%20Axis/IMAG0831.jpg

Go out the punch tools and the mallet and lightly got it back in place.

Rosco
05-18-2015, 12:19 AM
Once this was done, the action fit right into the stock without issue. It was however, to snug for my tastes, but I went ahead and tightened it down to 35in/lbs just to check. My biggest concern was that when tightened that the wood might crack around the action screw holes, but luckily that didn't happen. My plan is to add pillars, bed, and open up the barrel channel just a little bit. When it was purchased, I ordered the heavy barrel version which I knew might still need some work, but that is fine.

Now since I had rented the headspace gauges from 4-d, and needed to get them back. I was worried that I may have made a mistake when headspacing, so I wanted to go to the range and put 20 or so rounds down the tube just to make sure their were no problems. And if their were, this would allow at least a few days to correct before I had to send them back. So I went ahead and mounted to DNZ Hunt Reaper and the BSA scope. And Off to Knob Creek I went...

Rosco
05-18-2015, 12:35 AM
Before I get into the order in which I did this. What I wanted to do was, an accuracy test per se, and have I it go like this. First, check the accuracy/precision of the rifle with no muzzle break, no pillars and no bedding. Then add in one at a time and see if any of these made any significant difference. But the primary reason for being at the range was to ensure the rifle operated correctly.

http://i263.photobucket.com/albums/ii157/hcoltrain/Mobile%20Uploads/Ruger%20204%20Axis/IMAG0894.jpg

http://i263.photobucket.com/albums/ii157/hcoltrain/Mobile%20Uploads/Ruger%20204%20Axis/IMAG0893.jpg



http://i263.photobucket.com/albums/ii157/hcoltrain/Mobile%20Uploads/Ruger%20204%20Axis/IMAG0892.jpg



Set my target up at 50yds, loaded up the first round, pulled the trigger and it didn't blow up in my face!! Hell yeah!! The cartridge ejected just as it should, the bolt lift was perfect and the case looked fine. So I was pretty happy, figured why not a try a few more just to be sure, hell I have 40 rds, right!!

Rosco
05-18-2015, 12:49 AM
Fired off a few more rounds and decided to give a few groups a try.

Here is the first target the ones on the right were my first shots, then the 3 shot group in the middle was when I started. It measured 0.37. Maybe that was a fluke I thought, so out to 100yds it went. The first group at one hundred are the three across the top and came in at 0.67.

http://i263.photobucket.com/albums/ii157/hcoltrain/Mobile%20Uploads/Ruger%20204%20Axis/IMAG0898%201.jpg

Rosco
05-18-2015, 12:57 AM
Then out to 200..

I shot 2 three shot groups and one 2 shot before the RO called time on me. We had a pretty stiff 15mph wind gust blowing from left to right and as you can see the bullets spread out accordingly. The vertical spread is fantastic, and truth was I wasn't adjusting for wind, so I wasn't disappointed. Let the wind calm down and shot the 3 shot group which came in at 0.55 center to center.


http://i263.photobucket.com/albums/ii157/hcoltrain/Mobile%20Uploads/Ruger%20204%20Axis/IMAG0897.jpg

The ammo used was 40gr Hornady Superperformance V-max.

Rosco
05-18-2015, 01:01 AM
More updates to come...

Scalian
05-18-2015, 01:09 AM
Looks like you will have a nice rifle when you get all done. I think that you will find there is no recoil what so ever and a muzzle break really isn't needed.

DrThunder88
05-18-2015, 03:23 AM
Well done! Interesting choice for polishing. I've seen those or similar tools for nails but never thought about them being used for anything but polishing keratin!

Rosco
05-18-2015, 08:50 AM
Thanks guys I appreciate it. The rifle is a little bit heavier than I would have preferred but that does help cut down on the recoil which makes it about equivalent to my 17 HMR as it stands. And you are correct I really don't need a muzzle break it was just one of those why not scenarios.

As for the polishing I wish I could take credit for that idea because it's pretty clever but I saw it over in another thread on long range hunting I believe.

drybean
05-18-2015, 10:05 AM
Great Job

03mossy
05-18-2015, 10:15 AM
Nice write up and a very nice rifle you built yourself!

Rosco
05-18-2015, 02:15 PM
Thanks ...Drybean and Moss.

BarrelNuts
05-18-2015, 10:16 PM
Good looking stick and nice shooting!