An easy test to confirm IF the gun is lacking...
First test... barrel heat. If you get great results at 3rds but fail at 5rds, shoot 3 or 4 groups of 3rds under the conditions your barrel shows it can work... Then add a 4th noting where it lands... then add a 5th noting where it lands. If the first 3rds ALWAYS shoot under 1/2 moa but the 4th and 5th wander, you have a barrel heat issue which is WAY more common then shooters spending big bucks on the 'custom' barrel want to accept.
Bullet issue. If during the 4 groups X 3rds test, the group size changes so you AVERAGE under 1/2 MOA, try a true match bullet. Proper accurate rifles are consistent and reliable in their performance... to the shooters ability to adjust for wind. That's it. Nothing fancy need to be done.
Barrel wear issue. If you try match bullets AND you continue to get inconsistent results AND you are approaching 600rds, time for a new barrel.
The best accuracy of any magnum is in the first 25% of its lifespan... Yes, it is short lived BUT 1/2 MOA is not particularly demanding these days.
For reference, F Open has been the domain of SUB 1/2 MOA rifles for many years and thousands of rifles (or more precisely... barrels) in heavier cartridges. Today, 7mm-6.5PRC, 300 short magnums are punching itty bitty group way the heck out there. For fun, look up the results from the multi match at Heffley the last week. I think there were 60 shooters pounding targets.. ALL are trying to hammer a 1/2 MOA target out to 900 under match conditions and long strings of fire.
consistent 1/2 MOA is not hard to achieve today. Doesn't need to cost a left kidney but you do need to follow well established process that
F class shooters have sorted out for well over a decade.

FYI, this was a final test of my FTR 308 Win at 250yds shot prone in very nice conditions. Both 4rds group were shot back to back non stop. Obviously, I went with the right load. When F class rifles only group 1/2 MOA, the barrels get tossed.
Jerry
First test... barrel heat. If you get great results at 3rds but fail at 5rds, shoot 3 or 4 groups of 3rds under the conditions your barrel shows it can work... Then add a 4th noting where it lands... then add a 5th noting where it lands. If the first 3rds ALWAYS shoot under 1/2 moa but the 4th and 5th wander, you have a barrel heat issue which is WAY more common then shooters spending big bucks on the 'custom' barrel want to accept.
Bullet issue. If during the 4 groups X 3rds test, the group size changes so you AVERAGE under 1/2 MOA, try a true match bullet. Proper accurate rifles are consistent and reliable in their performance... to the shooters ability to adjust for wind. That's it. Nothing fancy need to be done.
Barrel wear issue. If you try match bullets AND you continue to get inconsistent results AND you are approaching 600rds, time for a new barrel.
The best accuracy of any magnum is in the first 25% of its lifespan... Yes, it is short lived BUT 1/2 MOA is not particularly demanding these days.
For reference, F Open has been the domain of SUB 1/2 MOA rifles for many years and thousands of rifles (or more precisely... barrels) in heavier cartridges. Today, 7mm-6.5PRC, 300 short magnums are punching itty bitty group way the heck out there. For fun, look up the results from the multi match at Heffley the last week. I think there were 60 shooters pounding targets.. ALL are trying to hammer a 1/2 MOA target out to 900 under match conditions and long strings of fire.
consistent 1/2 MOA is not hard to achieve today. Doesn't need to cost a left kidney but you do need to follow well established process that
F class shooters have sorted out for well over a decade.

FYI, this was a final test of my FTR 308 Win at 250yds shot prone in very nice conditions. Both 4rds group were shot back to back non stop. Obviously, I went with the right load. When F class rifles only group 1/2 MOA, the barrels get tossed.
Jerry


















































