Free-Floated Barrels and The Dollar Bill Trick
A free-floated barrel means the barrel does not contact the stock or chassis at any point forward of the receiver. Most shooters were taught to verify this with the dollar bill trick: slide a bill between the barrel and stock all the way back to the receiver. If it passes, the barrel is “free floated.” That test is incomplete.
The goal of a free-floated barrel is to allow the barrel to vibrate consistently during firing. Every shot produces barrel harmonics, whip, and oscillation. If the barrel contacts anything during that movement, accuracy and point of impact suffer. This has been proven repeatedly with slow-motion footage, and it is easily observed in real shooting. Even low-recoiling calibers produce measurable barrel movement.
WHY THE DOLLAR BILL TEST FALLS SHORT
The dollar bill test checks static clearance. Barrel harmonics happen dynamically, under recoil.
You are not sliding a dollar bill under the barrel while the rifle is firing. Add a suppressor, and the problem becomes more pronounced. The added weight at the muzzle changes harmonics and typically pulls the point of impact down. The same thing happens when shooters rest the barrel on a barricade rather than on the chassis. I routinely see impacts shift by 6 inches, from over a foot high to over a foot low, depending on how the barrel is supported. This is why barrels should not come into contact with anything, including the chassis.
If your rifle chassis or stock doesn’t have a large barrel channel like this ACC, you will need to take a close look at your system to make sure it is truly free-floated.
A BETTER WAY TO CHECK
Unless you have a Chassis Rifle System with an oversized barrel channel, you will need to just shoot your rifle a lot. After the first 100 rounds, remove the barreled action from the stock or chassis and inspect it closely. Look near the front of the chassis for wear marks where the finish is beginning to polish or turn silver. I have seen many rifles that passed the dollar bill test show contact after live fire. Another quick check is to apply downward pressure to the barrel by hand. All barrels flex. Heavy profiles flex less. Hunting profiles flex more. If modest pressure brings the barrel into contact with the chassis, that contact is very likely to occur during recoil, especially once a suppressor is added.
MDT DRT Chassis System. A suppressor can affect barrel whip and harmonics.
THE TAKEAWAY
Passing the dollar bill test does not guarantee a truly free-floated barrel. If your barrel contacts the chassis under recoil, it will affect harmonics and point of impact. The only reliable way to confirm true clearance is through live fire followed by inspection. Static tests are convenient. Recoil is honest.
