The Guns & Ammo Network



5 Steps to a Rifle Revamp

Want to turn your old deer gun into a tackdriver? Consider these five steps that are guaranteed to increase the accuracy of your rifle.

  • writerguide

    The importance of cleaning your rifle barrel is over played! Here is some radical info on my .338 WM rifle; I cleaned it once a year during the winter after use during severe weather. I shot that rifle almost daily the rest of the year, using Nosler bullets. I followed this routine for over 30 years and took unconscionable numbers of whitetails, blacktails and mule deer as well as over three dozen elk. Clean my rifle barrel, I guess not. The good shots and good hunters I know keep their rifle barrels fouled for hunting and load research/testing.

    • Jim In Oklahoma

      Amen. The reason for cleaning a bore is to protect it. If a good barrel is shot every day there is little reason to clean it. At Camp perry in the 1960s M1 actions were cleaned but the bore wasn't cleaned for over two weeks. The rifles shot well. What happens when several "fouling" shots are fired through a barrel–it's dirty again and it's shot while dirty.
      .22 rifles especially need little cleaning, as each shot removes some of the lubricant and leaves a fresh coat. Some outdoor prone competitors would clean after each twenty shot string plus fouling and zero shots. They would then shoot a number of shots into the backstop to "foul" the barrel.

    • K in Ohio

      Cleaning a firearm after every use was more important years ago when they used corrosive primers. I grew up in the 1950's. My father and grandpa were both stanch advocates of cleaning after every shooting session. I think that mindset is still prevalent today even though most people don't know or realise why..

    • PScott

      The reason it gets overplayed is the morons that NEVER clean it at all and then blame the rifle or brand etc

      Not saying you are wrong actually your comment made sense to me I think I remember my dad cleaning his deer shotgun once before the season started every year that was it since it got shot maybe 10 rounds per year

  • T Huntz

    Bedding a action/barrel can indeed prove to make a rifle shoot MUCH BETTER. I bedded my custom .280 with Devcon Putty. It's an aluminum based epoxy product and CUSTOM forms to your rifle instead of a generic aluminum bedding block. But then again most accuracy problems occur because of inadequate cleaning and also if you are NOT handloading, get in the business. You will be custom tailoring your ammo to that specific rifle. That's the MOST important part if you want to tighten up groups and have it perform with the "big dogs". You think they don't handload? Guess again