I look at it this way. Ignore the effect of wind on group size.
The 0.5moa load groups great at short range, but due to the terrible ES/SD, the groups get larger the further out you go.
The average load groups averagely at short range, but due to the great ES/SD, the groups stay the same size out at longer ranges.
At some distance, the average load is now grouping better then the 0.5moa load.
No, it does not work that way.
Low ES and SD is desirable, no doubt.
But long range vertical grouping is determined by barrel harmonics.
The barrel whips violently went shot. The muzzle is either moving up or moving down as the bullet leave the barrel. You have to find the velocity that gets the bullet leaving the barrel as the the muzzle is rising. (You see this at long range by seeing good elevation. If the barrel is moving down, you get a very vertical group.)
Lets all agree that our ES is not zero. For sake of discussion, lets say its is 25 fps.
You fire a shot, the muzzle is moving up as the bullet leaves the barrel -
If it is the fastest shot of the string, at long range it will print a bit higher, right?
Not exactly. Because it was fast, it got to the muzzle more quickly than the other shots, and the muzzle was not quite as high in its arc, so the shot was aimed a bit lower. As a result, the shot that was destined to go a bit higher than the other shots was aimed a bit lower, so the group is not as tall as it other wise would have been.
This effect is very easy to see at 800 to 1000 yards. You test various powder charges and find what shoots the best elevation group. The SD/ES are whatever they are. The group tells the story.























































