My friend and I both recently bought Remington 700 SPS VS rifles in .22-250, his is blue and mine is stainless. Far as I'm concerned I'll never buy another Remington. The stock is junk and the Xmark trigger is horrible. I couldn't adjust the trigger to 4 lb, new it broke at 6 lbs.
In all the years Remington has been in business they've learned nothing about free floating a barrel. So, I ordered a B&C stock and Timney trigger. The group size has gone down but I'm still not thrilled with this rifle.
I did have my heart set on a Winchester 70 Stealth but they aren't making those anymore. Presently I have one in .308 and it is the most accurate rifle I ever bought new.
Reloading the .22-250 has been an experience. After loading for 34 years the .22-250 humbled me. Seating the bullets near the lands produced 3" groups. I tried different powders, primers and bullets, nothing helped. Factory ammo produced 3/4" groups. I was stumped.
On one of the forums someone mentioned to me that their rifle refused to shoot accurately unless they kept the length to what was specified in the loading manuals. I tried that, groups sizes shrank to 3/4" and no more fliers.
I'm still working on loads for this cartridge. I no longer use H380 as I found it to be way to temperature sensitive for my liking. Switching to Varget has proven to be a better choice.
One other thing I've noticed with the .22-250 is some pretty big differences in loading data. My Nosler book (which is my favorite) lists 36.0 gr max of Varget with a 50 gr bullet while my Lyman lists 38.0 gr as max. Who do you believe? RL-15 is another that shows wide variations in data. My manuals show charges of around 36 gr as max while Alliant shows 38.1 gr as max.
I've yet to chronograph any of the loads for the .22-250 but I bet I'm going to be disappointed. Always thought this was a high velocity round but it don't look like it with the loads I see in the manuals.
My rifle is new and maybe things will get better. If not I'll part with it and go with something in .243 Win.
In all the years Remington has been in business they've learned nothing about free floating a barrel. So, I ordered a B&C stock and Timney trigger. The group size has gone down but I'm still not thrilled with this rifle.
I did have my heart set on a Winchester 70 Stealth but they aren't making those anymore. Presently I have one in .308 and it is the most accurate rifle I ever bought new.
Reloading the .22-250 has been an experience. After loading for 34 years the .22-250 humbled me. Seating the bullets near the lands produced 3" groups. I tried different powders, primers and bullets, nothing helped. Factory ammo produced 3/4" groups. I was stumped.
On one of the forums someone mentioned to me that their rifle refused to shoot accurately unless they kept the length to what was specified in the loading manuals. I tried that, groups sizes shrank to 3/4" and no more fliers.
I'm still working on loads for this cartridge. I no longer use H380 as I found it to be way to temperature sensitive for my liking. Switching to Varget has proven to be a better choice.
One other thing I've noticed with the .22-250 is some pretty big differences in loading data. My Nosler book (which is my favorite) lists 36.0 gr max of Varget with a 50 gr bullet while my Lyman lists 38.0 gr as max. Who do you believe? RL-15 is another that shows wide variations in data. My manuals show charges of around 36 gr as max while Alliant shows 38.1 gr as max.
I've yet to chronograph any of the loads for the .22-250 but I bet I'm going to be disappointed. Always thought this was a high velocity round but it don't look like it with the loads I see in the manuals.
My rifle is new and maybe things will get better. If not I'll part with it and go with something in .243 Win.