OFFHAND, I hope my wife gets home early today, after seeing your rifle I think I,m in love again. eastbank
Here's a head's up for 6BR competition shooters. Jim Carstensen of JLC Precision now offers his bullet seating die in 6BR. These are beautifully made chamber type (Wilson) seating dies with precise, micrometer type calibrated "click" adjustments. I've used his 6ppc seating dies for several years, as have many other benchrest shooters, and happy to have same in 6BR. JIm is an accomplished bench shooter himself and is a persnickety machinist.View attachment 776045
yeah, that guy is buying all the br brass coming into the country. kind of a pain for people who want to shoot br
They are already available in 6br, it's the one in the photo. If not in stock he can make it on order.I checked this out and it is very impressive. Cannot wait to see if he comes out with it in 6br.
Sorry, meant 6brx. Might be getting one made if I do indeed build this. thanxThey are already available in 6br, it's the one in the photo. If not in stock he can make it on order.
Very topical thread for me as I have a 6 Dasher in the works. The plan is to use it in F Open. Mid range to start. Long range later.
I aquired a previously owned Kelbly Panda action in a Kelbly stock as the basis for this project
Which model of Kelby? I am asking because I recently looked into f-class and found out they have specs on butt stock angle.
It’s a KTM with adjustable cheek rest and 3-way adjustable butt plate. I just read the rules again and didn’t see that restriction. I’ll go back and re-read it. I’ve only shot 2 F-T/R matches so far (got my 3rd coming up this weekend) so I’m no expert by any stretch
Just went to Kelbly site. Not seeing KTM. Could it be KTS? That stock is such a great beginning to a true competition build.
What will you be using for brass?
Going to be a charm.Sorry, yes, KTS stock
Haven't decided on brass yet.
Can you imagine having a customer base as anal as reloaders? They take every piece of your product, weigh it, measure thickness, concentricty, length, fill it with water, repeatedly subject it to extreme pressures, reform it, measure it again, Etc....
And we wonder why more companies aren't making brass for us in obscure chamberings