Shorty, it appears that your ideas are based on too much misguided theory. Unfortunately they don't reflect reality.Largest divergence between muzzle and target is about halfway there when you're tuned for that target's distance. Interesting how that works, eh? It's almost like the bullets' flight paths follow some kind of rules... I wonder if any of those rules might explain why it is only "about halfway there" and not "exactly halfway there"...
You refer to "some kind of rules" above. You seem to believe that one of them is that .22LR rounds self-correct as they fly toward the target. You say that some kind of force acts on rounds to reduce their rate of dispersion as they fly past the half-way point, that group size begins to shrink (in terms of MOA) once past about half-way to the target.
That is a misunderstanding of how things work. It's wrong. Bullets do not self-correct as they pass the halfway point and go down range to target. There is no force that causes a group to shrink in MOA size once beyond the halfway point up to the bullseye.
Surely you can't imagine that such ideas would find support among serious shooters. You would have to believe that you're the only one who is correct and everyone else is mistaken. If you could shoot more and theorize less you might avoid such wrong-headed ideas.
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