It's SINGLE SHOT testing.
Eventually, each single shot defines your actual capability.
That said;
I shoot followups very early, to see if the gun has any potential.
Then I focus purely on single shot
accuracy.
There are are guns that cannot hold a 2nd shot with the first cold bore shot.
My last with this issue was a new Tubb T2K (tube gun in 6XC), which I had bought for hunting.
While it did what it was designed for (tight 600yd grouping) very well, I could tell right off that it had zero potential for LR hunting shots.
So I had fun with the gun for a bit & sold it off.
This is really the test that told me all I needed to know:
View attachment 472962
For my cold bore testing, I begin at 200yds and 10min shot rate. This is because it's the worst performing condition I am aware of.
That is, when it shoots good under this condition, it will shoot better under any other.
Anyway, the high spread shots were 10min each, with an immediate followup that formed a group along the target edge.
This was not the best cold bore load, and the brass was new/unfired, but it doesn't matter because the followup shots told me all I needed for this test (which is why I do it). A good test to do while fire forming brass.
A stable system, at 200yds, would put each in a 2sht group at least touching.
A good cold bore load would put them all inside that target.
I could develop with this gun to putting fully cold bore inside the target, but I would forever know that a followup would depart.
So given varying field conditions, i could never really know that my 1st shot could be relied on either.
No amount of load development can fix this, so you can save a lot of tail chasing right here. It passes the test, or fails.