Your observations mirror mine. I agree with the feed lip issue and may modify when I get a spare.Alderleet wrote:So I fixed the mag issue. The follower still wants to nose dive, because the spring is mostly contained in the rear of the mag, with a small front blip to control the front of the follower.
I had to press the mag tighter in the middle, where the feedlips start, and that made loading easier. Must've been a bit of warp from when the mag was welded.
The thing I'm noticing is that I think the feed lips extend too far forward, since the case neck starts about 5/16" behind the front of the feed lips when loaded. I'm curious if CZ would consider grinding the feed lips back, so loading on has to only overcome the outside body diameter, instead of nose diving the loaded cartridges when pressing a round in and it pushes against the case neck.
I'm still not a huge fan of the stock. I disassembled and retightened, but had to fight a little getting the bottom metal guided into the bottom of the receiver, while also trying to make the barrel more centered in the barrel channed in the foreend. I believe that my stock has a bit of left leaning warp, because even after wrestling with it to move the action slightly left, the best I could accomplish was a about a 1/16 gap on the right side.
I may stuff my stock in a padded vice, and press into it to get the front end more centered.
I've been playing with the action for a week now, and the intial machining drag is now gone. I finally added a bit of grease to the bolt and action/camming surfaces, and it runs like smooth glass now.
I'm a tall guy (6'5"), and the rifle doesnt feel way too short in LOP. Its short, but not bad.
I like how handy the 16" barrel is, and how light it is with my osprey can attached.
It feels much more quality than the ruger american rifle I was considering in 300blk. If I can swap to a wood stock, I would take this hands freaking down over a ruger any day of the week. I have a RPR, and i'm accustomed to the new ruger actions, but this is a whole new level.
All in all, solid reccomend. Even more so if you can swap a wood stock.
My stock needs free floating, as most do. I found applying more torque to the front action screw first, then tightening the rear snug helped center the stock. Synthetic stocks do not bother me at all, so long as they are not flimsy. Mine seems much more solid than most.
To early to see what is truly needed, if anything, with this platform. I'm sure I will float it,, and it probably has a glass bedding job in it's future.