Agreed, this is another one of those arguments where the more you shoot the less interesting it becomes...I say either one is fine for 99.9% of us...the 1/9s are a bit more accurate(in my experience) with commercial loads. I currently have 1/9" 1/8" and 1/7" ...
I agree with your agreement. My most accurate barrels are 1/9, with my 20" shooting from 52 to 75gn (Hornady) very nicely. I just picked up a box of 77gn SMKs which I'm going to try next in it and will report the results.
Going back to back, my 20" 1/7 won't shoot most cheaper 55gn loads as well as my 1/9 does. More fliers to be specific, otherwise pretty similar. For 80gn+ match ammo, the 1/7 is obviously a good choice, but I've never even held a 80+gn 224 bullet and I don't see me needing them anytime soon (longest range I can shoot at is 600m).
Looking at manufacturers offerings, how many offer their 'accurized' AR15 rifles with a 1/7 twist? Colt does a 1/9 on theirs, most others 1/8, I don't know of any major manufacturer who uses a 1/7 in an "accurized' model. The Swiss went with a 1/10 for their 63gn ammo, and I trust the Swiss to care about these things. YMMV, of course, but, the manufacturers seem to agree that 1/9 is the most accurate with most ammo. There is no difference in manufacturing costs between the two rates of twist.
If I was only shooting 55gn I'd probably go with a 1/12, but I do shoot a fair bit of 62gn ammo and the 1/9 handles both great.
"who would want 1:9 over 1:7? I dont get why RRA and other manufacturers make this twist when 1:7 seems to stabilize all the good rounds out there"
-I think they would tell you that most ammo being shot isn't the 'good stuff'. Most of it is cheap 55gn FMJ and 62gn surplus, the ammo where I personally find more fliers with my 1/7, and I presume, so do the manufacturers. I can speak for Stag Arms take on this, because I asked the CEO exactly this question, and his response was "Because I don't want to have to spend my days on the phone explaining to shop owners why their customers rifles won't group well with the most common ammunition they sell." This is also when I was told that their 1/9 is closer to 1/8.5 and should stabilize most any mag loadable ammo.
The vast vast vast majority of 223 ammo commercially sold in the USA is <62gns, and the 1/9 is superior there, that's why almost everyone offers the bulk of their lineup in 1/9.
As Leg said, the US Military went with 1/7 due to the length of the tracer round, not due to better accuracy with 62gn M855 ball ammo. I know we have a few customers who put 20" 1/9 uppers on their C7 lowers for matches, as they find they shoot C77 ball more consistently.
There is no conspiracy here, and it's not a lack of knowledge on the manufacturers part.
But, back to Sparrows comment on twist, "the more you shoot the less interesting it becomes". I've heard this now from more than one active shooter actually, and the more I shoot the more I agree. Truth.
