stagpanther
New member
I'm an ol fart with fading eyesight so shooting without a scope past 50 yds is difficult since at 100 I can't really see either the target or the sights with any clarity. It takes a while to get used to the sights and shooting the rifle with irons only, though I can generally get "minute of deer" reliably to 75 yds with irons, which is good enough for hunting the woods of Maine.
If you have a tumbling bullet that is a serious sign that the bullet is failing to stabilize--my guess is something is "putting a stopper" on the bullet trying to clear the bore with adequate velocity, or possibly not chambering concentrically correctly to begin with. The twist is more than enough to handle the 170 gr bullets. I'd consider changing up to a premium ammo while at the same time making sure your chamber and bore are clean as a whistle. If you see further signs of projectile destabilization--send the rifle back. I've had a couple of squibs in my time but have been lucky enough to clue into them by spotting for impacts. Of all the firearms malfunctions (and I've done/experienced a lot of them) a squib is what scares me the most.
If you have a tumbling bullet that is a serious sign that the bullet is failing to stabilize--my guess is something is "putting a stopper" on the bullet trying to clear the bore with adequate velocity, or possibly not chambering concentrically correctly to begin with. The twist is more than enough to handle the 170 gr bullets. I'd consider changing up to a premium ammo while at the same time making sure your chamber and bore are clean as a whistle. If you see further signs of projectile destabilization--send the rifle back. I've had a couple of squibs in my time but have been lucky enough to clue into them by spotting for impacts. Of all the firearms malfunctions (and I've done/experienced a lot of them) a squib is what scares me the most.