This was at 1,000 yards, five rounds there the fifth is higher and tougher to spot, with my Krieger barrelled Garand and iron sights (match). A lot of it is how you hold your sights. At extreme range, I don't set my sights for a center, or bullseye hold. I set them to be hitting center on the target board but visually my front sight has the target board sitting fully on top of it. Our target board there ends up appearing about the width of my 0.62" NM front sight, and it becomes pretty elementary from there. Rest it on top, center it, and control your breathing- wait for the right exhale and let one go. Repeat.
I am fortunate in the vision, still 20/10, it may get tougher as time goes on I suspect.
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Sounds like you might have a good one. That's a decent group but might be just lucky, shoot it some more and see. One 3 shot group isn't enough to tell you how accurate your rifle is.
OTOH, it's a norc M14 - not a target rifle. Don't get yourself worked up too much about determining the ultimate accuracy potential on a gun you bought to use as a fun plinker. Some people get their panties in a knot about every last tenth of an inch of group size and that is not what these rifles were designed for. Mechanical accuaracy and group size is interesting but hardly the only consideration on a rifle that was built to be shot offhand and fast under battle conditions. Shoot and have fun and don't let the group-junkies poop on your birthday cake.
Sometimes in this forum I have this flashback, I'm in high school and some fat kid is laughing like a donkey because he thought something sounded retarded... Have fun with that line of humour chief, hope it brings you happiness.
To the OP, join one of our matches some time if interested, PM me for details it's free.
That's impressive Ardent!
I still have 20/20 vision as well (at least the last time I saw my eye doctor) but at 100 yards I find it difficult to get a clear sight picture on a 8.5 x 11 piece of paper. Maybe I'm focusing on the wrong point??
36 but yep same difference
10"= MOA at 1,000, x .6 for 6", x 60 secs = 36