So, got the word back! Id like to thank Nordic for their phenomenal customer service! Always super quick in getting in contact with me. I have never had an order go wrong or ever been disappointed by them!
My group is not some some odd ball group. The target passed the accuracy test! So my rifle should be able to do this! lol
(18mm Is the required group size, I didn't catch the distance. I wonder with what ammo ?)
Basically I need to keep trying ammo out and one will be what works.
The brick if Midas + should be here in a couple days then back to the range. I was also recommended in playing with the torque settings...
I generally find an ammo the rifle "likes" then tune in the torque settings. Is that how the rest of you do it also?
Anschutz tests .22LR at 50 meters. See FAQ at h t t p s://jga.anschuetz-sport.com/index.php5?menu=25&sprache=1&frageID=%05%BA%D2%FD%C4TG%C9&FAQID=%03%14%F4%19%B2%E0r%CD
It might be more productive to find the torque setting that produces the best results with what ever ammo is used and then find ammo that shoots even better.
As far as I'm concerned a proper pillar bedding is essential to accuracy in just about any rifle, mostly this type, my MPR 64 didn't shoot worth a crap out of the box, but after I fixed it up, no problem.
Second thing, any scope even brand new out of the box, even on a .22lr, can be a bad scope.
The issue you're having there is not ammo related, nor ammo fixable.
I'll never run crappy cheap bulk ammo through a match rifle, always good match ammo, lapua or eley.
It may be a bedding issue, as SND suggests. And he is absolutely right about the scope. If you haven't done so already, try a different scope with different mounts. That should be part of the "figuring out the problem" protocol. Finally, as SND says, the problem is not ammo related. It seems improbable that the rifle in question will shoot only one or two particular kinds of ammo well and give only poor results with everything else, including good quality match ammo.
It is true that in many rifles some ammos shoot better than others (and that some lots of some ammo shoot better than other lots -- but you are not at there yet). The thing to keep in mind is that, if you are trying to achieve a measure of consistency at, say, 50 yards, most every decent ammo that is tried should give some kind of consistent results, perhaps not the most desirable but at least consistent. In other words, while perhaps something like Center X may not be the best, that is yield the smallest groups, it should nevertheless produce consistent results. You appear to be getting arbitrary results and that is not be the result of not using the best ammo for the rifle.
What causes the arbitrary results? There are a number of possibilities, including bedding, scope, mounts, shooter technique (not all rifles respond equally to the same technique).
What happened to the very promising results posted initially?