Douglas barrels

Salchi Papa

Beginner
Sep 16, 2024
100
141
I’m considering replacement of the barrels on 2 rifles; one is a 1968 Remington 700 270win and the other is a tikka t3 not a t3x in 30.06. I intend to keep the factory barrel lengths of 24 on the rem700 and 22 on the tikka. These are hunting rifles in central PA so I don’t need minute of gnats azz marksmanship but I do want good accuracy which I view as better than an inch at 100yds. I’m there now with both rifles however the tikka barrel is slightly pitted and only shoots 2 of my hand loads decently and the rem700 took a lot of time and effort and resources to find a decent loading that shoots just over an inch @100yds. For hunting these are both adequate but when was adequate ever satisfactory. I’m looking at Douglas barrels #3 contour and I also intend to keep the factory calibers on both. I know the reputation of Douglas barrels but I don’t know anyone locally who has one. I’m intending to send the rifles to them as well to have them fit the barrels to the rifles, there are plenty of gunsmiths around here but the one that was highly recommended to me didn’t do a great job silver soldering a sight back on my pre-64 Winchester 94 so I figured have the guys at Douglas do it since they probably know what they’re doing. What can you guys tell me about the barrels Douglas makes and is it worth sending my rifles to them as well. Thanks
 
I bought one, looks like it had been rifled with a hand held Dremmel tool. Un-F believable. Their simple response was we don’t hand-lap. No shit. Did a full treatment with Tubbs fire lapping which failed to remove the gouges crossing diagonal across the rifling. Where the lands and groves meet looks like a mill bastard file. Should have waited the six months for a Pac Nor or similar barrel. 400 dollars for the barrel about that for the instal on a ruger #1 I would have been way better off just selling the original rifle.
 
My 7stw has a Douglass that has been phenomenal. It is over twenty years old now so maybe they were better back in the day-but I would use them again. I would be comfortable with any of the better name brands tho, no real bias
 
If I wanted a cheap barrel I'd do a Wilson from Ragged Hole Barrels. All of the ones I've used where pretty accurate with one being exceptional. I havent been overly impressed with the Douglas barrels I've used. I'd personally spend a bit more and do a top tier barrel like Brux, Bartlein or Krieger.
 
My Winchester Model 70 280AI I built has a Shilen match grade stainless barrel. It has been great, but that's the one and only rifle I've ever had this done to so I'm probably not much help.
I bought my Grandson a REM 700 chambered in 260 , it has a Shilen " air gauged " barrel on it .I'll say this is the "most consistent " rifle I've ever played with . it shoots everything I've tried . I doubt it has shot anything bigger than 1 1/2 " at 100 yards , right out of the gate . after a little tweaking , most loads go to 1/2 "- 3/4 " at 100 yards , with the bullets I've tried .
 
I have a few custom rifles that have Douglas barrels and they were at my request.There's a .308, 7x57 and 30-06 that all shoot sub MOA although the 06 is fussy about bullet weight. The rifle was built by a friend, the late Cal Albright. You might rememberthe ads in some of the gun rags on the Albright fast fit trapdoor buttplates. Same Mr. Albright I had an old commercial FN Mauser with a bad barrel and he had the Douglas barrel. I put it on my FN, chambered it crowned the barrel and even whipped out a stock for the rifle. Cal was great working with metal and even our local gunsmith would pay him to do a ticklish job. I never could get the rifle to shoot 180 gr. bullets worth spit but 165s will do bug holes. Funny thing is it will give good groups with 220 gr. round nose as well. The real joker in that gun deal deck is he only charged me one dollar to build the rifle. I did say he was a friend.

When I had the 7x57 built, I specified for a Doughlas barrel and it too is sub MOA.

Another is a super lightweight .308. Just too light really but will do an inch off the bench if one concentrates real hard.

One thing that may make a difference is I let my gunsmith order the barrel and install it. He will borescope every barrel he orders and has sent a few back. Maybe that's part of the different reactions aout those barrels.
PJ
 
These are the last two 100-yard targets from my 300 WSM with a Douglas barrel. Visually the barrel looked very good.

As PJGunner noted above, this barrel was ordered by my gunsmith. He (my gunsmith) says he has had good luck with Douglas barrels.

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