SteveM
Sounds like you have some work to do with the Coyote. 1) Make sure the barrel is not touching the stock. I picked up a Sako 75 the other day at McBrides to look at and the barrel was resting firmly against one side of the stock. Not good. 2) What's the trigger pull like. If it was out of the box and like mine it was atrocious (8 Pounds). I'm not good enough a shooter to shoot under an inch with eight pounds working against me. 3) Scope?, Rings? Bases? If they are not tight and tested you will never get it right. 4) Try another load. If it still shoots that poorly box it up with the targets and send her to USRAC with a letter describing the problems. They will get it right. We’ve got three Coyote M70’s in 300WSM, 270WSM and 223 rem. They all shoot great
Sounds like you have some work to do with the Coyote. 1) Make sure the barrel is not touching the stock. I picked up a Sako 75 the other day at McBrides to look at and the barrel was resting firmly against one side of the stock. Not good. 2) What's the trigger pull like. If it was out of the box and like mine it was atrocious (8 Pounds). I'm not good enough a shooter to shoot under an inch with eight pounds working against me. 3) Scope?, Rings? Bases? If they are not tight and tested you will never get it right. 4) Try another load. If it still shoots that poorly box it up with the targets and send her to USRAC with a letter describing the problems. They will get it right. We’ve got three Coyote M70’s in 300WSM, 270WSM and 223 rem. They all shoot great