If your goal with the gun is accuracy then you should do some tune up work on it. First thing would be to clean it real good and make sure there isn't any debris in the rifling in the barrel. Just buy rifle gun cleaning supplies and follow the directions. Second is to make sure the barrel is "floating". Basically the barrel rotates around a little as the bullet goes through and if it hits the stock at all it will throw accuracy off. To test this just take a dollar bill loop it under the barrel and run it down towards the action to see if it gets stuck. Also to make it easier to shoot you might want to lighten the trigger so you don't have to pull it as much as rest your finger on it. To keep it accurate don't shoot it more than a few times every half hour to keep the barrel cool. And if you want to get really really accurate then you need to start working on running reloads through the gun. Reloaded bullets if fired in the same position over and over can greatly increase accuracy. We do all this with our hunting rifles and can put 4 in a nickel at 200 yards on the range with no problems.