Everyone shoots Sub-MOA all day and game to 1500yds. Why aren't you?
Bolt or gas gun?
Bolt, 6gt with 107s, 6.5cm with 153.5, these are both heavy match rigs.Bolt or gas gun?
exactly the same as my lightweight big game guns then…Bolt, 6gt with 107s, 6.5cm with 153.5, these are both heavy match rigs.
Honest shooters; when it comes to claimed accuracy arrrr right? A genuine one MOA hunting weight rifle five shot group is excellent despite all the internet BS that we see. Even then we're probably looking at a quality action & barrel, decent bedding and possibly hand loading.This is the method I use on light barrel, larger caliber, big game hunting rifles. I usually do 3+3+3 to get an idea of what a rifle/load is capable of, letting it cool between. Main reason is that I figure it's much closer to the actual use profile. I do try to fire them as quick as is practical while feeding from the magazine; it always amazes me how many people complain of poor feeding troubles while hunting.
To accommodate the time this takes I generally bring 4-5 guns to the range so I can keep on pulling the trigger.
To the OP question, 1moa for 10 consecutive shots is plenty good, and based off all my shooting and what I see at the range, is probably as good or better than what the majority of honest shooters are actually experiencing.
I have always verified with multiple 10 shot groups with all of my loads.Do others experience the same sort of thing?
For load development, 5 or 10 shots are fine. If I were a real statistics expert, I could tell you how many shots are required to see x change. I'm not.I've been doing 5-shot groups for load development. Once I get a 1/2 MOA 5-shot group, I call it good. However, I'm finding that the same load opens up to 1 moa when I do 10-shot groups. I allow several minutes between shots to cool down.
Wondering:
1. Do others experience the same sort of thing?
2. I'm shooting with custom barrels (proof and fierce). But these are lightweight, high-recoil hunting rifles. Should I be demanding a 1/2MOA 10-shot group, or am I chasing a rainbow trying to make that happen?
I see guys at my range shooting 20-shot 1/2 MOA groups, but they are shooting huge bull barrel .223's literally ratcheted down to an enormous rest. I can see how that would be pretty consistent . What's a realistic expectation for the rest of us?
The cost of components!Not sure why there is so much push-back to shooting more.
I'm not advocating against shooting more, I just don't see any reason to shoot 10 shot groups when tuning a hunting rifle.