A thorough review of the Noreen BN36 and demonstration.
Only Long Range: Noreen BN36 review
December 8, 2021
Reviews long range, Noreen 2 Comments
Managed Marksmanship
December 8, 2021
Reviews long range, Noreen 2 Comments
A thorough review of the Noreen BN36 and demonstration.
Anonymous
Dec 09, 2021 @ 00:09:09
First of all, fabled drill sergeant cleaning is destructive, more than helpful, especially in the bore of the barrel. I have seen them use drills for this!
Wondering how this rifle shoots heavier long bullets, such as Sierra 190/200, also Lapua 185. With 1/10 twist some rifles with these heavier bullets shoot the same size group at 200 as 100, but them minute of angle dispersion is half.
M-14/M1A famously did not like heavier bullets and would bend op rods if attempted. 168 was fine, likely Sierra 173/175 would be fine as well, but lighter bullets hurt performance at really longer ranges.
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John Buol
Dec 09, 2021 @ 08:28:41
>> First of all, fabled drill sergeant cleaning is destructive, more than helpful, especially in the bore of the barrel. I have seen them use drills for this!
Very true, unfortunately.
https://firearmusernetwork.com/moron-cleaning-guns-maintain/
https://firearmusernetwork.com/cleaning-guns/
https://firearmusernetwork.com/put-oil-on-it/
>> Wondering how this rifle shoots heavier long bullets, such as Sierra 190/200, also Lapua 185. With 1/10 twist some rifles with these heavier bullets shoot the same size group at 200 as 100, but them minute of angle dispersion is half.
Great questions that I’m unable to answer. I only had the rifle as a test item for one day of shooting.
>> M-14/M1A famously did not like heavier bullets and would bend op rods if attempted. 168 was fine, likely Sierra 173/175 would be fine as well, but lighter bullets hurt performance at really longer ranges.
One advantage of Stoner’s internal piston design is there is no op rod so it can’t be bent.
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