Not me, but honestly, I can't see why I would want them to ????? :-))
There are a bunch of custom bbls & bbl makers out there. Has anyone had Savage themselves rebarrel a rifle?
Not me, but honestly, I can't see why I would want them to ????? :-))
Well, you can do that if you want, no issue if you do.
But, with cost of having them do it, and the shipping costs, you could easily buy the action wrench, a go and a no go gauge, the nut wrench and a standard caliber barrel from lets say Midway, and still be money ahead. I have 4 different A&B barrels and they all shoot 1/2" at 100 yds with my loads.
They could do better than that, but I will not see it with my hunting style of reloading and shooting.
Then you also have the "tools" to keep barreling if you want.
Good luck, which ever way you choose.
Let him grow, Shoot a doe !
3/8" is a good group, but I put together a 250/3000 Savage using a A&B barrel I got on sale from Midway for $103 that has shot 3/8" groups. All my builds have shot 1/2" or less. That's the reason for the Savage System. So we can do it our selves.
Just Sayin :-))......Jim
Edit...I was posting at the same time as MM
Well the cost is reasonable, it was $373 including shipping from Savage to me.
I'm happy every bbl I priced & two gunsmith friends was right at $250 for a blank?
Well for the same money you could have had an aftermarket barrel that was hand lapped or for about 200 you could have had an aftermarket that was not hand lapped both of which are chambered, threaded and read to go with a better (usually) finish on the bore. Savage barrels are known for being accurate but also known for having a rough bore causing rapid copper build up and long cleaning times.
"And you shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.” John 8:32 (New King James Version)
I totally agree with the above. My OEM Savage barrels are very accurate, but I will probably use 25 patches during cleaning. Also I have to start with a bore brush.Savage barrels are known for being accurate but also known for having a rough bore causing rapid copper build up and long cleaning times.
On the aftermarket barrels, I just use chemicals, no brush, and 5 to 6 patches max to clean them up.
JMO, Dennis
Some folks are just not mechanically inclined as we tinkerers are so using Savage is an option there especially if you have a Savage you bought on the cheap or even free. The drawback to letting Savage do it is they will only use their barrels so you are stuck with what they have on the shelf at that time. I don't know what they charge labor & parts wise.
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