Yes, they are exactly that: consolidations of 4 10-shot groups, at 50 meters, measured outside, in mm.250-25X Are these 40 shot groups at 50m with group sizes measured outside to outside? Thanks,
Is there any evidence that shows that some rifles/barrels correct ammo defects? Is there any evidence that some barrels are immune to the potential consequences of wide ES and high SD values? Is there any evidence that ammo that shoots poorly in one good rifle shoots incredibly well in another?It's absolutely essential to clarify your sentence: ''The X-Act performance on target is inconsistent and poor.....in your rifle''. Maybe these lots you tested could shoot incredibly well in my rifle, no matter what their SD is.
Below are some more Tenex results taken from the Eley Lot Analyser, now unavailable for several years. The images below show six different lots of Tenex shot with four different barrels in ten shot groups at 50 meters. Each column shows five ten shot groups for one of four barrels used.Every time a target shooter tells me he doesn't need to test Tenex (or X-Act, or R50...) in his rifle because he's sure it's ammunition that will necessarily group well, I show him these Tenex test results. It's usually an eye-opener for them...
 
 
 
 
For your two first questions: of course not ! I obviously have no logical explanation for what I'm saying.Is there any evidence that shows that some rifles/barrels correct ammo defects? Is there any evidence that some barrels are immune to the potential consequences of wide ES and high SD values? Is there any evidence that ammo that shoots poorly in one good rifle shoots incredibly well in another?
I have to note that the term "incredibly well" was yours. In your post above you suggested the poorly performing X-Act might perform "incredibly well" in your rifle, regardless of SD.For your third question, it depends on how you define ''poorly'' and ''incredibly well''![]()
As I mentioned in another thread, I was starting to get discouraged, having tried various SK and Eley ammos; some 2-3 X the price of Tac-22 with performance no better than Tac-22, and often worse. I have been searching for what to try next, talking to other shooters, watching reviews and scouring threads here.Below are the 1907 results from August 13, 2024. It should be noted that some groups were affected by wind.
In each lot, however, other groups had outliers or flyers not due to wind, which is to say errant shots went either high or low. Except to say they occur with these lots, those kind of shots are otherwise unpredictable.
Generally speaking the results with the X-Act lots are more inconsistent than those with the Midas lots tested this season.
The three lots of X-Act are shown below, beginning with lot number ending 904.
Below are the 1907 results with X-Act lot ending 413.
Finally, below are the 1907 results with X-Act lot ending 293. Wind aside, this lot may have the best results of the day.
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Shooting .22LR at 100 yards is probably near the end of repeatable, consistent accuracy. It can be tough to shoot ten-shot groups that average under one inch. When that happens, the ammo must be reasonably consistent and the winds not a factor, either because air movement is minimal or absent or because the shooter has superlative 100 yard wind flag reading skills. If it's windy and you don't have outstanding flag reading ability for .22LR at 100 (few, if any, really do), the solution is simple: don't shoot. Good things don't happen when there's wind.As I mentioned in another thread, I was starting to get discouraged, having tried various SK and Eley ammos; some 2-3 X the price of Tac-22 with performance no better than Tac-22, and often worse. I have been searching for what to try next, talking to other shooters, watching reviews and scouring threads here.
your equipment does not allow benchrest accuracy at this timeAs I mentioned in another thread, I was starting to get discouraged, having tried various SK and Eley ammos; some 2-3 X the price of Tac-22 with performance no better than Tac-22, and often worse. I have been searching for what to try next, talking to other shooters, watching reviews and scouring threads here.
Youtube accuracy reviews are most often shot only a 50 yards; my present rifle with pretty much any "good" reasonably priced ammo has little trouble shooting one hole groups; Glenn, you have seen a lot of my targets, some of which have been as good as 2, 3, 7 and 9 above. Granted, when you get a good group, they are really good, but then one with of fliers, for the price of the ammo, I find it hard to justify.
Nothing is a sure thing, ammo is a lottery, barrels can be a lottery, life is a lottery; while I will continue the search for the "final solution", I will continue to practice, and focus on tempered contentment.
A couple of my more recent targets which are typical for me, all shot with the custom 455 I built:
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Two best targets with SK Std. + (the rest I tried don't even deserve an honorable mention. LOL:
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Keep up the good work Glenn!
Shooting .22LR at 100 yards is probably near the end of repeatable, consistent accuracy. It can be tough to shoot ten-shot groups that average under one inch. When that happens, the ammo must be reasonably consistent and the winds not a factor, either because air movement is minimal or absent or because the shooter has superlative 100 yard wind flag reading skills. If it's windy and you don't have outstanding flag reading ability for .22LR at 100 (few, if any, really do), the solution is simple: don't shoot. Good things don't happen when there's wind.
It's easier to find a rifle up to the challenge than it is ammo. At the same time, it's important to remember that when some varieties produce a few good groups the shooter should not take it that they will be regular. Too often a few good groups with entry level target ammo (such as SK varieties) will be only a few out of many. These ammos can be quite mercurial, Jekyll and Hyde, as it were, with too much Hyde.
Even with better grades of .22LR match ammo such as Midas (and X-Act), at 100 yards the "inconsistencies" of the ammo in question will be revealed, even though these may not show up or be obvious at half the distance. Ammo misbehaviour can be like swear words. At 50 yards it can be like in a church where they are not often heard but further away at 100 it may sound much less civil.
Some lots will be better than others. Not every lot of Midas (or X-Act) will perform equally well. Some will more regularly produce better results. These lots will have fewer flyers than others, but they will have them. Ammo imperfections that may be innocuous or benign at 50 will often become increasingly problematic with distance.
Ammo selection is often expensive. Unless a shooter knows for certain that a particular lot will perform well, he should avoid putting all his eggs in one basket. Get as many different lots by the brick as possible. Shoot when it's calm (at 100 there are no heroes who easily excel in the wind). Shoot as much as possible. Unless they are incontrovertibly poor, the results of one box of ammo are rarely conclusive.
I have. LOL




























