
Hi All!
I'm a newbie to this forum (but not to hunting and shooting). Recently, I purchased one of the new Ruger American Predator rifles chambered in 204 Ruger (see pic). This gun has a hammer-forged and tapered varmint barrel which is 22" long and has 1:12 RH twist. It utilizes the same "Power Bedding" system that Ruger uses in their standard American Rifle to free-float the barrel. I mounted a Simmons 44Mag 6-24X44 scope on my gun.
About a week ago, I shot it for the first time to sight in the scope. After consuming 1 box (20 rounds) of 40 grain Hornady V-max, I called it quits. I'd estimate my last 4-5 shots to have 1.5-2.0 MOA at 100 yds. Out of 20 shots, I had maybe 3-4 flyers that were completely dumbfounding. Keep in mind that I had a solid shooting table and gun rest. Shooting conditions were excellent (i.e. no wind). I am very confident about the rail and scope mount being secure. Likewise, I am confident about my shooting technique and abilities.
Perhaps my expectations regarding accuracy are unrealistic. I was hoping for sub MOA but at least 1 MOA at 100 yds. What is a reasonable expectation in terms of accuracy for this gun?
After a fair amount of research and reading, I saw where it was suggested that the 1:12 twist was borderline for 40 grain bullets. Is there any truth to this notion and could this explain both the flyers and unimpressive accuracy?
Also, I have read where a number of Ruger American Rifle owners have experienced fit and/or flexing problems associated with the synthetic stock. The problems are associated with the forestock area. Some of these folks have claimed that the forward rest point made a difference in their accuracy/consistency. Resting the gun near the end of the forestock created problems. Moving the rest point closer towards the magazine produced better results. I inspected my gun today and noticed there was little if any clearance between the barrel and an area on one side of the forestock. I tested clearance with a sheet of paper and confirmed there was some interference at the area in question. Could this explain the flyers and relatively poor accuracy?
I plan to test a lighter bullet (32 grain Hornady V-max) but am not optimistic at this point. Nevertheless, I will wait and see how the lighter bullets compare before I pass final judgement.
Any thoughts, ideas or recommendations?
Thanks and I look forward to reading your replies.
Big-D