1 MOA Challenge 2012

Last call for this years 1 MOA challenge. Saturday and Sunday Sept. 1 & 2.

This is post 141 of this thread so there has been lots of talk, but not too much action.

Let the excuses begin.......
 
I would like to have tried it this summer, but shooting has taken a back seat for me temporarily as my wife finished school, and I spent my time with the kids and at my business.

These are not excuses, just reality of my life at this time.
 
With a totally factory gun, I do not think that 10 shots sub MOA at 300 yards is all that easy. I wonder what the percentage of factory guns and owner combinations can do this when called upon. I know there are some as I have seen em but I'm not surprised there are no takers.
 
i was out this weekend, went and did well with new reloads, hit about 15 1/2 moa at 3 and 400 yards, bout 30-40 in the moa range of a 3" circle at 3 and 400 yards out of 90 rounds. not bad for a rifle i just picked up and started shooting for 800 scope and rifle.
 
Did anyone make it out to give it a try this weekend?

Practice on Saturday and didn't have any takers. Sunday was a match and one of our experienced shooters shot a very nice 50.8V at 300m and 50.9V on the same 300m target at 400m. He was shooting a custom Barnard, I believe in 6.5x55.
 
no takers on vancouver island, myself and another local pulled it off with savage f class rifles in 6br, both rifles also shot 10 shot groups under 6 inches at 600 yards, we'll keep trying to arrange another range for it in the near future.
 
With a totally factory gun, I do not think that 10 shots sub MOA at 300 yards is all that easy. I wonder what the percentage of factory guns and owner combinations can do this when called upon. I know there are some as I have seen em but I'm not surprised there are no takers.

With a proper, all-out custom target rifle, it's a heck of a lot harder than it sounds.

Re: your question of what percentage of factory gun + owner combos can do it, I would estimate less than perhaps 1%.

Given an honest 1/2-MOA F-Class rifle, it takes a good shooter to accomplish the task (it's no 'gimme'!)
 
I would say my stock Savage is able to do it, but I am not always up to this task. I did shoot a 50 of 50 at 500yards with it at the ORA shoot last month on the F-class target.

Nice shooting. Once my kids get a few years older I hope to get much more involved with the ORA. I had great fun at a vintage rifle shoot a couple of years ago. I have to admit, it is a lot more strenuous than I would have thought.
 
I would say my stock Savage is able to do it, but I am not always up to this task. I did shoot a 50 of 50 at 500yards with it at the ORA shoot last month on the F-class target.

Congrats on shooting a 50 on the F-Class target, that's a pretty meaningful shooting accomplishment (as an aside, is the ORA using ICFRA targets or DCRA targets?). It's a lot more common nowadays than it used to be, but an F-Class "possible" is still pretty meaningful (it's a heck of a lot more challenging that it is for a TR shooter to fire a 50 out of 50 on a TR target, and that is significant enough).

Shooting a 50 on an F-Class target is pretty much the moral equivalent of meeting the "1 MOA Challenge" that Maynard set out (on the 500 yard target it is _slightly_ more generous than 1 MOA, but then again it is at 500y rather than 300y/m).
 
500 Yard groups of the day

conditions were breezy but here is 2 500 yard groups both shot with Savage F class rifles in 6br, I was using 90 grain bullets and John was using 105's, both loaded over varget in lapua cases.

Mine, 3.88 inches

dave.jpg


John's 3.79 inches

daves.jpg


It can be done, people just have to come out and prove it.
Both of these targets were shot in a match today on Vancouver Island
 
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