Ysabel Kid wrote:Very cool!
However, aren't you concerned you now picked up a "early model assault weapon". The Obamaniacs will be soooo disappointed in you.

Naw, it goes with my other early models, mid models and late and current models!
And Ben Rumson - I couldn't wait and went out to the shop this morning to properly seat the action in my carbine - as per the instructions on that link you provided (thanks again) - the action was pretty much sitting in the wood - which is not condusive to good accuracy according to the author. So, I followed the directions and got the barrel floating above the bottom wood 1/4" and finished assembly - just followed his directions. Apparently, this causes the barrel to have consistent, upward pressure against the front barrel band and reduce variation in vibration from shot to shot.
He also indicated that the bayo mount helps accuracy - as long as its the later model (which I think mine is).
Further, I checked my barrel's muzzle (used a factory 30-06 round as I don't have any military ball laying around) and it looks like it's got most of its life left. The bore is strong and shiney, so that doesn't surprise me. I don't know when my carbine was made as I don't see any dates on it, but I'm guessing late in the production cycle - 44 or 45.
I also saw that my recipe for my handload was within 1/2 grain of the one he listed - same powder (mine is H110 - he listed W296 - same stuff) I didn't know this was developed specifically for the 30 carbine... cool
So, the next time out, if I use better bench technique, and shoot my handoads, I should get much smaller groups.
He indicated that the current factory stuff is underloaded and not very consistent in velocity = not great accuracy.