R and G.. fantastic shooting and thanks for posting the targets. Sounds like we are hitting an average of around 0.8 to 0.9" (sub 1") as being a really good average when shooting larger sample rd groups. Biggest vs smallest groups can have quite the spread... even with very good setups and ammo. Hopefully, this will help more shooters understand that the zinger wasnt a shot they 'pulled'.... it really is a flyer... and with rimfire ammo, even match ammo, you are going to get zingers.
Jerry
Ditto: Really great 100 shooting R and G!
I have a theory on training grade ammo consistency, like in the $8-$10 per box SK ammo that I use. There is a bad round frequency about 1 or 2 rounds per box of 50, causing bizarre fliers. Because of this almost certain frequency of bad rounds, I wonder why competition rules do not allow extra rounds per target, where a percentage of fliers can be ignored for the final score? (In Rimfire we have no control over the ammo consistency).
e.g. in a typical 25 round match, the shooter can shoot 27 rounds, and cancel out the 2 worst rounds for score.
e.g. in a group competition, shooters can shoot 6-round groups and measure 5 round group size, or 11 rounds for a 10-round groups size, eliminating the outer-most hole.
Background to above rationale:
Typical scenario: I will be shooting a club score target (single shots per 25 bulls) in perfect zero wind morning conditions (like I was this morning at my 50m range), and on track for a perfect 25 rd 250 score. Its only going to be a matter of how many X rings I hit...and then the heart-breaker 9 or 8 ring flier happens almost every fricken time to ruin the perfect score. And the flier is always bizarre, way way way outside the variation of all the other rounds. This commonly happens with my fellow shooters too.
This is bench rest shooting, single shot, slow pace, no wind and with flags out to make sure shots are taken with no visible breeze, and using a superb target rifle and 45x scope. These bizarre flier's POI do not line up with the reticle after recoil. The POI appears unexplainable and in no relation to the rifle's recoil path.
Anyways, I wonder if for training grade ammo, in group shooting we should allow for elimination of the outer hole, for 6-round groups or 11 round groups?
If we look at Grauhanen's post #138, top right target, that one high flier looks completely out of character with the rest of the group. G shows that he and his rifle at 100 can shoot consistent tight sub 1 inch groups on the other targets. That top right flier is windage-wise close to the center of the group. I bet that cartridge had a little extra primer or powder, or something wrong with the bullet that made it climb like that. If that flier could be nixed, that top right group would be sub 1 inch and very similar to the others. I bet that was a faulty round, not the shooter's fault.
Background to above rationale:
Typical scenario: I will be shooting a club score target (single shots per 25 bulls) in perfect zero wind morning conditions (like I was this morning at my 50m range), and on track for a perfect 25 rd 250 score. Its only going to be a matter of how many X rings I hit...and then the heart-breaker 9 or 8 ring flier happens almost every fricken time to ruin the perfect score. And the flier is always bizarre, way way way outside the variation of all the other rounds. This commonly happens with my fellow shooters too.
This is bench rest shooting, single shot, slow pace, no wind and with flags out to make sure shots are taken with no visible breeze, and using a superb target rifle and 45x scope. These bizarre flier's POI do not line up with the reticle after recoil. The POI appears unexplainable and in no relation to the rifle's recoil path.
Anyways, I wonder if for training grade ammo, in group shooting we should allow for elimination of the outer hole, for 6-round groups or 11 round groups?
If we look at Grauhanen's post #138, top right target, that one high flier looks completely out of character with the rest of the group. G shows that he and his rifle at 100 can shoot consistent tight sub 1 inch groups on the other targets. That top right flier is windage-wise close to the center of the group. I bet that cartridge had a little extra primer or powder, or something wrong with the bullet that made it climb like that. If that flier could be nixed, that top right group would be sub 1 inch and very similar to the others. I bet that was a faulty round, not the shooter's fault.
This was shot at 100 yards. At my other club we shoot 100 M. Rimfire. One member shot a 100-10X group that measured 0.602" c-c
While my best at 100 yards is 0.595 it only scored 100-9X.
https://hosting.photobucket.com/alb...sqhgkbuzd.jpeg?width=450&height=278&crop=fill
https://hosting.photobucket.com/alb...so6xafitk.jpeg?width=450&height=278&crop=fill
This target was shot with a Remington 40XB, Lilja barrel Remington Eley Match at 1062 fps over wind flags.
I am more and more liking the idea that for rimfire matches, and with new optical scanning technology that can measure groups, that we should use a statistical method for group scoring of inner density, and not total group. The computer software can easily calculate percentiles which would net out the outermost flier(s), and measure diameter density of the dominant proportion of the group. That proportion can be defined by the match, and the software could easily be programed to output those numbers.
For example, group size could be measured to the 90th percentile. That is not necessarily netting out 1 flier. Instead that is measuring 90% of the group diameter. The downside of this method is that the really crazy flier stretches out the diameter and penalizes the rest of the inner tight group. But the match designer could choose 80% or whatever they want to make it fair for the quality of ammo used by some participants.
Maybe a better diameter proportion for groups is 75th or 80th percentile for 10-shot groups. I recall a post that posted an ammo testing table showing a 65% inner group diameter proportion.
I have shot many thousands of rounds at 50m, in very low to no wind, using a Sightron 45x45 scope where the slightest movement of the reticle (rifle) can be seen, and recoil path in the reticle can be seen, using good benchrest front rest and rear bag. Bad shots by the shooter can be seen (e.g. bad trigger pull), but it soon becomes quite apparent that errant fliers have no resemblance to recoil path - in other words those crazy fliers can be seen to be the ammo, not the shooter. It is a real shame when good groups or good score is ruined by a bad round or two.
The proportion or percentile electronic method of measuring might be able to statistically nullify the effect of most or all of the bad ammo fliers, and reflect the true skill of the shooter and true precision of the rifle, assuming half decent ammo to begin with.
I do not use the new digital group measuring tools like Ballistic X app for mobile phones. Does it have an option for percentile scores with user-defined percentiles?
Skwerl: I hear you for the 5-shot group. 6 for 5 might be too much, I think you are right. I think the 90th or 80th percentile method for 5-round groups would be fair because it does not net out rounds - rather it nets down the total diameter based on the density of 90% or 80% of the diameter those rounds produced.
Tried group shooting with 22LR years back and the inconsistency took the fun away... and I didn't have the budget back then to try and chase it. My solution then as it is now, change the goals and target to suit the system you are using.
today, rimfire PRS works just fine with the ammo and its quirks.... or score shooting which is a hoot on a windy day
I am sure you are aware of the definition of insanity... and it gets real expensive chasing ghosts.
Clanging steel or driving them to the center seems like a far less stressful journey..
YMMV
Jerry
A couple excellent groups there, a real thrill to do that at 100 yards with a .22, eh? I agree with your observations about ammo consistency, it is our achilles heel. One has to wonder, what would it take on the manufacturing side of things to improve the consistency? It seems they just strive to make it good enough to cut the 10 ring on olympic targets. If some lots turn out better it's a happy accident, if some lots don't make the grade... simply repackage as a lower cost brand. The Benchrest market even seems to be ignored by the ammo makers, they are forced to constantly test lots to find something suitable rather than having a product made to the standards they demand readily available.
How do we make it possible to handload .22LR ourselves?
Biologist and sqwerl, for those with who are comfortable with technology and software, there may be a relatively simple solution to the problem that you want to solve. It's measuring average to center or group mean radius.
ATC (Average to Center) measurement allows a shooter to distinguish between two groups that may have the same Center to Center measurement but are otherwise qualitatively different. In brief, it measures the average distance of the shots in the group from the group's center.
As an example, two CTC groups are 1". One has it's shots distributed throughout the 1" diameter limits of the group's size, the other has all shots in a 1" diameter group, but 9 are in a consistent .75" group with one shot outside that group enough to make the entire group 1" in CTC size. Both groups are X" CTC, but both are qualitatively different.
Looking at the target below, the top right and bottom right groups are almost identical in size (respectively, .963" and .944" CTC). But each is qualitatively different than the other.
How to measure ATC? One solution is to use a readily available target evaluation program such as the OnTarget software. It's not be for smartphones and will require a Windows operating system. OnTarget, which has been around for nearly ten years, allows shooters to use a photo or a scan of a target with the program. The size of the target and distance shot are among the information that needs to be inputted. The user plots each shot individually on the program, and the program calculates not only CTC but also ATC.
Below is an image taken from one of the OnTarget threads on RFC. It compares CTC and ATC with a summary of the salient differences and advantages of ATC measurements over CTC. See h t t p s://www.rimfirecentral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=512993
There are two versions of OnTarget available for download. One is the basic version which calculates group center, maximum group spread (CTC), group mean radius, group width and height, and group offset from point of aim. The other is more sophisticated.
For a general introduction to using the OnTarget software, see h t t p s://www.rimfirecentral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=513106
Tried group shooting with 22LR years back and the inconsistency took the fun away... and I didn't have the budget back then to try and chase it. My solution then as it is now, change the goals and target to suit the system you are using.
today, rimfire PRS works just fine with the ammo and its quirks.... or score shooting which is a hoot on a windy day
I am sure you are aware of the definition of insanity... and it gets real expensive chasing ghosts.
Clanging steel or driving them to the center seems like a far less stressful journey..
YMMV
Jerry
Yes I am with you on that. Clanging steel in rimfire PRS looks like alot of fun. No PRS ranges within many hundreds of kms. My local range does not have any PRS set up, and its current rules do not allow it. Its an old fashioned range with benches and firing lines for benchrest, and that's the way it is. Maybe one day, we are talking about it, folks are seeing cool videos of other ranges in my province running successful rimfire PRS events. But some folks in our club don't know what PRS is and it takes a long time to change tradition. (lots of questions about what the Ontario CFO will allow or quash regarding barriers/bunkers around steel targets - currently our range rules will not allow what we are seeing on YouTube PRS events for how steel targets are used outside of bunkers....something we hope to change).
What sort of precision is required to be successful at PRS?
I know silhouette considers anything inside 1.25" at 100m to not be a limiting factor except for perhaps master shooters.