I can remember one day at the range when we had to delay shooting because of fog. That was the only perfect day I can remember to test long range loads... just as the fog cleared and before the sun and wind kicked up.
It was absolutely dead calm and group sizes were crazy small for all of us on the base. We referred to that morning as a trigger pulling contest as scores were perfect across the board.
Unless you are testing long range loads under such conditions all you can really do is gusetimate the group within the group, but that is difficult to do.
If you ever get the chance to shoot as the fog clears and compare such a group to what happens the rest of the time, you'll see how much noise there is at medium to long range.
You can do a would have should have check on a shot to shot basis... or a post mortem... This is where you write down the scope setting... point of aim... and point of impact for every shot... then compare to condition changes to see if it was a wind read error or incorrect dope... or if you called it perfect... From that you can extract an idea of true accuracy... but you need to be pretty focused to figure it out. This is essentially how I've been plotting F Class scores for the past 20 years.
For those who dont trust your chronograph...
Accurate to 1/2 FPS... Got to get me one of these one day and test it.