
Most notably uncalled fliers were much much reduced.

I was also putting 3 in the same general hole more often than coincidence should allow, before 4 and 5 would open it up. I do not know how much improvement is due to the chassis versus how much is due to the improved ergonomics making the triggerman more consistent, but so long as I held it together I could cut ragged 5 shot holes at 25, little bigger than a thumb tack. I had cleaned the barrel, since I was getting stuck cases, probably due to grease buildup in the chamber, so it took most of a box to settle in again. I shot the B22 today, fresh in its chassis. I find even "adult" sized rimfires to be short in that dept - I have a thick slip on recoil pad on my B22, just to get it (mostly) set up right. I like the MDT chassis for a couple reasons - I like AR ergonomics, and I like being able to set whatever I want for LOP. Hopefully Aztech can get KIDD units inĭLASK has not answered my emails, BTW - so pretty poor after sales support 22s in the past couple years, it's coming up short. I felt it was pretty good in my old 10/22, with its VQ innards, but on the new rifle, and after a few nice. Now that the barrel has settled in, it's turning in groups comparable with my bolt guns.

The TUFF is pretty amazing for a semi auto. I put a thin washer under each lug, set the screws to about 9 inch pounds, and it's back to how it was. I tried different torque values, and when nothing helped I figured I must have compressed the wood a bit. I took my Mk-II BTVLSS out of the stock to adjust the trigger (disappointed that it was already as light as it would go) and afterwards I could not get the groups inside of a quarter at 25m
