I am very interested in the original purpose of the thread, and hopefully we can steer away from the current argument and go back towards the original idea.
Amen. And thank you.
On a calm day from a nice solid shooting bench, with my best rifle (also an ATRS) and handloads I can shoot an average of about 3/8" 5 shot groups at 114yards (why they never placed the target at 100 yards or meters is beyond me). Depending on ammo / rifle quality the group size goes up from there.
Tell us more about the rifle (caliber, chambering, barrel length, weight, etc), and ammo (bullet, powder, m.v.). Sounds like a fantastic shooting rifle, wow!
On the 600m range we built, as far as I can tell the 600m firing point is within 1m or 2m of being correct. Somehow though our 100m firing point is about 95m from the targets(!).
Shooting offhand, kneeling, sitting, etc. I have no idea what my group sizes would be, but I know they would be awful.
Ditto. Such a barbaric way to shoot, eh? ;-)
Shooting offhand, I think I can put the majority of my shots inside 10 MOA. And that seems amazing to me, since my "hold" must be at least a 20 MOA wobble.
...and as per the last post - I personally give 3 shot groups absolutely no statistical relevance whatsoever. I always shoot 5 shot groups.
They don't have literally *no* relevance, it's just that they are quite *noisy*, and they are less relevant than groups fired with more shots. So provided that you correctly interpret a three-shot group (which basically means knowing just how large a grain of salt to take it with), there's nothing intrinsically erroneous about them.
You can also take the average of numerous three-shot groups. The average size of five or ten three-shot groups does start to filter out the noise and give some info. But you might want to consider if there might be a better way to analyze the data that these fifteen (or thirty) shots contain. (for the curious, there is; techniques such as "mean radius" make much better use of the data)
Thankyou Lloyd...things veered so far off course, I was about to ask to have my handle removed from the OP! Not being a competition or long range shooter, I am not sure what to expect for accuracy much past 300M...but I was pretty certain that anybody claiming much bettter than 1MOA consistency past 600M would need to be in the top 10% of shooters and be using top notch equipment. Since our Range is only 300M, I have to base my expectations on what I can do and what I see others doing at that distance. I see very few targets from the 300M board under 1/2MOA with 3 shot groups. Perhaps the long Range facilities attract a greater percentage of the really competent shooters? One thing I can be sure of, is that if you can't shoot well out to 300M...you won't get better further out.
I suppose tall tales are to be expected, but somehow it seems that the BS stories end up devaluing the actual shooting accomplishments of shooters who actually shoot.
For example, board member Cyanide posted a photo of a wonderful 10-shot group that he fired on the ICFRA 300m F-class target, which I thought was truly stunning. IIRC all ten shots were inside the V-bull, which is 0.45 MOA in diameter. And yet this real accomplishment sounds pretty mundane when ranked amongst the BS claims that populate (pollute?) the Internet.
While not quite common as dirt, rifles that honestly shoot 1/2MOA at 300m-600m are quite doable, and not at all rare at major target shooting competitions. But rifles that honestly shoot 1/2 MOA at 900m are truly rare - I think in all my years shooting I've only ever seen that done *once*.
In the mid-90s I used to shoot ORA sniper matches, which were fired on very challenging targets at 400y (1/2 MOA bullseye) 600y (2/3 MOA bullseye) and 800y (1 MOA bullseye). For fun, a playing card was placed in the center of the 800y target, and if you got any hits you were given the card to keep. This was a nice added bit of fun. Each shooter fired two sighters and fifteen on score at 800, so you were firing a total of 17 shots. Most people ended up getting at least one hit. A good shooter might typically get two or three hits out of the seventeen shots. I have a small stack of these cards, I think the most that I ever got was five hits (so that's my best performance, where luck and conditions and everything worked in my favour).
Since a playing card is about 1/4 MOA wide, and I don't recall ever seeing even the very best and very luckiest shooters getting any more than one third of their shots onto this 1/4 MOA target at 800 yards, I have a pretty darn skeptical view of anybody who claims to be grouping 1/4 MOA at 800 yards. No point in calling it BS, but I have have enough confidence in my guesstimate of the reality of it happening, that I would be *MOST* willing to take the other side of a series of monetary bets that would be easily winnable by somebody who actually could routinely shoot 1/4 MOA groups at 800y.
Well, I am just learning but I find consistency the hardest part( I guess that is everyone's problem). 20-25% of my 4 shot groups at 400 yards are under an inch, some well under an inch.It's that other 75-80% that are the problem. Anyways I am working on it and hopefully I can reverse the trend.I have my loads down to both single digit ES and SD .For anyone interested the rifle is a fully custom 7mm SAUM with a 0.315 neck. I had Dave Kiff make the reamer. It is built on a Barnard action, Roberston composites GBF stock( bedded by Ian), Lilja 30 inch barrel,Schmidt and Bender PMII 12-50x56 with 1/8 moa adjustments. I am using a SEB rest and rear bag.The gun was smithed by Joe Kroetsch.
(I admit I am curious why you've chosen 4-shot groups, especially since you're not firing from a Remington with a 4-shot magazine ;-) Nothing wrong with 4-shot groups, it's just nonstandard)
Sounds like you have first-rate gear, which you can fairly expect to be able to deliver 1/2 MOA or better at that range.
Any idea if the bad groups are your fault (wind reading, shooting technique etc) or the equipment's? Can you consistently get 1/2 MOA at 100 (which would suggest your gear is good and your technique is good)? If you're not an experienced shooter, are you able to get somebody who is, so that you can get a good "baseline" of what your gear is capable of and therefore what you know you can realistically strive for?